The document discusses the importance and power of storytelling in business contexts. It notes that storytelling taps into people's innate desire to hear and tell stories and can inspire people to act by inviting them to dream. Effective storytelling focuses on sharing the what, how, and why with passion, draws from personal experiences like a "grit that goes into the oyster makes a pearl", and should be planned, rehearsed, and involve truthful parables or stories that resonate with all human beings.
Design for extremes creates value for allSara Lerén
This document discusses inclusive design and its importance. It notes that inclusive design creates value for all users by considering people of all abilities, ages, cultures, genders and language preferences. The document encourages thinking about how to include more people in design, looking at what others are doing well, and testing designs iteratively with diverse groups. The overall message is that inclusive, accessible design benefits everybody.
Charting a Course Through Murky Work - Rachel Price, EuroIA 2020Rachel Price
In this talk for EuroIA 2020, I shared 5 lessons learned as an information architect at Microsoft to better facilitate murky projects with higher stakeholder confidence, less churn, better meetings, noticeable progress, and happy teams.
View the full transcript here: www.rachelaudreyprice.com/speaking-writing/euroia-2020-charting-a-course-through-murky-work
I learned to fly and drink coffee and met the horse on the way home”:jimbbq
Conference: Learn, teach and play in 3D virtual worlds
City University London, 18/03/09
presentation by Peter Abrahams,
Practice Leader Accessiblity and
Usability
How visualization helps navigate our complex environment by Cliff HazellBosnia Agile
In knowledge work, many things are typically invisible or opaque, ranging from our process, the actual work items, to our models for making sense of these. These are therefore open to assumption and misunderstanding, stemming partly from a variety of different perspectives. At Spotify, we aim to build shared views and models to reduce unnecessary ambiguity and improve our understanding, allowing us to more effectively navigate in a Complex environment. I’ll share some examples of how Spotify is using Visual techniques to learn and respond faster, including stories of our learnings along the way.
The document provides instructions for a group project to create a brochure about historical buildings discovered after being stranded on a beach following a cruise. It outlines the task, which is to include details, pictures, a map, and illustrations of the buildings in Microsoft Publisher or Word. It also provides an evaluation rubric assessing participation, the group brochure, creativity, and how informative it is. The document encourages the students to do their best and not stress about the rest. It then lists the names of five different student groups assigned to the project.
A good page is respectable; a great page memorable. A good page reaffirms reader's expectation; a great page churns out surprises. A good page is achieved by mixing the right ingredients; a great page by reinventing the formula. Yes, good is not bad, but it's not as good as great. A good page is the marriage of content and form. So does a great page. But how do you tell one from the other?
The document discusses the importance and power of storytelling in business contexts. It notes that storytelling taps into people's innate desire to hear and tell stories and can inspire people to act by inviting them to dream. Effective storytelling focuses on sharing the what, how, and why with passion, draws from personal experiences like a "grit that goes into the oyster makes a pearl", and should be planned, rehearsed, and involve truthful parables or stories that resonate with all human beings.
Design for extremes creates value for allSara Lerén
This document discusses inclusive design and its importance. It notes that inclusive design creates value for all users by considering people of all abilities, ages, cultures, genders and language preferences. The document encourages thinking about how to include more people in design, looking at what others are doing well, and testing designs iteratively with diverse groups. The overall message is that inclusive, accessible design benefits everybody.
Charting a Course Through Murky Work - Rachel Price, EuroIA 2020Rachel Price
In this talk for EuroIA 2020, I shared 5 lessons learned as an information architect at Microsoft to better facilitate murky projects with higher stakeholder confidence, less churn, better meetings, noticeable progress, and happy teams.
