Havas Media's trend profile on Life Tracking and the Quantified Self. Through today’s technologies, life tracking allows people to measure and monitor the activities in their daily lives, from eating and sleeping to exercising and shopping.
View the video: http://youtu.be/pEpNTFU0C0o
Life tracking systems include wearable computing – sensors, trackers and cameras embedded in shoes, wristbands, hats, clothing, etc. – and connected smart devices – mobile phones, monitors, home appliances and entertainment systems. Using these systems, one can measure, monitor and visualize performance; optimize daily activities to be healthier and more productive; make more informed purchase decisions; and manage social reputation.
For marketers, there are many areas of opportunity to become a useful part of people’s lives through life tracking.
A cool story about websites and the proliferation of tags. This is geared towards marketers and how they can perform their job more effectively with a tag manager. For more information, visit www.impactradius.com.
A contrarian view of Tag Management SystemsStéphane Hamel
Presented at eMetrics San Francisco 2015.
While everyone believe Tag Management Systems are the next best thing since sliced bread (at least, TMS vendors believe so!), I offer a different point of view based on my own experience and feedback gleaned from clients and consultants.
A cool story about websites and the proliferation of tags. This is geared towards marketers and how they can perform their job more effectively with a tag manager. For more information, visit www.impactradius.com.
A contrarian view of Tag Management SystemsStéphane Hamel
Presented at eMetrics San Francisco 2015.
While everyone believe Tag Management Systems are the next best thing since sliced bread (at least, TMS vendors believe so!), I offer a different point of view based on my own experience and feedback gleaned from clients and consultants.
Presence - The key to achieving wellbeing, is knowing (start up concept idea)Franki Chamaki
The presentation will show
1. My ability to take a complex wicked problem and come up with a viable business solutions
2. Apply customer-centric approach to solution discover
3. Exact insights to help with solution design
4. How to identify and leverage external IP to accelerate start up endeavors
5. How to validate ideas by applying Lean Start up framework.
6. How to test business models to discover new ways to generate value
What are the biggest trends in the wearables market today? Jen Quinlan, Wearables Specialist, explores the market from makers' and consumers' perspectives to identify areas of opportunity and misstep.
If you'd like to contact Jen directly, please find her on Twitter (@quirkyinsider).
Quantified Self - The Human App InstrumentEnola Labs
The quantified self economy features several activity monitoring devices as well as hundreds of applications that can track several aspects of your life. Atomic Axis believes that the problem with these applications is that they are disparate. They function and churn data for an individual independent of the other facets of human existence. Sure, an app can tell you how long you slept last night and can even illustrate your sleep cycle in an impressive visualization and analytical interface—but can it extrapolate that information to tell you how that data will affect your mood, efficiency and behavior throughout the day?
The overall theme of their vision is that organizations are finding interesting ways to gather data and use that data to make predictions. As soon as we are able to find a meaningful way to correlate quantified self data, can we use that data in an effort to solve large scale health issues? Just as Google was able to predict flu trends using aggregated search queries, we can use aggregated health information to make certain predictions that can improve individual and certain demographic’s quality of life, reduce healthcare expenditures by understanding exactly where funds need to be allocated, and aid health professionals in their effort to detect, prevent and remediate any potential large scale health issue.
Quantified Self: How digital technologies can help change behaviors (and mayb...Dana Allen-Greil
How does self-tracking work? Why do people do it? And why should we care? My thoughts on a digital trend that might help change the world for the better using technology (sensors + mobile + social media + gamification).
Quantified Self: The what, the why and the brave new futureAlja Isakovic
Slides from a lecture on the quantified self trend, prepared for communications students in May 2016. The lecture is based on a series of blog posts I wrote on the topic: https://medium.com/exploring-the-quantified-self
Lifelogging is the practice of tracking personal data generated by our own behavioral activities in continuous digital streams. As it is slowly becoming mainstream, it raises a lot of intriguing questions and thoughts.
