Archive for the ‘Web’ Category
Video: Stanford Expert Questions Related to Healthcare Reform in the USA
Stanford University uploaded this to Youtube last Thursday 11th March. The lecture was delivered 17th November 2009.
Stanford University’s Alan Garber, Professor of Medicine, of Economic, and of Health Research and Policy discusses many of the important policy questions relevant to the health care reform debate in the United States.
Video: Expert Stanford Lecture on Century’s History with Pandemic Influenza
This is fantastic and worth watching if you are involved in crisis and risk communications work in public health. In a lecture delivered November 2, 2009, Stanford University’s Lucy S. Tompkins, Professor of Medicine and of Microbiology and Immunology. She explores the history, past and present, of the pandemic influenza covering the last century, today, and in the future.
Stanford Mini Med School is a series arranged and directed by Stanford’s School of Medicine, and presented by the Stanford Continuing Studies program. Featuring more than thirty distinguished, faculty, scientists and physicians from Stanford’s medical school, the series offers students a dynamic introduction to the world of human biology, health and disease, and the groundbreaking changes taking place in medical research and health care.
Video: How To Be A Social Media Provocateur
This video shows an interview by Harvard Business Review with Josh Bernoff, vice president and principal analyst at Forrester Research. Bernoff lays out a series of steps that companies can do to step into the social media landscape with references to over 60 company case studies.
Bernoff says the wrong way to start is to transform everything overnight but says small successes will help the company to proceed. He recommends getting an executive sponsor within your company who supports social media efforts so that your efforts stay alive.
How Twitter Found A Missing Person Post-Chile Quake
Here is one powerful function of social media technology that is seldom reported on. Twitter is much, much more than a social yadayada tool. Few of us, let’s be honest, would think to turn to Twitter to find lost and missing people in a disaster zone. I’d be thinking that the network’s down so the internet and cellphone would be down. This moving story from Sherly Breuker and Ken Camp was first reported in Mashable, a leading social media guide online. Whoever thought that using the technology of twitter could be such an emotional experience:
An Example of Powerful Digital Communication
More than 18 million views on Youtube, and I recently heard it, thanks to the generosity of friends on Facebook like Mario Gaoa. Playingforchange.com say the idea for this global singing arrangement came out of a “common belief that music has the power to break down boundaries and overcome distances between people.” That’s one key goal of communications. Our planet needs more of this sort of energy during these challenging times. ENJOY!
Industry News: Apple Files LawSuit Against Google-Backed Competitor HTC
Since Apple has issued a media release on this dated 2nd March 2010, let’s hear from Apple Inc. and CEO Steve Jobs first:
Apple Sues HTC for Patent Infringement Media Release CUPERTINO, California—March 2, 2010—Apple® today filed a lawsuit against HTC for infringing on 20 Apple patents related to the iPhone’s user interface, underlying architecture and hardware. The lawsuit was filed concurrently with the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) and in U.S. District Court in Delaware. “We can sit by and watch competitors steal our patented inventions, or we can do something about it. We’ve decided to do something about it,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “We think competition is healthy, but competitors should create their own original technology, not steal ours.” Apple reinvented the mobile phone in 2007 with its revolutionary iPhone®, and did it again in 2008 with its pioneering App Store, which now offers more than 150,000 mobile applications in over 90 countries. Over 40 million iPhones have been sold worldwide.
How Obama Campaign Used Data to Win the Presidential Elections
In July 2008, Dan Siroker left his job as a product manager at Google, where he led the Google Chrome backend team, to volunteer for the Obama For America campaign.
For the next five months, Siroker used his knowledge and expertise with online digital media to maximise voter registration, email sign-ups, and donations for the campaign. The rest is history. Siroker then went on to do three-month stint as Obama’s Deputy New Media Director during the presidential transition. Post-Obama campaign, Siroker, a Stanford honors graduate in computer science, has since founded CarrotSticks, a start up focused on using technology to help children learn.










































