View the full transcript here: www.rachelaudreyprice.com/speaking-writing/euroia-2020-charting-a-course-through-murky-work
I learned to fly and drink coffee and met the horse on the way home”:jimbbq
Conference: Learn, teach and play in 3D virtual worlds
City University London, 18/03/09
presentation by Peter Abrahams,
Practice Leader Accessiblity and
Usability
How visualization helps navigate our complex environment by Cliff HazellBosnia Agile
In knowledge work, many things are typically invisible or opaque, ranging from our process, the actual work items, to our models for making sense of these. These are therefore open to assumption and misunderstanding, stemming partly from a variety of different perspectives. At Spotify, we aim to build shared views and models to reduce unnecessary ambiguity and improve our understanding, allowing us to more effectively navigate in a Complex environment. I’ll share some examples of how Spotify is using Visual techniques to learn and respond faster, including stories of our learnings along the way.
The document provides instructions for a group project to create a brochure about historical buildings discovered after being stranded on a beach following a cruise. It outlines the task, which is to include details, pictures, a map, and illustrations of the buildings in Microsoft Publisher or Word. It also provides an evaluation rubric assessing participation, the group brochure, creativity, and how informative it is. The document encourages the students to do their best and not stress about the rest. It then lists the names of five different student groups assigned to the project.
A good page is respectable; a great page memorable. A good page reaffirms reader's expectation; a great page churns out surprises. A good page is achieved by mixing the right ingredients; a great page by reinventing the formula. Yes, good is not bad, but it's not as good as great. A good page is the marriage of content and form. So does a great page. But how do you tell one from the other?
1. The document provides guidance on how to make your idea spread through a TED talk by focusing on 10 key areas called the 10 Cs.
2. The 10 Cs are: making the talk compelling, concise, conscious of the audience, comprehended by diverse age groups, provide proper context, be clear using visual aids, make conversions between measurement systems, avoid colloquial language, be cautious of sensitive content, and respect copyrights.
3. Following these 10 Cs can help one craft a TED talk that effectively spreads their idea on a global scale.
What does it take to get a TEDx talk? What are organizers looking for? In this presentation, originally delivered to the Boston Women in Media and Entertainment group, offers insights and takeaways for anyone who aspires to the TEDx stage.
Inspiration works wonders. Getting inspired, is the beginning for success and achievement. This is a lecture given to the students at the Induction programme, organized for the Saifabad Science College, Osmania University, Hyderabad. The talk was in English, but to suit the convenience of the audience, their background, Telugu and Hindi were liberally used. Becoming a Better Student, is the minimum that every student must aim at. The students must hope to become positive, constructive and contributing citizens of the society. Two power point presentations were used: 1. Inspiration, gathered from the presentation of Tom Peters and 2. Becoming a Better Student. These presentations can be viewed at: www.scribd.com [please search for Prof. V. Viswanadham and locate the item]. You can also find these presentations at www.slideshare.net/viswanadham .Your feedback will be highly appreciated. Another useful presentation, titled Some Hints on Study Skills, could not be used, due to power shutdown. In case you are interested, you can also find this power point presentation, at the indicated sites above. You can also listen to the talk on this topic, given elsewhere, by visiting www.archive.org [please search for Prof. V. Viswanadham and search for the required topic].
9 public speaking tips from today's best ted talks from carmine galloSean Sasaki
Here are 9 tips for giving powerful public speeches from popular TED talks:
1. Unleash your passion and mastery on the topic to inspire others.
2. Tell 3 impactful stories to engage the audience's brain.
3. Practice relentlessly like Dr. Jill Bolte-Taylor who rehearsed 200 times.
4. Teach the audience something new to give them a fresh perspective.
This document provides 12 effective techniques for grabbing an audience's attention in the first 30 seconds of a presentation. These include using a contrarian approach, asking rhetorical questions, delivering a catchy phrase, making a startling assertion, referencing a historical event, using the word "imagine", quoting movies, arousing curiosity, twisting quotations, quoting foreign proverbs, employing "what if" scenarios, and telling a brief story. The key is to choose a hook that is brief, well-rehearsed and pertinent to the topic being presented.