Lifelogging and self-tracking are altering the Futures of:
Memory,
Remembering,
Forgetting,
Storytelling,
Privacy,
Law enforcement,
Governance,
Bodies,
and our very Humanness.
This report explores these questions, thoughts and futures.
Top 10 smart fitness gadgets that actually work.pdfmisha khan
Top 10 smart fitness gadgets that actually work
Weight loss advice shared by Steve Miller in 2019
Losing weight doesn't come easy to some as it does to others, and it can be a minefield sifting through the thousands of diets on the internet to find one that works bet for you. With this in mind, many people tend to fall not the trap of just restricting their calories to the point where they are not eating in order to lose weight, a common practice but not a healthy one.
This not only makes a person hungrier, but it also slows down their metabolism.
Instead, doctors have suggested that cutting carbohydrates could help, but not for obvious reasons.
Dr. David Ludwig, a professor of nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health, explained to TODAY: "While people can lose weight over the short term, very few people can manage to ignore their hunger and fight through those metabolic problems to maintain their weight loss."
Instead, he and his colleagues suggest a new approach.
READ MORE: Diet: Expert warns against common mistake
Weight loss: Doctor suggests different approach to losing weight - 'remarkably healthy' (Image: GETTY)
They call it the "carbohydrate-insulin model" and it aims to control insulin levels.
"Insulin — you can think of (it) as the ultimate fat cell fertiliser," Dr Ludwig said.
"Too much insulin, fat cells get programmed to hoard calories.
"So, there aren’t too many calories in the blood stream and that’s why we get hungry."
DON'T MISS...Diet: 5 myths of Military Diet that could have adverse effects [LATEST]Dr Michael Mosley shares 3 alternatives to help cut down on carbs [ADVICE]Fitness: Best way to warm-up for strength training [HEALTH NEWS]
Low-carb diets hold a similar ethos, in some cases leading to a reduction in appetite due to the increased protein and healthy fats, such as avocados and nuts, consumed.
They usually involve cutting out refined carbs, including bread, rice and sweets.
Dr Ludwig went on to explained that the popular ketogenic diet is a more "extreme" form that restricts carbs to between 30 and 50 grams a day.
But he noted it is often a challenge for many as some foods contain a high number of carbs, such as a single bagel which has 48 grams.
Low-carb diets involve cutting out refined carbs, including bread, rice and sweets (Image: GETTY)
Jeff Volek, a professor in the department of human sciences at Ohio State University, said: "People have a remarkably healthy response to these diets.
"The body responds in a really elegant way.
"When you limit carbohydrates, the body gets really good at burning its own body fat because it doesn’t have a lot of sugar to burn for fuel."
WHITE PAPER: How safe is your quantified self? from the Symantec Security Res...Symantec
Fueled by technological advances and social factors, the quantified self movement has experienced rapid growth. Quantified self, also known as self-tracking, aims to improve lifestyle and achievements by measuring and analyzing key performance data across a range of activities.
Symantec has found security risks in a large number of self tracking devices and applications. One of the most significant findings was that all of the wearable activity-tracking devices examined, including those from leading brands, are vulnerable to location tracking.
Our researchers built a number of scanning devices using Raspberry Pi mini computers and, by taking them out to athletic events and busy public spaces, found that it was possible to track individuals.
Symantec also found vulnerabilities in how personal data is stored and managed, such as passwords being transmitted in clear text and poor session management. As we collect, store, and share more data about ourselves, do we ever pause to consider the risks and implications of sharing this additional data?
Mobile World Congress 2019: 6 Key Factors that Will Change the PresentHavas Media
Imagine a horse-drawn cart traveling along a stony track. At this point, we pose three questions. What speed could it be going at? What is the load that it can take? How long might it take to accelerate? Now imagine a large five-lane motorway, full of powerful cars, with almost instantaneous acceleration. Here we again pose the three questions above. The difference in the answers is the essence of the Mobile World Congress.
Havas Village Spain reports back from this year's event and looks at how 5G is going to change the way we understand connectivity and opens up a world of possibilities. Machines will have more autonomy and the challenge will be in seeing how the human-machine combination will lead us to a more sustainable and connected future.
