12 THINGS YOU NEVER KNEW ABOUT THE OLYMPICSJosh King
As the Olympics in Rio has just come to a close we thought we would stop and take a look back at what makes the Olympics so special. We're going to reveal to you some interesting facts that you may not know about the Olympic Games. If you would like to book an event at one of the London Olympic venues please contact: josh@emc3.eu
Glamorous athletes in commonwealth gameshazelandkent
The Commonwealth Games for 2014 is going on and people of all the countries want to see their players win more medals. If you are fashion addicts then here we show you few glamorous athletes. These athletes are very much famous for their beauty and fitness.
This presentation is created by Hazel and Kent
http://www.hazelandkent.co.uk/
Rio 2016 - Interesting Facts About Summer OlympicsPlan 5 d.o.o.
Interesting facts about summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro can found in this presentation. It takes only 60 seconds to go through it and to find out what can be expected in the Rio 2016.
Graduation presentation Rotterdam Olympic Games 2028stevenvandersande
"Olympic Aftermath; Olympic Games as a catalyst for urban regeneration in Rotterdam"
The build program for the possible 2028 Olympic Games in the Netherlands were the starting point for this master thesis. The post-Olympic situation can be very beneficial for the host city, however in too many former Olympic cities the negative effects have taken over the positive effects in the long run. Empty unused stadiums, large debts and unpleasant public space turned out to be the result instead of an improved city.
In this plan, a new metro line forms the backbone of an integral urban regeneration plan in the weakest part of the weakest city in the Randstad, the economic center of the Netherlands, Rotterdam-Zuid.
Adjacent infrastructure, accommodation and sports facilities are planned in such a way that the livability and economic development of vulnerable, deprived neighborhoods in Rotterdam-Zuid are assured in the long run.
12 THINGS YOU NEVER KNEW ABOUT THE OLYMPICSJosh King
As the Olympics in Rio has just come to a close we thought we would stop and take a look back at what makes the Olympics so special. We're going to reveal to you some interesting facts that you may not know about the Olympic Games. If you would like to book an event at one of the London Olympic venues please contact: josh@emc3.eu
Glamorous athletes in commonwealth gameshazelandkent
The Commonwealth Games for 2014 is going on and people of all the countries want to see their players win more medals. If you are fashion addicts then here we show you few glamorous athletes. These athletes are very much famous for their beauty and fitness.
This presentation is created by Hazel and Kent
http://www.hazelandkent.co.uk/
Rio 2016 - Interesting Facts About Summer OlympicsPlan 5 d.o.o.
Interesting facts about summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro can found in this presentation. It takes only 60 seconds to go through it and to find out what can be expected in the Rio 2016.
Graduation presentation Rotterdam Olympic Games 2028stevenvandersande
"Olympic Aftermath; Olympic Games as a catalyst for urban regeneration in Rotterdam"
The build program for the possible 2028 Olympic Games in the Netherlands were the starting point for this master thesis. The post-Olympic situation can be very beneficial for the host city, however in too many former Olympic cities the negative effects have taken over the positive effects in the long run. Empty unused stadiums, large debts and unpleasant public space turned out to be the result instead of an improved city.
In this plan, a new metro line forms the backbone of an integral urban regeneration plan in the weakest part of the weakest city in the Randstad, the economic center of the Netherlands, Rotterdam-Zuid.
Adjacent infrastructure, accommodation and sports facilities are planned in such a way that the livability and economic development of vulnerable, deprived neighborhoods in Rotterdam-Zuid are assured in the long run.
The given presentation discuss such topic as Olympic Games. Little is said about history and evelopment of the Olympics. There is a little bit of mythology, olympic symbols...More attention is given to winter Olympics and namely games in Sochi 2014.
Presentation given by Dr. Ferran Brunet, lecturer at the UAB Faculty of Economics and academic collaborator of CEO-UAB, at the “IX National Seminar of Sport and Leisure Public Policies: Brazil 2016: the Olympiad and its desire impacts on Brazilian cities’ sport and leisure public policies”. The seminar was organized by the Ministry of Sport of the Brazilian Federal Government and the Municipality of Sao Bernardo do Campo, March 24-27 2010.