This document provides 12 effective techniques for grabbing an audience's attention in the first 30 seconds of a presentation. These include using a contrarian approach, asking rhetorical questions, delivering a catchy phrase, making a startling assertion, referencing a historical event, using the word "imagine", quoting movies, arousing curiosity, twisting quotations, quoting foreign proverbs, employing "what if" scenarios, and telling a brief story. The key is to choose a hook that is brief, well-rehearsed and pertinent to the topic being presented.
The document provides information about TEDxDouglasville, a local event modeled after TED Talks where speakers share ideas. It summarizes that TEDxDouglasville has been held annually since 2015, featuring speakers from various backgrounds. The document outlines responsibilities and criteria for speakers, including meeting deadlines, having a focused idea rather than telling their life story, and not using the platform for commercial or political purposes. Speakers are encouraged to rehearse their talks and connect with audiences emotionally.
The document discusses innovation and overcoming roadblocks to innovation. It identifies universal, group, and individual roadblocks such as human nature, culture, and personality. Some key roadblocks discussed are fear of change, failure, and inadequacy. The document provides techniques to promote innovation such as keeping a journal, solving opposite problems, finding a creative environment, and doing something fun to shift perspective. The overall message is that innovation requires removing fears and adapting to changes in order to evolve.
What Would Steve Do? Lessons from the World's Most Captivating PresentersMartafy!
This was the last presentation I created during my tenure at HubSpot as Director of Brand & Buzz. To date, it remains HubSpot's 2nd most popular SlideShare of all time with >1.25 Million views and 35,000 downloads.
See the original presentation on HubSpot's SlideShare channel here: http://slidesha.re/1avaxMa
To learn more about HubSpot, visit www.HubSpot.com.
Perhaps school taught you how to make a taxonomy or create a persona from research, but did it teach you how to ask for a raise? How to create consensus between your team, product and engineering? Or how to get the right design out in the face of the “just copy Amazon/Google/Netflix” argument?
Designers are taught the skills to make good design, but not the ones that will assure that design will go live. In this talk, I’ll cover key skills every UX practitioner should know.
The techniques I’ll each are based on a combination of Nonviolent Communication, John Kotter’s Buy In, FBI negotiation techniques, and from real life in the Silicon Valley.
Attendees will learn
How to build consensus
How to argue and listen effectively
How to stay zen when the situation gets hot
How to get buy in
How to ask for what you need
While designers historically have shrunk away from selling, It’s not gross or ugly to ask for what you need to get the job done right. If designers want a place at the table, they will have to ask for it.
The document provides tips and advice for effective public speaking. It discusses the importance of being well-prepared, overcoming stage fright, engaging the audience, using humor appropriately, gestures, and concluding powerfully. Specific tips include starting simply, practicing, making eye contact, speaking conversationally, and being confident in delivering one's message.
Bullets are for guns & to-do lists ,not presentations.Umberto Tessitore
Humans process images 60,000x faster than words
We also recall information presented as image 6x more easily than text
Logic doesn’t flood the brain with dopamine, which is why logic alone doesn’t move mountains.
USE METAPHORS TO GIVE MEANING
USE SIMPLE LANGUAGE, FREE OF JARGONS
This document provides 10 tips for creating captivating presentations based on lessons from famous presenters like Steve Jobs, Scott Harrison, and Gary Vaynerchuk. The tips include crafting an emotional story instead of using bullet points, answering why the audience should care, how it will improve their lives, and what they must do. It also recommends practicing extensively, using simple language and images over words, and treating it as a performance rather than just a presentation. The overall message is that awe-inspiring presentations can motivate audiences in a way that boring ones cannot.
This document provides 10 tips for creating captivating presentations based on lessons from famous presenters like Steve Jobs, Scott Harrison, and Gary Vaynerchuk. The tips include crafting an emotional story instead of using bullet points, answering why the audience should care, how it will improve their lives, and what they must do. It also recommends practicing extensively, showing images instead of just words, and treating it as a performance rather than just a presentation. The overall message is that awe-inspiring presentations can motivate audiences in a way that boring presentations cannot.