There are endless statistics about the overwhelming volume of media & advertising that reaches our eyes and ears every day.
The first chapter in a series, The Power of Sound uncovers emerging opportunities for brands to use sound—whether music or voice, melodic or informational—to build meaningful connections with people across cultures and categories.
#meaningfulmedia
Presence - The key to achieving wellbeing, is knowing (start up concept idea)Franki Chamaki
The presentation will show
1. My ability to take a complex wicked problem and come up with a viable business solutions
2. Apply customer-centric approach to solution discover
3. Exact insights to help with solution design
4. How to identify and leverage external IP to accelerate start up endeavors
5. How to validate ideas by applying Lean Start up framework.
6. How to test business models to discover new ways to generate value
What are the biggest trends in the wearables market today? Jen Quinlan, Wearables Specialist, explores the market from makers' and consumers' perspectives to identify areas of opportunity and misstep.
If you'd like to contact Jen directly, please find her on Twitter (@quirkyinsider).
Quantified Self - The Human App InstrumentEnola Labs
The quantified self economy features several activity monitoring devices as well as hundreds of applications that can track several aspects of your life. Atomic Axis believes that the problem with these applications is that they are disparate. They function and churn data for an individual independent of the other facets of human existence. Sure, an app can tell you how long you slept last night and can even illustrate your sleep cycle in an impressive visualization and analytical interface—but can it extrapolate that information to tell you how that data will affect your mood, efficiency and behavior throughout the day?
The overall theme of their vision is that organizations are finding interesting ways to gather data and use that data to make predictions. As soon as we are able to find a meaningful way to correlate quantified self data, can we use that data in an effort to solve large scale health issues? Just as Google was able to predict flu trends using aggregated search queries, we can use aggregated health information to make certain predictions that can improve individual and certain demographic’s quality of life, reduce healthcare expenditures by understanding exactly where funds need to be allocated, and aid health professionals in their effort to detect, prevent and remediate any potential large scale health issue.
Quantified Self: How digital technologies can help change behaviors (and mayb...Dana Allen-Greil
How does self-tracking work? Why do people do it? And why should we care? My thoughts on a digital trend that might help change the world for the better using technology (sensors + mobile + social media + gamification).
Quantified Self: The what, the why and the brave new futureAlja Isakovic
Slides from a lecture on the quantified self trend, prepared for communications students in May 2016. The lecture is based on a series of blog posts I wrote on the topic: https://medium.com/exploring-the-quantified-self
Lifelogging is the practice of tracking personal data generated by our own behavioral activities in continuous digital streams. As it is slowly becoming mainstream, it raises a lot of intriguing questions and thoughts.
Lifelogging and self-tracking are altering the Futures of:
Memory,
Remembering,
Forgetting,
Storytelling,
Privacy,
Law enforcement,
Governance,
Bodies,
and our very Humanness.
This report explores these questions, thoughts and futures.
Top 10 smart fitness gadgets that actually work.pdfmisha khan
Top 10 smart fitness gadgets that actually work
Weight loss advice shared by Steve Miller in 2019
Losing weight doesn't come easy to some as it does to others, and it can be a minefield sifting through the thousands of diets on the internet to find one that works bet for you. With this in mind, many people tend to fall not the trap of just restricting their calories to the point where they are not eating in order to lose weight, a common practice but not a healthy one.
This not only makes a person hungrier, but it also slows down their metabolism.
Instead, doctors have suggested that cutting carbohydrates could help, but not for obvious reasons.
Dr. David Ludwig, a professor of nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health, explained to TODAY: "While people can lose weight over the short term, very few people can manage to ignore their hunger and fight through those metabolic problems to maintain their weight loss."
Instead, he and his colleagues suggest a new approach.
READ MORE: Diet: Expert warns against common mistake
Weight loss: Doctor suggests different approach to losing weight - 'remarkably healthy' (Image: GETTY)
They call it the "carbohydrate-insulin model" and it aims to control insulin levels.