Economics Presentation On Cost of Olympics PankajSultane
1)Cost of Olympic Games
2) Overview
First Olympic in 1896 in Athens
2012 Summer Olympics - 26 sports, 10568 Athletes, 204 Nations
2014 Winter Olympics -7 sports, 2873 Athletes, 88 Nations
Governing Body: International Federation (IF)
International Olympic Committee (IOC): sports, disciplines and events.
London 2012 US$14.8 billion
Source: www.theguardian.com/sport/2012/oct/23/london-2012-olympics-cost-total
Sochi 2014 Estimated US$51 billion
Source: www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2013/oct/09/sochi-2014-olympics-money- corruption
3) Cost Bidding
5 out of 9 cities selected for bidding by IOC on 18 May 2004
Hosting Fee in 2012: U.S $150,000
London won the right to host the 2012 Games with 54 votes to Paris' 50
4) Cost Bidding Graph
5)Costs for Hosting
Operational Costs
(OCOG)
Technology Costs
Workforce Costs
Administration Costs
Transportation Costs
Catering & Medical Services
Security costs
Non-Operational Costs
(Non-OCOG)
Direct
Olympic Villages
International Broadcast Centre
Media & Press Centre
Indirect
Infrastructure
Hotel Upgrade Costs
6)Cost of Olympic Games
7) Cost OverRun
8)Economic impact of OLYMPIC GAMES
1. Identifying the impact
2. Evidence from the past games
3. ATHENS & outlook of Greek Economy
9) -GDP & Employment Impact
10) ATHENS-Slowdown Economy
Smallest Country.
Total cost EXCEEDS Estimate cost leads to Downfall.
Even the villages lands are used to conduct OLYMPICS.
Widening Government Budget Deficit.
11) Scam 2014 Sochi Russia
As the Olympics are gaining more popularity and exposure from one event to another, many trends and factors are affecting its identity, the olympic venues and audience engagement. Our project, as part of the Design Futures module of the MA Design Strategy and Innovation program at Brunel University - London, presents how the Olympics will change in terms of Design and Innovation through three intervals: the period until 2016, 2032, then 2060.
The Team:
Eunsung Kim
Sami Hmaidan
Sophie Dobber
Syibratul Mohd Pauzi
Vasileios Matsoukas
Woonghee Park
Digital media & service design at Rio 2016 Olympic GamesMarcelo Albagli
Presentation at the London College of Communication / University of the Arts London on digital communications strategy and design thinking for the Olympic Games in Rio. 10th November 2016
The team at Lemon.ly is very excited for the 2012 London Olympics. As we count down the days to the start of the Olympic Games we started asking a few questions about Olympic history. In this graphical presentation, Lemon.ly presents a few Olympic Games Fast Facts to get you excited.
The Powerpoint slideshow presentation is a brief walk through of the Opening ceremony of the 2012 London Olympic games. It explains the historical events experienced by its people in recent history.
A Quiz Club IIT Patna Quiz conducted by Rishabh and Keshav on 06th August 2021. Carrying the torch forward, this quiz took us through the history of Olympics with many interesting questions, inspiring us to be Faster, rise Higher and be Stronger - Together!
Presentation for the Data Marketing Association, London 2023.
How should we think about the metaverse in a time where the idea is surrounded by controversy? This presentation talks about the long history towards increasingly immersive experiences and how this signals a transformation to our digital lifestyles and what this means for how we think about data.
For Oxford University, 2023
How should science communication work in the metaverse? What are the opportunities to share research insights in advanced digital environments?
A research project funded by the Wellcome Trust, led by the University of Bath, University of Salford, and University of Canberra.
Exploring how young people engage with digital health platforms.
Presentation of the Digital Health Generation project, funded by Wellcome Trust.
Project team: Dr Emma Rich, Prof Andy Miah, Prof Sarah Lupton, Dr Sarah C. Lewis
The Research Excellence Framework for UK Universities has been transformed by the new requirement to show impact outside of academia. Here are some insights into key principles, based on the Stern Review
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.
Biological screening of herbal drugs: Introduction and Need for
Phyto-Pharmacological Screening, New Strategies for evaluating
Natural Products, In vitro evaluation techniques for Antioxidants, Antimicrobial and Anticancer drugs. In vivo evaluation techniques
for Anti-inflammatory, Antiulcer, Anticancer, Wound healing, Antidiabetic, Hepatoprotective, Cardio protective, Diuretics and
Antifertility, Toxicity studies as per OECD guidelines
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.