World of Speakers E.47: Creating value and connections with your talksSpeakerHub
Ryan Foland speaks with Drew Dudley, a dynamic and fascinating speaker whose viral TED Talk has been voted “one of the 15 most inspirational TED talks of all time.”
Ryan and Drew cover a wide range of fantastically helpful topics in this podcast that range from how to effectively tell stories that connect with your audience, to how to get more bookings and become a highly-valuable speaker.
Listen to this podcast to find out:
- A practical guide to authentically living your values
- Anecdotes or stories? How to connect and teach your audience
- Reverse engineering: how to sell your talk to organizers, which will get you more bookings
- Why being useful is better than being motivational or inspirational
- How to overcome nerves and connect with your audience when you first start speaking on stages
- Why you need to become a truly amazing speaker before investing in marketing your speaking business.
What if you can curate serendipity? A challenge to fellow IT practitioners. Materials mostly from http://tech.co/tony-hsieh-theory-serendipity-2012-09 and http://www.boundlss.com/blog/casual-collisions-spontaneous-meetings-serendipity. Also: http://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/25386981-social-physics-how-good-ideas-spread-the-lessons-from-a-new-science
Ted Talks is a place where people share their innovative ideas around the world. Ted Talks – A friend that you never had, a teacher that will show you a world in a different way. They believe passionately in the power of ideas to change the attitude of people, life, and ultimately the world.
To know more visit : http://www.thecreativebureau.in/2017/01/13/ted-talks/
The document describes a knowledge cafe event being held by David Gurteen on facilitating learning conversations. The day-long event includes introductions, discussions on business as conversation and the knowledge cafe process, and a knowledge cafe session. A knowledge cafe is a structured conversation where participants discuss a topic to gain a deeper understanding through sharing ideas and knowledge. It emphasizes dialogue over debate and creates an open environment to surface collective insights.
Rotarians are often asked to give public speeches but many fear public speaking. The article provides advice from Chris Anderson on how to give an effective presentation. It recommends framing your story with a clear beginning, middle, and end. It also suggests practicing your delivery through memorization or notecards and making eye contact with the audience. The use of multimedia should enhance rather than replace the presentation. With preparation and practice, anyone can learn to give a compelling speech.
How Donald Trump can help you become a better Art Director
The 2017 updated version of the ADMA Creative School Art Direction lecture designed to help and inspire all young creatives hoping to get a job in an agency creative department.
Does one UX fits tem all? Welcome to the era of GX: Gamification ExperienceOlcayto Cengiz
This document discusses gamification and the growing importance of gamification experiences (GX). It notes that gamification goes beyond just making games and involves using game elements to motivate and engage users. The document outlines several gamification frameworks and models. It also provides statistics showing the increasing number of people who play games regularly, including half of mobile players being female. The document advocates designing gamification with psychology and story/meaning in mind, not just technology. It provides some examples of successful gamified apps and argues gamification will become increasingly important.
1. The document provides guidance on how to make your idea spread through a TED talk by focusing on 10 key areas called the 10 Cs.
2. The 10 Cs are: making the talk compelling, concise, conscious of the audience, comprehended by diverse age groups, provide proper context, be clear using visual aids, make conversions between measurement systems, avoid colloquial language, be cautious of sensitive content, and respect copyrights.
3. Following these 10 Cs can help one craft a TED talk that effectively spreads their idea on a global scale.
What does it take to get a TEDx talk? What are organizers looking for? In this presentation, originally delivered to the Boston Women in Media and Entertainment group, offers insights and takeaways for anyone who aspires to the TEDx stage.