"Insulin — you can think of (it) as the ultimate fat cell fertiliser," Dr Ludwig said.
"Too much insulin, fat cells get programmed to hoard calories.
"So, there aren’t too many calories in the blood stream and that’s why we get hungry."
DON'T MISS...Diet: 5 myths of Military Diet that could have adverse effects [LATEST]Dr Michael Mosley shares 3 alternatives to help cut down on carbs [ADVICE]Fitness: Best way to warm-up for strength training [HEALTH NEWS]
Low-carb diets hold a similar ethos, in some cases leading to a reduction in appetite due to the increased protein and healthy fats, such as avocados and nuts, consumed.
They usually involve cutting out refined carbs, including bread, rice and sweets.
Dr Ludwig went on to explained that the popular ketogenic diet is a more "extreme" form that restricts carbs to between 30 and 50 grams a day.
But he noted it is often a challenge for many as some foods contain a high number of carbs, such as a single bagel which has 48 grams.
Low-carb diets involve cutting out refined carbs, including bread, rice and sweets (Image: GETTY)
Jeff Volek, a professor in the department of human sciences at Ohio State University, said: "People have a remarkably healthy response to these diets.
"The body responds in a really elegant way.
"When you limit carbohydrates, the body gets really good at burning its own body fat because it doesn’t have a lot of sugar to burn for fuel."
WHITE PAPER: How safe is your quantified self? from the Symantec Security Res...Symantec
Fueled by technological advances and social factors, the quantified self movement has experienced rapid growth. Quantified self, also known as self-tracking, aims to improve lifestyle and achievements by measuring and analyzing key performance data across a range of activities.
Symantec has found security risks in a large number of self tracking devices and applications. One of the most significant findings was that all of the wearable activity-tracking devices examined, including those from leading brands, are vulnerable to location tracking.
Our researchers built a number of scanning devices using Raspberry Pi mini computers and, by taking them out to athletic events and busy public spaces, found that it was possible to track individuals.
Symantec also found vulnerabilities in how personal data is stored and managed, such as passwords being transmitted in clear text and poor session management. As we collect, store, and share more data about ourselves, do we ever pause to consider the risks and implications of sharing this additional data?
Mobile World Congress 2019: 6 Key Factors that Will Change the PresentHavas Media
Imagine a horse-drawn cart traveling along a stony track. At this point, we pose three questions. What speed could it be going at? What is the load that it can take? How long might it take to accelerate? Now imagine a large five-lane motorway, full of powerful cars, with almost instantaneous acceleration. Here we again pose the three questions above. The difference in the answers is the essence of the Mobile World Congress.
Havas Village Spain reports back from this year's event and looks at how 5G is going to change the way we understand connectivity and opens up a world of possibilities. Machines will have more autonomy and the challenge will be in seeing how the human-machine combination will lead us to a more sustainable and connected future.
There are endless statistics about the overwhelming volume of media & advertising that reaches our eyes and ears every day.
The first chapter in a series, The Power of Sound uncovers emerging opportunities for brands to use sound—whether music or voice, melodic or informational—to build meaningful connections with people across cultures and categories.
#meaningfulmedia
CES 2019: From Consumer Electronics to Connected ExperiencesHavas Media
This year marked the 52nd year of CES– one of the most highly anticipated product launch platforms in our industry. With 2.9MM square feet of exhibition space, over 4,500 exhibiting companies flocked to Las Vegas to showcase their brands and products to consumers across every market. There were over 188,000 attendees from all over the globe, including our Havas digital strategy team, who curated the most meaningful insights and takeaways for our clients and colleagues.
Since the launch of smartphones circa 2007, the level of expectation from CES increases each year as marketers and media practitioners seek the next game-changing technologies. While it may not have been home to the next iPhone, Google or Amazon disruptor (yet), CES 2019 went beyond gadgets, robots, and cool toys.
