The document is a word search puzzle containing terms related to technology and the internet. Some of the hidden words include ARPANET, social networks, the web, blogs, computers, games, Google, PayPal, wikis, and DARPA. It also contains the words "quality of life" and "ENIAC", an early general-purpose electronic computer.
5 Summer Camp Concepts for the Next 5 YearsTravis Allison
I was asked to do some thinking about the future of our industry and present to a group of progressive summer camp owners.
I believe there are 5 things camp directors must do to excel in the next 5 years:
1) It is all about VISUALS
2) Get comfortable with TECHNOLOGY
3) Learn to RELAX
4) Make your marketing about THEM (not you)
5) Make BOLD STATEMENTS
Advances in narrow artificial intelligence make possible agentive systems that do things directly for their users (like, say, an automatic pet feeder). They deliver on the promise of user-centered design, but present fresh challenges in understanding their unique promises and pitfalls. They challenge strategists and product owners to think in new ways, since they deliver value mostly when the user isn’t paying them any attention. Join Christopher Noessel of IBM as he introduces us to the concepts from his new book, "Designing Agentive Technology: AI That Works For People" (Rosenfeld Media, 2017). Attendees will learn what agentive technology is—and what it isn’t—and why it matters to businesses and consumers alike. You’ll leave understanding how agentive technology can be used to solve practical problems and what impacts its adoption may have on content professionals. And, you'll discover why we are increasingly moving from systems that help to systems that do. November 30, 2017
5 Summer Camp Concepts for the Next 5 YearsTravis Allison
I was asked to do some thinking about the future of our industry and present to a group of progressive summer camp owners.
I believe there are 5 things camp directors must do to excel in the next 5 years:
1) It is all about VISUALS
2) Get comfortable with TECHNOLOGY
3) Learn to RELAX
4) Make your marketing about THEM (not you)
5) Make BOLD STATEMENTS
Advances in narrow artificial intelligence make possible agentive systems that do things directly for their users (like, say, an automatic pet feeder). They deliver on the promise of user-centered design, but present fresh challenges in understanding their unique promises and pitfalls. They challenge strategists and product owners to think in new ways, since they deliver value mostly when the user isn’t paying them any attention. Join Christopher Noessel of IBM as he introduces us to the concepts from his new book, "Designing Agentive Technology: AI That Works For People" (Rosenfeld Media, 2017). Attendees will learn what agentive technology is—and what it isn’t—and why it matters to businesses and consumers alike. You’ll leave understanding how agentive technology can be used to solve practical problems and what impacts its adoption may have on content professionals. And, you'll discover why we are increasingly moving from systems that help to systems that do. November 30, 2017
Nurture their use of nose more than often. Start practicing no touch, no talk, no eye contact while meeting them so that they can use their nose to figure out or meet you through their nose, which is their natural way of meeting.
Acknowledge the dog once he is in calm submissive state of mind which is their natural happy state of mind.
https://ohmydog.rocks/how-to-properly-meet-dogs/
Presented at FITC's Web Unleashed 2016 in Toronto
by Haris Mahmood, Shopify
FITC produces events for digital creators in Toronto, Amsterdam, NYC and beyond
Save 10% off any of our events with discount code 'slideshare'
Check out our events at http://fitc.ca
or follow us at https://twitter.com/fitc
Overview
The web development industry is an incredibly fast growing and fast moving industry. Those relatively new to it can sometimes be overwhelmed with the increasing complexity of their job, what things to learn to continue advancing, what to look out for, and most importantly, how to cope with the wide range of emotions they feel on a day-to-day basis. This talk aims to address a variety of these issues, along with providing suggestions for employers, recruiters and veterans in the industry on what they can do to help.
Target Audience
Junior/intermediate web developers, employers, recruiters
Five Things Audience Members Will Learn
The state of the web development industry
Various aspects of day-to-day decision making for web developers
The emotional aspect in and around the industry
Ways for developers to navigate through the industry
How employers, recruiters and veterans can help
How do I design a menu for my restaurant?
Here's the answer!
Secret psychological tricks taught by world's most famous menu engineer with over 30 years of experience, Gregg Rapp.
All restaurant owners & restaurant managers can use this to enhance their menu and use it to increase average sales.
Increase restaurant sales with menu design tricks.
Menu engineering tricks.
We have ethical responsibilities when coding. We’re able to extract remarkably precise intuitions about an individual. But do we have a right to know what they didn’t consent to share, even when they willingly shared the data that leads us there? A major retailer’s data-driven marketing accidentially revealed to a teen’s family that she was pregnant. Eek.
What are our obligations to people who did not expect themselves to be so intimately known without sharing directly? How do we mitigate against unintended outcomes? For instance, an activity tracker carelessly revealed users’ sexual activity data to search engines. A social network’s algorithm accidentally triggered painful memories for grieving families who’d recently experienced death of their child and other loved ones.
We design software for humans. Balancing human needs and business specs can be tough. It’s crucial that we learn how to build in systematic empathy.
In this talk, we'll delve into specific examples of uncritical programming, and painful results from using insightful data in ways that were benignly intended. You’ll learn ways we can integrate practices for examining how our code might harm individuals. We’ll look at how to flip the paradigm, netting consequences that can be better for everyone.
