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During my keynote presentation at the Durham Blackboard Users conference (7th January 2014) I asked the audience to draw the 'architecture of participation' for their organisation.
More about architectures of participation here.
(Created with fd's Flickr Toys)
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I'm trying to decide which of my photos (if any!) might be attractive for hip, urban, youngish potential buyers as framed prints since I might get lucky and be able to put up one or two in an upcoming expo in a café in Paris.
If you have a minute please have a look at this set and leave me some feedback. Feel free to even suggest other photos you might have seen in my stream. Either way I'd much appreciate you taking the time! :)
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~ Basics ~
Real Name: Dean Horace
Alias: Feedback
Age: 60, appears 30
Gender: Male
Height: 6’ 3”
Weight: 201
Eyes: Normally blue but red when channeling energy
Hair Color / Style: Red and flared up
Distinguishing Features: Wooden Sandals and Buddhist prayer beads
~ Attributes ~
Intelligence ***
Wits ***
Resolve *****
Strength **
Dexterity **
Stamina *****
Presence ***
Manipulation **
Composure *****
~ Skills ~
Academics ****
Computer
Crafts
Investigation
Medicine *
Science ***
Athletics *****
Brawl
Firearms
Larceny
Stealth
Weaponry
Empathy ****
Intimidation
Persuasion *****
Socialize ****
Streetwise ***
Subterfuge *
~ Self ~
Powers:
➢Healing Factor****
➢> Retributive Strike (Mirror Energy)***
➢> Retributive Strike (Force)***
Weakness : Pacifist, he will not willfully engage in combat. He would remain put and accept the ravages of hate others would bestow upon him. However altruistic in nature, he’s willing to use his own body to shield others from harm.
Personality: The dean is a very laid back individual, a by product of sorts from the hippy age and the time period that he grew up on. He abhors violence and looks down upon those that resort to it with great disappointment. Dean encourages the pupils of the school to seek less violent and alternative measures to solve situations. Though he is aware that not all share his peaceful viewpoints so he is careful not to come down too hard upon those that falter on the path of peace.
History:
Born in 1948, young dean had experience the end of the Second Great War and lived through the road to recovery. However, he was a happy boy with one minor difference compare to his childhood friends he healed abnormally fast. Dean’s healing factor has always been apart of him as far back as he could remember. His wounds always healed quicker than the other kids, which was a good thing since he loved to roughhouse with his friends and father growing up. His early year progressed normally and he was quite a happy content kid.
Upon growing older and graduating high school, Dean applied to and was accepted into Kent State University to study philosophy. Sadly, while he attended classes, the Vietnam War was progressing. Sickened by the violence and loss of human life on both sides, Dean couldn’t understand how the lessons of WWII could be ignored so soon. Who carried about the communists? Their philosophy didn’t matter. Knowing something had to be done, Dean along with others from the campus gathered to protest the war, the date was May 4 1970. The National Guard came in to stop the protest and all hell broke loose. Student’s forgetting why there were gathered began attacking the guards with rocks which prompted a volley of tear gas. Things continued to get out of hand and ended up with the horrifying sounds of gunfire erupting over campus.
Dean was in the midst of the carnage when it happened. A sudden burning pain tears its way through his chest. Falling onto his knees, blood began leaking from a bullet hole in his chest. By the graces of god, his wound began to close thanks to his healing factor. However, the man who fired the gun collapsed onto his knees as well, holding an identical spot on his chest. The man stared at dean with wide eyes a she was bleeding from a shallow bullet hole. The scary part was, no bullet had been fired at the guard.
Dean’s very own body had unleashed its own Eye for an Eye philosophy on the National Guard member. From that day on, any violence received by his body would be unleashed back upon the attacker. As time went on and Dean became the victim of other attacks for his protests and viewpoints, his body developed new ways to protect itself while lashing out on its own. In time, people recognized his abilities and dubbed him Feedback.
~ Additional Information ~[/b]
This Power comes in two variations, but in essence it is the ability to return punishment received to its sender. Although it does not function against overwhelming onslaughts of pure punishment, this Power can ensure that a mutant's attackers regret their decision to throw down. The Energy variant is a Social Power, while the Force variant is a Physical Power. No roll is required in most cases for either variant.
Variation: Mirror Energy- instead of returning the same sort of energy back to its source, this variation returns a different sort (the opposite, if possible)- thus Iceman would find himself blasted by heat, and Dagger would be struck by Balefire. If there is no obvious opposite, then use Energy Force or Heat. This variation costs two freebie or experience points per Rank.