Francesca Gottschalk - How can education support child empowerment.pptxEduSkills OECD
Francesca Gottschalk from the OECD’s Centre for Educational Research and Innovation presents at the Ask an Expert Webinar: How can education support child empowerment?
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
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
Digital Tools and AI for Teaching Learning and Research
Untold Stories of the Olympic Games
1. Untold Stories of an Olympic Games British Library, April 20, 2010. Professor Andy Miah, PhD @andymiah @uwscreative www.andymiah.net university of the west of scotland Editor, Culture @ the Olympics http://www.culturalolympics.org.uk
2. London 2012 Olympic Park, ArcelorMittal Orbit , designed by Anish Kapoor, Photo by ARUP
14. THE OLYMPIC GAMES BEGINS HERE Ancient Olympia, catching rays from the sun to light the Olympic flame The traditional and recurrent media moments of the Olympic Games
18. Beijing 2008 torch relay, citizens track the international leg, while broadcasters fail
19. AND THEIR VENUES Coca-Cola place, Beijing 2008 Photo by Andy Miah
20. "It is very discouraging to be in a team with white athletes. On the track you are Tommie Smith, the fastest man in the world, but once you are in the dressing rooms you are nothing more than a dirty Negro." - Tommie Smith
21.
22. 21% of Vancouverites plan to boycott the Games http://www.flickr.com/photos/darkness/3278949127/
When I think about what an archive should be, I’m drawn first to considering the visions of the future that were never realized. These were visions of what we would like our future to look like, but which did not emerge due to society’s need for restriction, selection and political organization. Consider the recently announced ArcelorMittal Orbit viewing platform in London 2012 Olympic Park (Figure 1). Celebrated and criticized in equal measure already, it is a work that will put public art at the centre of the Olympic park experience. Yet, it was one of many designs on the Olympic park that were imagined by people like us, who had aspirations for what the London 2012 Olympic Games should symbolize and represent. But, what do we know of these other projects, these other ways of promising the future to us?
The moment when a project like this is announced, all other visions of what might have been vanish into thin air, like this vision of ‘the Cloud’ (Figure 2), another design for a viewing platform in Olympic park, which did not succeed. Our perspective in the image is from within the cloud, looking over the park and the city of London. Who will document these histories of the Olympic Games; the histories that were not realized? Indeed, it is not just architectural visions that are not realized. When London won the right to host the Games, back in 2005, it set out a number of bid promises to the IOC. These bid promises were visible for the nation to evaluate, they were part of the London 2012 website. However, they are no longer.
My point is not that London 2012 are hiding their promises – these are already in the public domain for everyone to see. Rather, my claim is principally that the Olympic Games proper exists within the grey zones that tend not to be recorded, reported or remembered. My contention is that the Olympic Games may never arrive to London unless we quickly realize how much work there is to be done in documenting the range of activity that emerges from this period of Olympic obligations.
One place that has been effective at archiving the Games is the Olympic Studies Centre and archive at the IOC Olympic Museum in Lausanne. I have visited the museum on numerous occasions, as it holds the archives of the IOC, along with an extensive library of Olympic history. However, their systems of archiving the Games will not permit the capture of the stories I am talking about. I am not talking about stories that may be seen by Olympic authorities as contrary to the promotion of Olympic values, though I will comet to those. First, I am referring to official Olympic stories that are not effectively captured because they do not occupy a central position in the organizing committee or in the political economy of the IOC. This includes the documentation of the Cultural programmes that are constituted around the Games. Indeed, this absence is why Dr Beatriz Garcia and I set up this:
Indeed, this absence is why Dr Beatriz Garcia and I set up this:
At a time when LOCOG seems pained to emphasize how much cultural activity there will be in London around Games time, the broader dimensions of what has already happened are already losing prominence. Since 2008, the nations and regions – the constitutive parts of London’s Games – because remember, London 2012 is not just London’s Games – vast amounts of cultural activity have taken place, funded largely through a London Olympic & Paralympic body, the Legacy Trust. The projects within this programme do not enjoy a central position within LOCOG, they rely on quite limited pockets of money and, while there are systems to effectively document what has taken place, there is nearly no publicly visible archive of these works that allow them to explain their Olympic story. Two years have passed since their main programmes have been instituted. Many of you may well have participated in activities that were associated with these regional and national funds, but did you notice that they were Olympic events? Possibly not.