Inspiration works wonders. Getting inspired, is the beginning for success and achievement. This is a lecture given to the students at the Induction programme, organized for the Saifabad Science College, Osmania University, Hyderabad. The talk was in English, but to suit the convenience of the audience, their background, Telugu and Hindi were liberally used. Becoming a Better Student, is the minimum that every student must aim at. The students must hope to become positive, constructive and contributing citizens of the society. Two power point presentations were used: 1. Inspiration, gathered from the presentation of Tom Peters and 2. Becoming a Better Student. These presentations can be viewed at: www.scribd.com [please search for Prof. V. Viswanadham and locate the item]. You can also find these presentations at www.slideshare.net/viswanadham .Your feedback will be highly appreciated. Another useful presentation, titled Some Hints on Study Skills, could not be used, due to power shutdown. In case you are interested, you can also find this power point presentation, at the indicated sites above. You can also listen to the talk on this topic, given elsewhere, by visiting www.archive.org [please search for Prof. V. Viswanadham and search for the required topic].
9 public speaking tips from today's best ted talks from carmine galloSean Sasaki
Here are 9 tips for giving powerful public speeches from popular TED talks:
1. Unleash your passion and mastery on the topic to inspire others.
2. Tell 3 impactful stories to engage the audience's brain.
3. Practice relentlessly like Dr. Jill Bolte-Taylor who rehearsed 200 times.
4. Teach the audience something new to give them a fresh perspective.
This document provides 12 effective techniques for grabbing an audience's attention in the first 30 seconds of a presentation. These include using a contrarian approach, asking rhetorical questions, delivering a catchy phrase, making a startling assertion, referencing a historical event, using the word "imagine", quoting movies, arousing curiosity, twisting quotations, quoting foreign proverbs, employing "what if" scenarios, and telling a brief story. The key is to choose a hook that is brief, well-rehearsed and pertinent to the topic being presented.
This document provides 12 effective techniques for grabbing an audience's attention in the first 30 seconds of a presentation. These include using a contrarian approach, asking rhetorical questions, delivering a catchy phrase, making a startling assertion, referencing a historical event, using the word "imagine", quoting movies, arousing curiosity, twisting quotations, quoting foreign proverbs, employing "what if" scenarios, and telling a brief story. The key is to choose a hook that is brief, well-rehearsed and pertinent to the topic being presented.
The document provides information about TEDxDouglasville, a local event modeled after TED Talks where speakers share ideas. It summarizes that TEDxDouglasville has been held annually since 2015, featuring speakers from various backgrounds. The document outlines responsibilities and criteria for speakers, including meeting deadlines, having a focused idea rather than telling their life story, and not using the platform for commercial or political purposes. Speakers are encouraged to rehearse their talks and connect with audiences emotionally.
The document discusses innovation and overcoming roadblocks to innovation. It identifies universal, group, and individual roadblocks such as human nature, culture, and personality. Some key roadblocks discussed are fear of change, failure, and inadequacy. The document provides techniques to promote innovation such as keeping a journal, solving opposite problems, finding a creative environment, and doing something fun to shift perspective. The overall message is that innovation requires removing fears and adapting to changes in order to evolve.
What Would Steve Do? Lessons from the World's Most Captivating PresentersMartafy!
This was the last presentation I created during my tenure at HubSpot as Director of Brand & Buzz. To date, it remains HubSpot's 2nd most popular SlideShare of all time with >1.25 Million views and 35,000 downloads.
See the original presentation on HubSpot's SlideShare channel here: http://slidesha.re/1avaxMa
To learn more about HubSpot, visit www.HubSpot.com.
Perhaps school taught you how to make a taxonomy or create a persona from research, but did it teach you how to ask for a raise? How to create consensus between your team, product and engineering? Or how to get the right design out in the face of the “just copy Amazon/Google/Netflix” argument?
Designers are taught the skills to make good design, but not the ones that will assure that design will go live. In this talk, I’ll cover key skills every UX practitioner should know.
The techniques I’ll each are based on a combination of Nonviolent Communication, John Kotter’s Buy In, FBI negotiation techniques, and from real life in the Silicon Valley.