* Force- this variant functions against physical attacks, including blunt force trauma, cutting attacks, and kinetic energy attacks such as Telekinesis, Energy Emission: Kinetic Force, and Sound Generation. Instead of the mutant suffering the damage from the attack, the source of the assault will suffer.
¥ The mutant can return up to 2 Health Levels of damage back to its source. The mutant need not soak this damage. If more than this amount is inflicted, then the mutant must soak ALL of the damage, and none of it is reflected.
¥¥ The mutant can return up to 3 Health Levels of damage.
¥¥¥ The mutant can return up to 4 Health Levels.
¥¥¥¥ The mutant can return up to 5 Health Levels.
¥¥¥¥¥ The mutant can return up to 6 Health Levels.
¥¥¥¥¥ ¥ The mutant can return up to 8 Health Levels.
¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥ Ten Health Levels.
¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥ Twelve Health Levels.
¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥ Fourteen Health Levels.
¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥¥ Twenty Health Levels.
Healing Factor (Physical) [AN]
This ability can be an extremely powerful one- although it is not a directly damaging power, it can allow a mutant to stay in the fight for the long haul. Variations of this power can even allow regeneration of limbs, etc. Wolverine, Sabretooth, Deadpool... all have Healing Factors. Usually, no roll is required apart from the occasional Stamina check.
¥ The character can heal one non-aggravated Health Level/round, with concentration.
¥¥ The character can heal one non-aggravated Health level per round involuntarily, so long as he is conscious.
¥¥¥ The character recovers one Health level of non-aggravated damage per round involuntarily, or either one level of aggravated damage or three levels of normal damage per round with concentration. If the character is unconscious, only one Health level per hour is healed (non-aggravated).
¥¥¥¥ The mutant recovers Health as per level three, except that the unconscious rate of healing is as the normal involuntary rate, and aggravated damage is healed at the rate of one level per day.
¥¥¥¥¥ Mutant recovers his Stamina in Health levels with concentration if damage is non-aggravated, or up to three levels of aggravated damage per round. He rolls his Stamina (diff 6) to determine the number of Health levels healed involuntarily per round (minimum of one). He will heal one Health level of aggravated damage per round involuntarily. Mutant will recover from death unless precautions are taken.
¥¥¥¥¥ ¥ Mutant recovers his Stamina in Health levels per round, voluntarily or involuntarily, if the damage is not aggravated, or up to three levels of aggravated damage the same way.
¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥ The mutant does not require his brain and heart to recover from death, merely requiring a substantial (20%) portion of his body to do so. This portion cannot have been denatured by aggravated damage (heat, acid, etc.)
¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥ So long as the mutant has at least 5% of his body, he can recover from death. This portion need not be all of one piece, so long as it is contiguous, and it can be any formerly living part, including blood or other body parts that contain the full genetic information.
¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥ So long as the mutant has at least one undamaged cell, he can recover from death. The cell needs to contain all of the mutant's genetic information, so sperm or ova aren't going to get the job done.
¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥¥ So long as a single, undamaged strand of DNA exists, the mutant can recover from death. This may take a while; the strand will act as a virus, roaming about until it finds some appropriate living matter. Once it finds that, the DNA will rebuild the mutant (to the detriment of the host).
Cadet Zachariah Warhus, from Southern Illinois University, after he completed his weapons training at George Blair Range at Fort Knox, June 16, 2019. | Photo by Jodi Moffett, CST Public Affairs Office
feedback with a slight zoom...
yes, my cusor says "what?".
you can blame a certain someone for that ^^
Sie vermissen ein bestimmtes Buch in unserem Bestand? In unserer Feedbackbox können Sie Anschaffungsvorschläge machen und uns Kritik oder allgemeine Rückmeldungen geben. Ihr Feedback hilft uns, die Bibliothek in Ihrem Sinne kontinuierlich zu verbessern.
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The toaster has a bad example of feedback. The knob that adjusts how long it toasts stays where it is during the toasting and you can never tell when the toast is about to be ready until it jumps out.
You Share We Care 2018 is a project organised by RMIT VN Student Council - SGS to encourage students to give feedback on various topics.
Feedback received for TEDxTempe 2010 from @heisenthought on Twitter:
During my keynote presentation at the Durham Blackboard Users conference (7th January 2014) I asked the audience to draw the 'architecture of participation' for their organisation.
More about architectures of participation here.
I came across this in my archive recently: in the eighties I had the original pinned up in my office in the UK. It still makes me smile.
Anyone know who the artist is, or where it came from? Possibly "Punch".
It turns out it was "The UTNE Reader"
During my keynote presentation at the Durham Blackboard Users conference (7th January 2014) I asked the audience to draw the 'architecture of participation' for their organisation.
More about architectures of participation here.
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