SLIDES: http://www.slideshare.net/cczona/consequences-of-an-insightful-algorithm
VIDEO: http://confreaks.tv/videos/rubyconf2015-keynote-consequences-of-an-insightful-algorithm
REVIEWS: https://wakelet.com/wake/5758ef98-8e71-4854-9ea2-683e0b5c98a3
KEYNOTE: RubyConf, JSConfEU, PyConAU, GOTO Berlin, Lean Agile Scotland, CUSEC, Open Source Bridge
ADDITIONAL: ArrrrCamp, EuRuKo, DjangoCon, WDCNZ, SCNA
Nurture their use of nose more than often. Start practicing no touch, no talk, no eye contact while meeting them so that they can use their nose to figure out or meet you through their nose, which is their natural way of meeting.
Acknowledge the dog once he is in calm submissive state of mind which is their natural happy state of mind.
https://ohmydog.rocks/how-to-properly-meet-dogs/
Presented at FITC's Web Unleashed 2016 in Toronto
by Haris Mahmood, Shopify
FITC produces events for digital creators in Toronto, Amsterdam, NYC and beyond
Save 10% off any of our events with discount code 'slideshare'
Check out our events at http://fitc.ca
or follow us at https://twitter.com/fitc
Overview
The web development industry is an incredibly fast growing and fast moving industry. Those relatively new to it can sometimes be overwhelmed with the increasing complexity of their job, what things to learn to continue advancing, what to look out for, and most importantly, how to cope with the wide range of emotions they feel on a day-to-day basis. This talk aims to address a variety of these issues, along with providing suggestions for employers, recruiters and veterans in the industry on what they can do to help.
Target Audience
Junior/intermediate web developers, employers, recruiters
Five Things Audience Members Will Learn
The state of the web development industry
Various aspects of day-to-day decision making for web developers
The emotional aspect in and around the industry
Ways for developers to navigate through the industry
How employers, recruiters and veterans can help
How do I design a menu for my restaurant?
Here's the answer!
Secret psychological tricks taught by world's most famous menu engineer with over 30 years of experience, Gregg Rapp.
All restaurant owners & restaurant managers can use this to enhance their menu and use it to increase average sales.
Increase restaurant sales with menu design tricks.
Menu engineering tricks.
We have ethical responsibilities when coding. We’re able to extract remarkably precise intuitions about an individual. But do we have a right to know what they didn’t consent to share, even when they willingly shared the data that leads us there? A major retailer’s data-driven marketing accidentially revealed to a teen’s family that she was pregnant. Eek.
What are our obligations to people who did not expect themselves to be so intimately known without sharing directly? How do we mitigate against unintended outcomes? For instance, an activity tracker carelessly revealed users’ sexual activity data to search engines. A social network’s algorithm accidentally triggered painful memories for grieving families who’d recently experienced death of their child and other loved ones.
We design software for humans. Balancing human needs and business specs can be tough. It’s crucial that we learn how to build in systematic empathy.
In this talk, we'll delve into specific examples of uncritical programming, and painful results from using insightful data in ways that were benignly intended. You’ll learn ways we can integrate practices for examining how our code might harm individuals. We’ll look at how to flip the paradigm, netting consequences that can be better for everyone.
SLIDES: http://www.slideshare.net/cczona/consequences-of-an-insightful-algorithm
VIDEO: http://confreaks.tv/videos/rubyconf2015-keynote-consequences-of-an-insightful-algorithm
REVIEWS: https://wakelet.com/wake/5758ef98-8e71-4854-9ea2-683e0b5c98a3
KEYNOTE: RubyConf, JSConfEU, PyConAU, GOTO Berlin, Lean Agile Scotland, CUSEC, Open Source Bridge
ADDITIONAL: ArrrrCamp, EuRuKo, DjangoCon, WDCNZ, SCNA
Presentación Juan Martitegui - eCommerce Day Buenos Aires 2015 eCommerce Institute
Diapositivas presentadas por Juan Martitegui, Co-Founder & CEO Mindvalley Hispano, en el eCommerce Day Buenos Aires 2015 en la plenaria "TRENDS PITCH ECOMMERCE II – LO QUE VIENE EN ECOMMERCE CENTRADO DE RESULTADOS Y CONVERSIÓN".
Most developers are familiar with the basics of AI: how do you make a computer, an algorithm, a system learn something? What most don't realize though is that the same principles are applied to people.
This talk looks at the theory behind how people learn, and maps it to real life examples of how specifically developers learn.
1. Sopa de Letras
PALABRAS:
ARPANET
INTEGRIDAD
REDES SOCIALES
WEB
BLOG
J.C.R LICKLIDDER
DARPA
CALIDAD DE VIDA
ENIAC
INTERNET
COMPUTADOR
CHAT
JUEGOS
LAS TIC
GOOGLE
STEVEN CHEN
JOHN ATANASOFT
PAYPAL
WIKI
SCRIBD
ARPA
B Q C A L I D A D D E V I D A U W R
E L T A S N E N I A C L I T E V E O
C Y O A B T E S A R I Y W A Q D B U
O E M G E E G U S K T A R S E M U C
M H O O Y R N O I S E E Q S U L E I
P H A O C N E W R Y D A S Q U A E N
U E S G U E N A T D R O T A G S A T
T M U L Y T M A I L C U E C A T Y E
A E S E M A L L O I M U V Y M I A G
D L O Z W P K Y A N P S E O S C E R
O Q T H Z C U L E A H C N A C C E I
R R Y M I V E T Y A A R C N H T E D
W X Y L O S R A Z P S I H D A R P A
N N R Q W U L I R E N B E T I E C D
U C I M R Z O A L A B D N E I O W M
J H Q L X Z Y W A R Z O M L N V T O
Q J O H N A T A N A S O F T U I W E
A R P A N E T N T U W N S O G E U J