Twitter for Academics
1. @Andy_tattersall
2. Image used under a Creative Commons: Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0) Todd Ryburn
3. Administering Twitter • You need to understand why you are taking it • You need to understand the benefits • You need to understand the side-effects • You need to understand that the benefits may take time in coming • You may need two courses Do not feel pressured to use it - as it won’t work
4. Navigating Twitter
5. Twitter Myth #1 You can’t say much in 140 characters “Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” “Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misguided men.” “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”
6. The make up of a Tweet
7. Lingo • RT – Retweet • MT – Modified Tweet • Reply – a conversation in Twitter • @ A mention of someone/organisation • # Tag – A stream of topic • DM – Direct Message • Block – To block a user • Favourite – To mark for later reference • URL Shortener - www.bit.ly • Follow – To follow someone’s Tweets
8. Following
9. Lists
10. Twitter Myth #2 Twitter is only used by sports people and celebs
11. Netiquette • Watch what you say (10 second rule) - What goes on the web stays on the Web
12. What to Tweet? • Publication (book, report, paper, proceedings) • Presentation • Idea • Resource • Conversation (ice breaker) • Funding Bid • Professional achievement • Link • Automate (Twentyfeet, Paper.li)
13. Who to follow? • @EmergencyMedBMJ 11k followers • @trishgreenhalgh 7k followers • @NICEcomms 28k followers • @EM_Journal 5k followers • @wellcometrust 40k followers • @LSEimpactBlog 10k followers • @richardhorton1 (Lancet) 7k followers
14. Conference Tweeting • Use the # tag • Create a filter to follow the proceedings • Advertise your presentation • Introduce yourself to others – ‘Tweetup’ • Get involved in the conversation • Carry the conversation on beyond the conference
15. Twitter Myth #4 “Twitter is a time sinkhole” Not if you want it to be
16. Tweeting Tools
17. Find something interesting? Tweet it
18. Altmetric it
19. Go Mobile
20. Go Tweet
Twitter for Academics
1. @Andy_tattersall
2. Image used under a Creative Commons: Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0) Todd Ryburn
3. Administering Twitter • You need to understand why you are taking it • You need to understand the benefits • You need to understand the side-effects • You need to understand that the benefits may take time in coming • You may need two courses Do not feel pressured to use it - as it won’t work
4. Navigating Twitter
5. Twitter Myth #1 You can’t say much in 140 characters “Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” “Our scientific power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided missiles and misguided men.” “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.”
6. The make up of a Tweet
7. Lingo • RT – Retweet • MT – Modified Tweet • Reply – a conversation in Twitter • @ A mention of someone/organisation • # Tag – A stream of topic • DM – Direct Message • Block – To block a user • Favourite – To mark for later reference • URL Shortener - www.bit.ly • Follow – To follow someone’s Tweets
8. Following
9. Lists
10. Twitter Myth #2 Twitter is only used by sports people and celebs
11. Netiquette • Watch what you say (10 second rule) - What goes on the web stays on the Web
12. What to Tweet? • Publication (book, report, paper, proceedings) • Presentation • Idea • Resource • Conversation (ice breaker) • Funding Bid • Professional achievement • Link • Automate (Twentyfeet, Paper.li)
13. Who to follow? • @EmergencyMedBMJ 11k followers • @trishgreenhalgh 7k followers • @NICEcomms 28k followers • @EM_Journal 5k followers • @wellcometrust 40k followers • @LSEimpactBlog 10k followers • @richardhorton1 (Lancet) 7k followers
14. Conference Tweeting • Use the # tag • Create a filter to follow the proceedings • Advertise your presentation • Introduce yourself to others – ‘Tweetup’ • Get involved in the conversation • Carry the conversation on beyond the conference
15. Twitter Myth #4 “Twitter is a time sinkhole” Not if you want it to be
16. Tweeting Tools
17. Find something interesting? Tweet it
18. Altmetric it
19. Go Mobile
20. Go Tweet
In this study, we have to project the airline travel for the next 12 months .The dataset used here is SASHELP.AIR which is Airline data and contains two variables – DATE and AIR( labeled as International Airline Travel).It contains the data from JAN 1949 to DEC 1960.
Past Present and Future of Data Processing in Apache HadoopDataWorks Summit
Apache Hadoop MapReduce has undergone a complete re-haul to emerge as Apache Hadoop YARN, a generic compute fabric to support MapReduce and other application paradigms. This really changes the game to recast Hadoop as a much more powerful data-processing system. As a result Hadoop looks very different from itself 12 months ago. Now, ever wonder what it might look like in 12 months or 24 months or longer? This talk will take you through some ideas for YARN itself and the many myriad ways it`s really moving the needle for MapReduce, Pig, Hive, Cascading and other data-processing tools in the Hadoop ecosystem.
presentation given at the ISACA EuroCACS 2015 conference in Copenhagen on why organisations should apply Privacy by Design in their Internet of Everything solutions.