Certain key themes have remained of top interest over the years, and they continue to build momentum in the marketplace: smart homes, voice, retail, IoT — all of which ladder up to connected experiences. Connected devices have given brands unparalleled access to consumers by shortening the distance between the consumer and what they want to engage with or buy. Conversely, they have increased the distance between brands and the consumers as multiple connections also bring the challenge of holding their attention. Connected devices and consumers enable richer opportunities for brands only when the right ecosystem powers that opportunity. Furthermore, consumers expect to get what they want in their immediate context, at their precise moment of need.
For brands, this change in the power dynamic has raised the importance of effectively and efficiently interacting with consumers across each touchpoint. To be able to distinguish themselves and drive long-term loyalty valuable consumers, they need to build a long-lasting authentic connection. This is dependent on their ability to maintain a consistent and always-on presence in front of their consumers with or without paid media dollars or exposure. In a world where marketing dollars continue to shrink, that is no small feat; however, the mandate is quite clear: To deliver the best digital marketing solutions, brands must simply find the maximum outcome from their investments. And it is with this mandate in mind that we navigated CES 2019 to draw inspiration from what was showcased on the floor and build meaningful themes for our clients and partners to share in the boardroom.
Cannes 2018: Six Takeaways from the Festival of CreativityHavas Media
This year’s Cannes Lions Festival took a back-to-basics approach with a renewed spirit of creativity. It was a smaller festival but still filled with big ideas.
Here are our major takeaways.
Havas Media Singapore has released its 2018 media and marketing trends, Havas Horizon.
The annual Havas Horizon publication is in conjunction with National University of Singapore’s Institute of System Sciences (NUS-ISS). The team has selected 5 relevant trends for marketers in the region to take note of, which arose from interviews with subject matter experts and includes case studies from forward-looking brands.
Other than a brief description of the trends, readers can also find out what are some of the implications to marketing strategies through our perspective.
The publication also identified some of the executive education courses at NUS-ISS available to working professionals who wish to level up their skills to be future-ready.
Don’t let the breakfast tacos, parties, brand houses, and activations fool you. SXSW is growing up.
The festival has shifted from a place of discovering the next big digital innovation to a place for reflecting on how technology (e.g., AI, AR vs.VR, and Blockchain) can impact society, along with focusing on social responsibility and ethics.
Five days and hundreds of panels later, here’s a look at the trends and emerging tech that’ll be shaping the future.
Last week, more than 3,900 exhibitors gathered in Las Vegas to showcase their latest technology innovations. With over 2.75 million square feet of exhibit space across Las Vegas, CES 2018 was the largest show floor in CES’ 51-year history.
Like years past, CES showcases everything from futuristic robots, autonomous vehicles, and artificial intelligence. This year, however, the true stand-outs were those who invested in real-life application.
We've put together our key takeaways from CES 2018, which cover the most groundbreaking trends and what they mean for brands, marketers, and consumers.
Havas Group Prosumer Report - The Future is FeMaleHavas Media
Gender is a hot-button issue in 2017, with gender-related controversies multiplying around the world. But will there come a time when gender is regarded as no more important than a person’s height, handedness, or hair color? Based on the findings of Havas Group’s recent survey of more than 12,000 people in 32 countries and the accompanying “The Future Is FeMale” report, a nongendered future may be in the cards.
The 32-nation survey, commissioned by the Havas Group and fielded by Market Probe International, sought to measure how far gender equality has come in an era when women in most parts of the world are able to do things once considered the province of men, including work outside the home, earn high school and college degrees, vote, own property, and hold elected office.
For more information on Havas' Prosumer Reports visit: mag.havas.com/prosumer-reports
Last week, nearly 200,000 people gathered in Las Vegas at the 50th annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) to discover revolutionary products and transformational technologies that will have a significant impact on the evolving customer experience.
In a great collaboration between Havas Creative Group and Havas Media Group, we've put together a CES 2017 takeaways deck covering the most groundbreaking inventions, the most influential trends, and what they all mean for brands, marketers, and consumers.
Last week, nearly 200,000 people gathered in Las Vegas at the 50th annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) to discover revolutionary products and transformational technologies that will have a significant impact on the evolving customer experience.