It might seem surprising that moments like this are not widely documented, but in order to understand what we’re missing, we first need to understand what is actually taking place. I have been fortunate enough to attend one lighting ceremony in Olympia, which was for Sydney 2000. It is apparent from just being there that what is recorded by the media who are attending just is not adequate. Indeed, they would argue the same, since their images are taken from official camera feeds. Of course, part of this is a practical decision – in the same way that it is for the Olympic sports themselves – to have cameras from over 100 broadcasters would be a practical impossibility. As such, broadcasters can select feeds from different cameras belonging to the official Olympic Games broadcaster, which is a separate dedicated team of operators. Yet, what happens off camera is often the more interesting document of what happened.
At the Beijing Games, the lighting ceremony was perhaps the most controversial in history, as it was the target of Reporters without Borders, who were campaigning for journalist freedom in China. What we know about this moment is that it was not seen in china. The feed delay permitted the Olympic broadcaster to cut away from the camera until it was dealt with, but people in the stadium did record it. The activity surrounding the lighting ceremony is equally in need of recording and, in this case, included pro-Tibet protests. As the torch went on its international leg – what would be the last time an international torch relay would take place – it was met with protests around the world and this raised new challenges for the media – notably due to the fact that it is ‘managed’ and thus dependent on the organizers to inform them where to locate cameras for television moments. Due to the last minute reorganization of these routes, the broadcasters were, at times, unable to locate the torch, but citizens on the ground coordinated their activity to keep track of it. This example conveys a shift in the archival process towards the citizen organized archive. The ethos of this archival culture is already embedded into contemporary online practice. Indeed, we have become obsessive organizers of information. XXXX None of this makes any more redundant the role of the institutional archivist. Consider images from the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games. While there is a remarkable amount of content on photo sharing platforms like flickr – those who are involved with archiving understand that an archive is a curated entity, framed by a particular set of interests to document something in a very meaningful way. What distinguishes the role of the archivist today is that ownership of the archive does not reside in the ownership of content, but of the methodological data that underpins its ordering. Thus, we still need a gateway to Olympic content to make sense of what took place, to organize it and to put it into context. This is why academics need to work especially close with organizations like the British Library to allow future historians to make sense of what happened here on the years leading up to and after the Games took place. How will people make sense of places like this:
During the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games, we piloted a process of Games time archiving, which relied on our team taking photographs and trying to document those aspects of the Games that tend not to be noticed by the official media. Games time archiving is particularly difficult and, most importantly, will require access to the Games at the highest level. This means securing ‘infinity’ passes for the archival team and it means getting LOCOG and the ODA to understand that their systems of archiving will not do enough to ensure that the history of this Games is written in its fullest sense. Making sure this happens will be no easy task. In fact, I don’t think anyone has done it yet. It will require a considerable degree of trust to bring about, strategic commitments from key figureheads who care about the historical recording of the Olympic period, not just the Olympic Games. Yet, the biggest challenge would be in gaining support to articulate those dimensions of the Games that are not representative of the Olympic values. Remember, LOCOG, the ODA, the City of London and, perhaps most importantly, various aspects of the media, are under a contractual obligation to promote the Olympic values in their work. This restricts what the media can report within their Games time sports coverage structure, but it also alerts us to the fact that the expression of dissent occupies a very special place in Olympic history. Consider this example: How should we regard this moment in Olympic history? Is it to be celebrated or criticized? I put it to you that we should celebrate this XXX, but I recognize that it is difficult for an Olympic organization to endorse such a view. This is why it is necessary to ensure that archival research into these dimensions also benefits from funding that is unrelated to the delivery organizations, but we should not seek a complete separation as this will also lead to the marganization of these stories. We need, in particular, them to reach officialdom and become part of the official - acknowledged history. Consider another example, the Olympic Tent Village in Vancouver.
What would it have meant for this story to have become part of the official Olympic narrative/ What if Mayor Gregor Robertson in his speech at the closing Ceremony acknowledged how far the city of Vancouver still has to go to correct social injustices, some of which may have been exacerbate by their XXXX Olympic Games? Of course, people in the UK will have been completely unaware of the tent village or of the dramatic rise in homelessness over the Olympic period. They will also be unaware of the protests that took place on the day of the Olympic ceremony, the days leading up to the Games and throughout the Games themselves. But this was Vancouver’s 2010 Olympic Games.
