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Martin John Callanan, Martin John Callanan is Okay, 2007 - 2011. Installation at Büro BDP, Berlin, April 2011. Photo Iocose
Martin John Callanan, Martin John Callanan is Okay, 2007 - 2011. Installation at Büro BDP, Berlin, April 2011. Photo Iocose
Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
This image is excerpted from a U.S. GAO report: www.gao.gov/products/GAO-13-776 FEDERAL INFORMATION SECURITY: Mixed Progress in Implementing Program Components; Improved Metrics Needed to Measure Effectiveness
Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
Source: Sameer Hinduja and Justin W. Patchin www.cyberbullying.us/safe_responsible_social_networking.pdf
This is a screen shot of one of the very many downloadable resources available online related to bullying and cyber bullying.
Martin John Callanan, Martin John Callanan is Okay, 2007 - 2011. Installation at Büro BDP, Berlin, April 2011. Photo Iocose
From Left: Chef Joe Dugan, Jens Bogehegn, Scott Lynch, Matt Kelly, Dawn Triplett, Patrick Fee, Kris Williams, Joe Swanberg, Susan Buice, Joe DeJulius, Steve Weiss
Come watch the full FilmFellas Series at www.zacuto.com/filmfellas
FilmFellas Cast 2: "Mumblecore and More," features a new genre of filmmakers who are challenging the traditional Hollywood movie scene. Joe Swanberg (Kissing on the Mouth, Hannah Takes the Stairs), Susan Buice (Four Eyed Monsters) and Kris Williams (Young American Bodies) come together with host Steve Weiss (Director FilmFellas/Critics) to discuss the Mumblecore film movement. Come watch the full series at
Steve Weiss (Director of FilmFellas/critics)
Joe Swanberg (Director, Kissing on the Mouth, Hannah Takes the Stairs)
Susan Buice (Director, Four Eyed Monsters)
Kris Williams (Director, Young American Bodies)
Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
Event: Meet the Media Guru | Keiichi Matsuda
Date: 14/10/2014
Venue: Mediateca Santa Teresa - Milan, Italy
Twitter: @mmguru / #mmgMatsuda
Photo by Massimo Demelas
Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
Web Marketing Specialists, Web Marketing Strategies, Sales & Marketing Services, Sales & Marketing Training & Consultancy
“As long as I can remember, I wanted to be a filmmaker”, if this is your mantra, then you’ve got to see FilmFellas! Zacuto is excited to announce their new webisodic series, FilmFellas. A behind the scenes peek featuring influential and emerging new filmmakers who are making, creating and challenging the independent film scene and how we view entertainment. Follow this continuing series, you won’t want to miss a webisode as the cast and topics change. Watch in full screen HD at zacutovideo.com/ with new webisodes premiering every two weeks. Producers Steve Weiss, Jens Bogehegn & Scott Lynch sit down and dine with industry movers and shakers where talking film is their family business.
“I have been in search of programming that gets to the heart of my industry, one that I’ve been a part of since I’ve been a kid.”, Steve Weiss, Director
FilmFellas, a Zacuto production presented in conjunction with Vimeo.com:
Cast One: FILM SCHOOL AND BEYOND
A four part series premiering on Jan. 1 & 15, Feb. 1 & 15
Explores what young filmmakers need to know about film school, mentors, experience, financing, avenues of distribution, directing, styles, cameras and more.
Steve Weiss (Director, Zacuto product designer)
Philip Bloom (DoP, The Insider, If I Were Prime Minister)
Peter Hawley (Director, Chair film department, Flashpoint Academy)
Steven Dadouche (DP, Student & RED owner)
These are not your everyday dinner table conversations, so sit down and dine with these industry movers and shakers where talking film is their family business. Follow the fun, food and repartee with FilmFellas. Subscribe to the show or podcast and immediately be informed when new shows arrive. Download to your PDA or phone via iTunes or watch in full screen HD on our Vimeo Channel, zacutovideo.com/
A Zacuto Production.
New windows are being installed in our house today, so it’s freezing. We had to retreat to the downstairs family room and turn up the heat. I’m on a laptop, which doesn’t contain any of my photos, so I created this one in photobooth. Not the most sophisticated image in the world, but it works OK for my little essay that follows.
While down here, I read an article in the New York Times about how Flickr is on the decline. When it comes to sharing photos as part of social networking, Facebook is giving Flickr a thrashing (sidenote: having been thrashed seems to be the origin of the term “a checkered past”). Way more people are using Facebook to share photos about their lives.
On a positive note, people who are seriously interested in photography are more inclined to use Flickr. Nevertheless, that isn’t going to generate nearly as much revenue as the “photo sharing social network for everyone” that Flickr claims to be. The people running Flickr must know they’re in trouble, even though, according to the NY Times article, they still want to give the impression that Flickr is like friends and family sitting on the living room couch, talking about photos.
Did I just say, “Talking about photos?” Yes I did, but to be quite honest, I see very little of that happening in flickr, even among the people who are serious about photography. Instead I see lots of terse and mundane comments, which has mostly been the case for the 5 years I’ve been on flickr.
Rather than it truly being a social network where people, including those serious about photography, are discussing photos, I see flickr more as a kind of competition or popularity contest. Who gets the most views, favs, explore hits, and comments, regardless of how valuable those comments are. I see it more as a “recognition network” than truly a “social network.” Besides being a good photographer, in order to get that recognition, one also needs to be good at the flickr “recognition” game. Online you’ll find lots of advice about how to be a flickr superstar, but very little about discussing photos.
Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
www.visualcomplexity.com/vc/project_details.cfm?id=634&am...
Burak Arikan is an artist and researcher who focuses on creating networked systems that evolve with the interactions of people and machines. He has also been previously featured in VC. One of his latest pieces has been an experiment with the Twitter API, where he tracked the growth of his Twitter network over a period of 3 weeks. Burak was trying to understand how connections and particular clusters might expand or contract over time. The first image is a portrait of Burak's Twitter graph on the first week of the experiment, when he was following 80 people. Burak only mapped the interconnections between friends, removing himself from the picture, and then labeled the 6 main clusters: "MIT", "silicon valley", "web programming", "generative art", "Istanbul", and "web business tr (Turkey)". As he explains: "The silicon valley cluster is large and dense compared to others. The MIT cluster is almost like a clique (every person connected to every other). Generative art is quite close to Silicon Valley, mostly bridged through the user neb. Obviously the Turkish web business cluster has many connections to the Silicon Valley, techcrunch being a major bridge here. The web programming cluster is very small, surprisingly it is connected to Silicon Valley only through the user al3x, who works at Twitter". To test the importance of key bridging users, Burak decided to remove them and see if the graph still hold together. Many of these changes are represented on his map of week 3 (second image) where more bridges and denser clusters are discernible within his network of 158 people. Apart from a careful analysis of some of the patterns emerging in this experiment, which can be further explored in his blog post, Burak poses an important question worth considering: "Do these people mind abo
Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
Sorry about two
Screenshots in two days. But how
Overzichtelijk!
Spend a lot of the day staring at monitors. But had a nice break doing a voice-over session with Michelle for the socnet. I have to create a short 2-3 minute animated video that explains social networking to those of us that don't work in social networks. After being turned down by a few people because of the tight timeline and budget, I think I've found someone. The guy who did the animations for Supersize Me! He seems like a great guy on the phone, and hopefully this will happen.
In the meantime, while my attempt to watch a movie a night, in addition to outlining, hasn't panned out... at least I'm outlining. Tonight marks day 3. Day 1 was a general overview. Day 2 was Act 1 ("Spring"). And today will hopefully be the first half of Act 2 ("Summer"). Though if I only get through half of it, it's all right. Fortunately, a week has 7 days.
And 7 martinis.
I'd like to end with a quote from the late, great George Carlin who died last night (I'm also stealing this from the blog lonelysandwich.com):
"The most unfair thing about life is the way it ends. I mean, life is tough. It takes up a lot of your time. What do you get at the end of it? A Death! What’s that, a bonus? I think the life cycle is all backwards. You should die first, get it out of the way. Then you live in an old age home. You get kicked out when you’re too young, you get a gold watch, you go to work. You work forty years until you’re young enough to enjoy your retirement. You do drugs, alcohol, you party, you get ready for high school. You go to grade school, you become a kid, you play, you have no responsibilities, you become a little baby, you go back into the womb, you spend your last nine months floating …and you finish off as an orgasm."
The Social Couple - 2013
Con: Lisa Baldi e Paolo Moznich
Soggetto: Michele Leccese
Musica: Luca Francini
Regia: Stefano Masi
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Ambassador Roemer chatted with American Center Facebook fans at a special screening of The Social Network, on Wednesday, Feb. 28. Speaking before the movie, Ambassador thanked the more than 30,000 young Indians who communicate with the U.S. Embassy via social media from around India.
It was the Movies theme for Week 7 of the X Factor Live shows with Little Mix stealing the show and now seems to be the nation's favourite. Clocking up more YouTube video views than any other contestant, they're social following has been supercharged, but more importantly, it's matched by their voting fans.
Unfortunately, Craig Colton and Amelia Lily didn't weren't so lucky, left in the bottom two for the sing off. Eventually, we witnessed a deadlock from the judges leaving it up to the voting public for the first time. Although Craig has more followers than Amelia Lily, her growth since returning and specifically for the last week was greater than his. Did Amelia's return and the drama around it give her the edge? Possibly.
As we enter the quarter finals with only three live shows left and five contestants in the running; looking at the raw social media statistics tells us that Marcus Collins, Amelia Lily and Little Mix look to be the final three to fight it out. With Little Mix the bookies favourite this week, can you call it?
Love it. Fast pace dialogue, engaging story, and it shows us how thin the line is between friend and enemy.
Comment survivre aux réseaux sociaux ? #socialnetwork #survival #topten #deaf #blind #combinaison #nbc #attaque #personnelle #séparer #pseudo #collage #lyonart
From Left: Chef Joe Dugan, Jens Bogehegn, Scott Lynch, Matt Kelly, Dawn Triplett, Patrick Fee, Kris Williams, Joe Swanberg, Susan Buice, Joe DeJulius, Steve Weiss
Cast Two: MUMBLECORE AND MORE
FilmFellas gets to the center of this independent film movement. These webisodes explore directing styles, budgets, roles, acting, paths to distribution, web business models, credit card debt and more.
Steve Weiss (Director, Zacuto product designer)
Joe Swanberg (Director, Kissing on the Mouth, Hannah Takes the Stairs)
Susan Buice (Director, Four Eyed Monsters)
Kris Williams (Young American Bodies)
Come watch the FilmFellas series at www.zacuto.com/filmfellas