In a great collaboration between Havas Creative Group and Havas Media Group, we've put together a CES 2017 takeaways deck covering the most groundbreaking inventions, the most influential trends, and what they all mean for brands, marketers, and consumers.
From the new wave of technological phenomena to the expansion of creativity in different formats, Cannes has redefined our interpretation of media execution.
We saw larger stunts, smarter tech, more effective applications of data and more OSEP approaches.
With the help of insights from Cannes media jury members - Maria Garrido and Jez Jowett - we have assessed the best trends to develop from the largest festival of the year.
The pace of change in advertising and consumer behavior continues to be frantic and to accelerate, so our annual trip to CES in Las Vegas continues to remind us how, in relative terms, hardware changes more slowly than both software and our expectations. In fact, CES in 2016 didn’t show a revolution in electronics and consumer products, but more of an evolution. The products were similar yet faster, thinner, cheaper and above all else, more connected.
This moment feels like the early stages of a new era, a time when all products are becoming cloud connected, touch screens are everywhere, and all media is digital. Yet it’s not quite the Internet of things — it’s the interim of things. We don’t yet have a complete smart home, we have sophisticated homes that sometimes don’t quite work. We have 3D printers without totally compelling use cases, and robotic body parts that don’t quite make a full humanoid.
The companies succeeding are those that are innovating and collaborating to solve real consumer needs, while staying true to a clear brand purpose. From artificial intelligence and cognitive computing, to drone technologies, virtual reality and biometric sensing, to 8k video and 360 surround sound, there are tremendous opportunities on the horizon.
Please read on to view the ten themes that make up this moment in time.
With special thanks to Rori DuBoff, Jez Jowett, Tom Goodwin and the team at Havas Worldwide.
When will Virtual Reality become Reality? @NED2015 Havas Media
The evolution of virtual reality and its impact upon experiences and escapism.
Is it a fad or is this genuinely going to become the next internet?
What is in place for brands and consumers to now step into another dimension? Is it safe?
Will blended realities become a reality?
What's the VR eco-system?
These topics, themes and opportunities are all explored in this keynote presentation.
There was a time when SXSW set the agenda, but now it seems to reflect it.
Once a focal point of the digital design industry, the event has grown in size and ambition to become a forum for a wide variety of contemporary issues, seemingly random in nature and curated around no clear principles.
Havas has summarized some of the common key themes on display at SXSW, which were reflected more generally as societal trends.
Tech & Media Trends 2015 @ Mobile World Congress with Havas + MobextHavas Media
With more than 50 billion connected devices expected by 2020, the world of mobile continues to evolve way beyond handsets, to include smart appliances, accessories, cars, bikes and almost any object imaginable.
In this new organic marketing world of data-driven connectivity and content-fueled experiences, we find tremendous opportunities for marketers to create more meaningful connections with consumers.
The key trends from Mobile World Congress:
Custom Connectivity & Wearables, Immersive Experiences: Virtual & Augmented Reality, Location-Based Marketing, Mobile Commerce and Biometrics Communications
Mobile World Congress 2014 - Key TakeawaysHavas Media
This year at the MWC, manufacturers, telcos and content providers all seemed to share a common goal: to bring technology and Internet access to every corner in the world. Beyond the bigger and better screens, faster processors, and integration of new functionalities in mobile devices, there was a notable shift in focus from high-end devices to less expensive and more accessible technology.
This document contains the five key areas of focus for 2014 in the mobile industry.
[ See live footage from Mobile World Congress at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_dyLKbZxMNo ]
Havas Media Global Trends: Location-based marketing Havas Media
In the past few years, there has been significant worldwide growth in the number of people using location-based services and corresponding marketer investment in geo targeted advertising and media. We expect this trend to increase exponentially as the ability to deliver on the promise of highly relevant, real-time personal connections between brands, people and communities becomes further realized. In this POV, we explore the technology, media and strategy fueling the opportunities of location-based marketing.