Attendees will learn
How to build consensus
How to argue and listen effectively
How to stay zen when the situation gets hot
How to get buy in
How to ask for what you need
While designers historically have shrunk away from selling, It’s not gross or ugly to ask for what you need to get the job done right. If designers want a place at the table, they will have to ask for it.
The document provides tips and advice for effective public speaking. It discusses the importance of being well-prepared, overcoming stage fright, engaging the audience, using humor appropriately, gestures, and concluding powerfully. Specific tips include starting simply, practicing, making eye contact, speaking conversationally, and being confident in delivering one's message.
Bullets are for guns & to-do lists ,not presentations.Umberto Tessitore
Humans process images 60,000x faster than words
We also recall information presented as image 6x more easily than text
Logic doesn’t flood the brain with dopamine, which is why logic alone doesn’t move mountains.
USE METAPHORS TO GIVE MEANING
USE SIMPLE LANGUAGE, FREE OF JARGONS
This document provides 10 tips for creating captivating presentations based on lessons from famous presenters like Steve Jobs, Scott Harrison, and Gary Vaynerchuk. The tips include crafting an emotional story instead of using bullet points, answering why the audience should care, how it will improve their lives, and what they must do. It also recommends practicing extensively, using simple language and images over words, and treating it as a performance rather than just a presentation. The overall message is that awe-inspiring presentations can motivate audiences in a way that boring ones cannot.
This document provides 10 tips for creating captivating presentations based on lessons from famous presenters like Steve Jobs, Scott Harrison, and Gary Vaynerchuk. The tips include crafting an emotional story instead of using bullet points, answering why the audience should care, how it will improve their lives, and what they must do. It also recommends practicing extensively, showing images instead of just words, and treating it as a performance rather than just a presentation. The overall message is that awe-inspiring presentations can motivate audiences in a way that boring presentations cannot.
World of Speakers E.47: Creating value and connections with your talksSpeakerHub
Ryan Foland speaks with Drew Dudley, a dynamic and fascinating speaker whose viral TED Talk has been voted “one of the 15 most inspirational TED talks of all time.”
Ryan and Drew cover a wide range of fantastically helpful topics in this podcast that range from how to effectively tell stories that connect with your audience, to how to get more bookings and become a highly-valuable speaker.
Listen to this podcast to find out:
- A practical guide to authentically living your values
- Anecdotes or stories? How to connect and teach your audience
- Reverse engineering: how to sell your talk to organizers, which will get you more bookings
- Why being useful is better than being motivational or inspirational
- How to overcome nerves and connect with your audience when you first start speaking on stages
- Why you need to become a truly amazing speaker before investing in marketing your speaking business.
What if you can curate serendipity? A challenge to fellow IT practitioners. Materials mostly from http://tech.co/tony-hsieh-theory-serendipity-2012-09 and http://www.boundlss.com/blog/casual-collisions-spontaneous-meetings-serendipity. Also: http://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/25386981-social-physics-how-good-ideas-spread-the-lessons-from-a-new-science
Ted Talks is a place where people share their innovative ideas around the world. Ted Talks – A friend that you never had, a teacher that will show you a world in a different way. They believe passionately in the power of ideas to change the attitude of people, life, and ultimately the world.
To know more visit : http://www.thecreativebureau.in/2017/01/13/ted-talks/
The document describes a knowledge cafe event being held by David Gurteen on facilitating learning conversations. The day-long event includes introductions, discussions on business as conversation and the knowledge cafe process, and a knowledge cafe session. A knowledge cafe is a structured conversation where participants discuss a topic to gain a deeper understanding through sharing ideas and knowledge. It emphasizes dialogue over debate and creates an open environment to surface collective insights.
Rotarians are often asked to give public speeches but many fear public speaking. The article provides advice from Chris Anderson on how to give an effective presentation. It recommends framing your story with a clear beginning, middle, and end. It also suggests practicing your delivery through memorization or notecards and making eye contact with the audience. The use of multimedia should enhance rather than replace the presentation. With preparation and practice, anyone can learn to give a compelling speech.