In september last year, I got married in a small place just between edinburgh and stirling. It was an intimate affair with only 14 people. My wife and I had these rings made up for our wedding After having spent 10 years around the Olympic movement. It would be fair to say that it was the Olympics that brought us together. We met at a place called the International Olympic Academy, in Ancient Olympia Greece. Since then, we’ve been quite cloely involved with the Olympic movement, undertaking research at the last 5 Games And writing numerous papers about the phenomenon Despite our own personal commitment to the idea of the Olympics, I remain something of a spanner in the works of what it does I encountered the Olympics via my work on the prospects of human enhancement in sport. At the turn of the century, the hype surrounding the human genome project led to claims that genetically modified athletes were not far off. And they’re not. So, I published a lot of work arguing on behalf of gene doping and, more generally, the biological transformation of athletes. This didn’t win me many allies in the sports world, but it did permit my involvement in a wave of work surrounding human enhancement. At each Olympic Games, I would be asked the same question ‘when could we expect to see GMAs?’ But these interviews were really part of a broader aspiration To hold the Olympic movement to greater account To achieve this, I was concurrently researching the rise of new media at the Games In Sydney 2000, I managed to blag myself access to one of the city’s Olympic media centres during Games time. The sole basis on which I achieved this was by having my own website, which, at the time, was still relatively unusual. During Sydney’s Games, it emerged that there were – in addition to the 20000 journalists in town to report the Games, a large number of journos wanting to cover other aspects of the Games And quickly, I became one of them, always working within a Games time media centre Expecting to see whether and how these non-sport journalists were able to disrupt the Olympic narrative by reporting other dimensions. After Sydney, this grew into a wider ambition to effect change via these new independents My wife and I went to Lausanne in 2001 for 2 months, working around the Olympic museum, meeting IOC staff And launched a network of Olympic researchers – very quickly getting into trouble for doing so. Because, of course, these rings along with many other aspects of what I do Are not endorsed by the IOC or the other Olympic organizations Which have been protected by British law most recently within the Olympic Bill of 2005 Which limits any activity that may threaten the successful carrying out of the Olympic Games The implications of such legislation are far reaching. In China last year, it led to their temporarily opening up to reporting by foreign journalists. Only to close down again, soon after the Games. What do I mean by design politics? I mean the range of creative visions that converge around a Games and their negotiation via various stakeholder priorities
Third, it requires cultivating sensitivity to the Olympic Games experience and understanding how to navigate this mega-event. The Olympic Games is a remarkably disorienting experience for the tourist/citizen. I have tried to document an Olympic Games 6 times now and still return from the city feeling as though I have not got all the photographs I should have got. Archiving the London 2012 will require a dedicated team of researchers, perhaps drawing on the volunteer population. Members of the teams should be dedicated to specific dimensions of the Games experience, but notably should not focus on documenting the sports themselves. Aspects of such a programme would include documenting the venues (this is why access is crucial), reporting what happens on the streets, within the cultural venues and the many non-Olympic spaces that become part of the Olympic city, such as the way in which billboards occupy places, or the way that important political places become utilized by people during the Games – as in this protest during the Athens 2004 Olympic Games when a manifestation occurred on behalf of workers who lost their lives in the construction of the venues. Alternatively, in Torino 2006, just around the corner from the Athlete’s village, was this building branded with the phrase ‘Repression Lives Here’, a play on words of the Torino official slogan ‘Passion Lives Here’.
Third, it requires cultivating sensitivity to the Olympic Games experience and understanding how to navigate this mega-event. The Olympic Games is a remarkably disorienting experience for the tourist/citizen. I have tried to document an Olympic Games 6 times now and still return from the city feeling as though I have not got all the photographs I should have got. Archiving the London 2012 will require a dedicated team of researchers, perhaps drawing on the volunteer population. Members of the teams should be dedicated to specific dimensions of the Games experience, but notably should not focus on documenting the sports themselves. Aspects of such a programme would include documenting the venues (this is why access is crucial), reporting what happens on the streets, within the cultural venues and the many non-Olympic spaces that become part of the Olympic city, such as the way in which billboards occupy places, or the way that important political places become utilized by people during the Games – as in this protest during the Athens 2004 Olympic Games when a manifestation occurred on behalf of workers who lost their lives in the construction of the venues. Alternatively, in Torino 2006, just around the corner from the Athlete’s village, These stories constitute the Olympic Games. They are what happened. The Olympic records and results are just one part of this movement.