Location-based marketing video: http://youtu.be/-Nv1d9Lylzg
Location-based Marketing (LBM) - Global Media Trends Havas Media
Creating Meaningful Connections through Location Based Marketing. How can we reach consumers at the right time and place with the right message and experiences? We know today’s average consumer is constantly changing location, device, and changing the media type with which they interact. To be relevant to these consumers, we need to keep up with them, adapting and changing marketing content to their realities and environments. The presentation provides an overview of the technology, media and strategy fueling the opportunities of location-based marketing for global and regional brands.
Location-based marketing video: http://youtu.be/-Nv1d9Lylzg
Havas Global Media trends series also includes other reports on slideshare such as: Progressive Screens (multi-screens), Social Shopping and Life Tracking.
13 Trends of 2013 - by Eduardo Mapa Jr, Executive Partner at Havas Media OrtegaHavas Media
Havas Media Ortega Managing Partner Eduardo Mapa Jr. presented '13 Trends of 2013' during the Philippine Association of National Advertisers (PANA)'s General Members Meeting at Hard Rock Cafe, Glorietta, Makati Philippines.
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Safalta Digital marketing institute in Noida, provide complete applications that encompass a huge range of virtual advertising and marketing additives, which includes search engine optimization, virtual communication advertising, pay-per-click on marketing, content material advertising, internet analytics, and greater. These university courses are designed for students who possess a comprehensive understanding of virtual marketing strategies and attributes.Safalta Digital Marketing Institute in Noida is a first choice for young individuals or students who are looking to start their careers in the field of digital advertising. The institute gives specialized courses designed and certification.
for beginners, providing thorough training in areas such as SEO, digital communication marketing, and PPC training in Noida. After finishing the program, students receive the certifications recognised by top different universitie, setting a strong foundation for a successful career in digital marketing.
Normal Labour/ Stages of Labour/ Mechanism of LabourWasim Ak
Normal labor is also termed spontaneous labor, defined as the natural physiological process through which the fetus, placenta, and membranes are expelled from the uterus through the birth canal at term (37 to 42 weeks
Embracing GenAI - A Strategic ImperativePeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
2. Life Tracking: What is it?
Quantified Self
• Tracking activities in your life, surrounding
environments, and social networks to:
• Measure, monitor and visualize your
performance and progress
• Optimize daily activities and behaviors
(exercising, eating, sleeping, etc) to
better enjoy life, be healthier and more
productive
• Make more informed purchase decisions
• Manage and develop your social
reputation
• Life tracking systems include:
• Wearable computing – sensors, trackers
and cameras embedded into clothing,
shoes, hats, wristbands, etc
• Connected smart devices and mobile
applications– mobile phones, monitors,
home appliances, entertainment system
3. Measure your everyday movements
and monitor your calories burned
with an electronic bracelet and
connected smartphone.
Earn fuel points for reaching your goals,
compare your athletic achievements with
others like you, and share your success on
Facebook or other social networks
(Nike Fuelband)
Life Tracking: Mastering your sport
Improve your golf game on over
20,000 courses worldwide-right
from your wrist or belt.
A virtual caddy keeps track of your
scorecards, clubs and key statistics,
so you can view and share them with
friends, and study rounds from the pros
(Motorola, MOTOACTV)
4. At night, measure and improve your
sleep cycles. Wake up in the morning by
a vibrating bracelet alarm.
During the day, log-on to a web
dashboard to track
your steps, calories burned,
and calories eaten.
(Fit Bit)
Life Tracking: Living healthier
Monitor and control blood pressure by
wrapping a device around your arm
and plugging a chord into your phone
to get your numbers.
Get tips on improvements and share
results with your doctor
(Withings)
5. Track moods and behaviors of kids or
adults with autism. View daily patterns
with a visual calendar and
multi-item graphs.
Share individual events or entire screens
with your family members or doctor by
using email or Twitter
(Autism Tracker)
Life Tracking: Managing conditions
Manage your diabetes from your phone;
log in glucose numbers,
carbohydrate consumption, insulin
dosages, and health activities.