How Donald Trump can help you become a better Art Director
The 2017 updated version of the ADMA Creative School Art Direction lecture designed to help and inspire all young creatives hoping to get a job in an agency creative department.
Does one UX fits tem all? Welcome to the era of GX: Gamification ExperienceOlcayto Cengiz
This document discusses gamification and the growing importance of gamification experiences (GX). It notes that gamification goes beyond just making games and involves using game elements to motivate and engage users. The document outlines several gamification frameworks and models. It also provides statistics showing the increasing number of people who play games regularly, including half of mobile players being female. The document advocates designing gamification with psychology and story/meaning in mind, not just technology. It provides some examples of successful gamified apps and argues gamification will become increasingly important.
Olcayto Cengiz discusses connecting dots by looking backward and trusting they will connect in the future. He notes that 15 years ago a good website was dismissed but is now essential, and gamification is currently dismissed but may become important. Cengiz concludes by quoting Steve Jobs that you can only connect dots looking backward, so you must trust they will connect in your future.
Why Psychological Safety Matters for Software Teams - ACE 2024 - Ben Linders.pdfBen Linders
Psychological safety in teams is important; team members must feel safe and able to communicate and collaborate effectively to deliver value. It’s also necessary to build long-lasting teams since things will happen and relationships will be strained.
But, how safe is a team? How can we determine if there are any factors that make the team unsafe or have an impact on the team’s culture?
In this mini-workshop, we’ll play games for psychological safety and team culture utilizing a deck of coaching cards, The Psychological Safety Cards. We will learn how to use gamification to gain a better understanding of what’s going on in teams. Individuals share what they have learned from working in teams, what has impacted the team’s safety and culture, and what has led to positive change.
Different game formats will be played in groups in parallel. Examples are an ice-breaker to get people talking about psychological safety, a constellation where people take positions about aspects of psychological safety in their team or organization, and collaborative card games where people work together to create an environment that fosters psychological safety.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
1.) Introduction
Our Movement is not new; it is the same as it was for Freedom, Justice, and Equality since we were labeled as slaves. However, this movement at its core must entail economics.
2.) Historical Context
This is the same movement because none of the previous movements, such as boycotts, were ever completed. For some, maybe, but for the most part, it’s just a place to keep your stable until you’re ready to assimilate them into your system. The rest of the crabs are left in the world’s worst parts, begging for scraps.
3.) Economic Empowerment
Our Movement aims to show that it is indeed possible for the less fortunate to establish their economic system. Everyone else – Caucasian, Asian, Mexican, Israeli, Jews, etc. – has their systems, and they all set up and usurp money from the less fortunate. So, the less fortunate buy from every one of them, yet none of them buy from the less fortunate. Moreover, the less fortunate really don’t have anything to sell.
4.) Collaboration with Organizations
Our Movement will demonstrate how organizations such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, National Urban League, Black Lives Matter, and others can assist in creating a much more indestructible Black Wall Street.
5.) Vision for the Future
Our Movement will not settle for less than those who came before us and stopped before the rights were equal. The economy, jobs, healthcare, education, housing, incarceration – everything is unfair, and what isn’t is rigged for the less fortunate to fail, as evidenced in society.
6.) Call to Action
Our movement has started and implemented everything needed for the advancement of the economic system. There are positions for only those who understand the importance of this movement, as failure to address it will continue the degradation of the people deemed less fortunate.
No, this isn’t Noah’s Ark, nor am I a Prophet. I’m just a man who wrote a couple of books, created a magnificent website: http://www.thearkproject.llc, and who truly hopes to try and initiate a truly sustainable economic system for deprived people. We may not all have the same beliefs, but if our methods are tried, tested, and proven, we can come together and help others. My website: http://www.thearkproject.llc is very informative and considerably controversial. Please check it out, and if you are afraid, leave immediately; it’s no place for cowards. The last Prophet said: “Whoever among you sees an evil action, then let him change it with his hand [by taking action]; if he cannot, then with his tongue [by speaking out]; and if he cannot, then, with his heart – and that is the weakest of faith.” [Sahih Muslim] If we all, or even some of us, did this, there would be significant change. We are able to witness it on small and grand scales, for example, from climate control to business partnerships. I encourage, invite, and challenge you all to support me by visiting my website.
This presentation by Juraj Čorba, Chair of OECD Working Party on Artificial Intelligence Governance (AIGO), was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Katharine Kemp, Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law & Justice at UNSW Sydney, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
• For a full set of 530+ questions. Go to
https://skillcertpro.com/product/servicenow-cis-itsm-exam-questions/
• SkillCertPro offers detailed explanations to each question which helps to understand the concepts better.
• It is recommended to score above 85% in SkillCertPro exams before attempting a real exam.
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This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the 77th meeting of the OECD Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Nathaniel Lane, Associate Professor in Economics at Oxford University, was made during the discussion “Pro-competitive Industrial Policy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/pcip.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
The importance of sustainable and efficient computational practices in artificial intelligence (AI) and deep learning has become increasingly critical. This webinar focuses on the intersection of sustainability and AI, highlighting the significance of energy-efficient deep learning, innovative randomization techniques in neural networks, the potential of reservoir computing, and the cutting-edge realm of neuromorphic computing. This webinar aims to connect theoretical knowledge with practical applications and provide insights into how these innovative approaches can lead to more robust, efficient, and environmentally conscious AI systems.
Webinar Speaker: Prof. Claudio Gallicchio, Assistant Professor, University of Pisa
Claudio Gallicchio is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Computer Science of the University of Pisa, Italy. His research involves merging concepts from Deep Learning, Dynamical Systems, and Randomized Neural Systems, and he has co-authored over 100 scientific publications on the subject. He is the founder of the IEEE CIS Task Force on Reservoir Computing, and the co-founder and chair of the IEEE Task Force on Randomization-based Neural Networks and Learning Systems. He is an associate editor of IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks and Learning Systems (TNNLS).
This presentation by Thibault Schrepel, Associate Professor of Law at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam University, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Yong Lim, Professor of Economic Law at Seoul National University School of Law, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Tim Capel, Director of the UK Information Commissioner’s Office Legal Service, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
XP 2024 presentation: A New Look to Leadershipsamililja
Presentation slides from XP2024 conference, Bolzano IT. The slides describe a new view to leadership and combines it with anthro-complexity (aka cynefin).
This presentation by Professor Alex Robson, Deputy Chair of Australia’s Productivity Commission, was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the 77th meeting of the OECD Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Professor Giuseppe Colangelo, Jean Monnet Professor of European Innovation Policy, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
3. Presentation worth spreading.
”HOW TO D A TED TALK”
“If I am to speak ten minutes, I need a week for preparation;
if fifteen minutes, three days; if half an hour, two days;
if an hour, I am ready now.”
- Woodrow Wilson
6. YOU ARE THE STORYTELLER
Presentation worth spreading.
”HOW TO D A TED TALK”
7. HI, I WORK AS A DIGITAL
BUSINESS INTEGRATION
MANAGER FOR THE
ACCENTURE ASGR
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”HOW TO D A TED TALK”
8. CURIOSITY KILLED THE CAT.feed
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”HOW TO D A TED TALK”
9. AUDIENCE ARE THE GUEST.
YOU ARE THE HOME.
NOT THE OTHER WAY AROUND
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”HOW TO D A TED TALK”
10. Be ready.
Have a passionate idea.
Know your audience.
Shape the story.
Stay real.
Fuel curiousity.
Feel comfortable.
Presentation worth spreading.
Presentation worth spreading.
”HOW TO D A TED TALK”
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