Share data with caregivers
and your doctor to get feedback.
(Glucose Buddy, SkyHealth)
6. Keep track of everything you eat and
drink and get rewards.
Turn healthy living into a fun game.
(Foodzy)
Life Tracking: Eating better
Be more conscious of your eating
habits by eating slower. If you east
too fast your fork vibrates to alert you
to slow down.
(HAPIfork)
7. Keep track of the foods in your fridge -
such as expiration dates so you can
reorder fresh items. On your fridge door,
also access customized recipes and
offers based upon what food you buy.
Monitor temperatures to keep your food
as fresh as possible for as
long as possible.
(LG Smart Refrigerator)
Life Tracking: Controlling your home
Unlock or lock your door from your
mobile device.
Share or restrict access to your home
by other people, send notifications
alerting when another user opens the
door, such as your child returning
home from school.
(ADT Pulse)
8. Track energy usage, fuel savings and
your environmental contribution over
time on your smartphone.
Store and share data with other eco-
friendly users online.
(Greencharge)
Life Tracking: Optimizing costs
Manage your money in real time:
automatically organize your spending
into categories—like rent, gas, clothes,
coffee —and visually see where
your money goes in
easy-to-understand charts.
(Mint)
9. Track all of your social activity and
accumulate points for your social
influence score
Based upon your Klout score, get
access to special perks, products or
experiences
(Klout profile)
Life Tracking: Managing social reputation
Record and share your life story
through Facebook timeline:
daily actions, geo-tagged photos,
likes, friendships, events
(Facebook Timeline)
10. Life Tracking: Opportunity
• Sponsor brand challenges through events and programs that encourage
people to take control of their own lives through ongoing tracking.
• Data should be interactive, interesting and easy to understand (graphs,
visuals) and share (forward, post, comment, embed, synchronize)
• Let people compare their individual performance against the collective
through measurements such as points earned, calories burned, miles run,
money saved
• Incentivize sharing of activities amongst friends and like-minded peers by
rewarding most active participants through gamification strategies.
• Provide real-time feedback and recommendations on how people can
further make improvements in their daily trackable activities.
• Connect with people around the emotional value of personal achievements
• Life tracking categories to consider: living healthier, managing conditions,
exercise training and competitive sports, home improvement, cost savings,
educational training, and more sustainable or efficient living.
11. Life Tracking: Key Stats
• The total number of wearable devices with fitness and wellness
applications will grow from 16.2 million in 2011 to 93 million in 2017;
revenue from sports and wellness mobile apps will rise from $123 million in
2010 to $341 million in 2016 (ABI Research 2012)
• 7 in 10 American adults are health self-trackers of some kind and 1 in 5
smartphone owners has a health application (Pew 2013)
• 60% adults track weight, diet, or exercise: 34% track the data on paper, like in a
notebook or journal, 21% use some form of technology to track their data
• 34% of trackers think the practice affected a health decision, 40% say it led them
to ask their doctor a new question or seek a second opinion, and 46% said it
changed their overall approach to health. (Pew 2013)
• By 2015, more than 50% of organizations will gamify their innovation
processes. Gamification builds a narrative that engages players to
participate and achieve the goals / tasks of the activity.(Gartner 2011)
12. Western Europe & North America Leading in
Smart Wearable Devices
Source: Juniper Research
13. Overview: Global Media Trends Video Series
For 2012-2013, Havas Digital is developing a global video series that will feature
interviews with innovative leading companies and key industry specialists
across nine media trend areas.
Havas has undertaken this comprehensive market review in order to identify
the most crucial areas of opportunity for our current and future clients.
For marketers who are seeking to be more effective in reaching their
audiences, more engaging when connecting with them, and more efficient in
transacting with them, we believe there are multiple opportunities that are
now available within this dynamic new landscape.
Trend categories: progressive screens, social shopping, location-based
marketing, crowdsourcing/co-creation/curation, augmented learning, big data
& analytics, smarter search, life tracking, and cashless commerce.