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elemenous   elemenous Lucy Gray's TIGblog
Lucy Gray's profile

iSummit 2009 Presentations

Professional Learning Networks - iSummit View more presentations from elemenous. Beyond Search - iSummit View more presentations from elemenous. All About Google Tools View more presentations from elemenous.



July 8, 2009 | 10:07 AM Comments  0 comments

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thlee   thlee dokoohakoo's TIGblog
dokoohakoo's profile

Vote for Media Features


Here at WordPress.com, we always run the most recent version of the WordPress open source software. In addition, we do custom development so that we can offer features not included in the open source core product (like VideoPress, built-in polls, etc.). Because WordPress.com gets new features implemented as they are developed, we don’t usually talk too much about big version releases. For example, WordPress 2.8 was released recently, but we didn’t announce it here because WordPress.com blogs had already been running the new features (like the new widgets administration panel) before the big open source release occurred.

The open source project is getting started on development of version 2.9, which is expected to launch toward the end of this year. The reason I think it’s worth posting about this here on WordPress.com is that the focus of the 2.9 development is going to be improved media features, and improved media management is one of the most frequently requested things in the support forums, support emails, comments and at WordCamps.

There have been many suggestions for how to improve our media functions, so many that we can’t build all of them at once. For the next couple of days, there is a survey you can take to vote on which media features are the most important to you. This will help us prioritize the development. Are you dying for photo albums? A redesigned uploader? The ability to crop, resize or rotate your images? There are 11 proposed media features listed in the survey for you to rank in order of priority.

Descriptions of each proposed feature are provided at the beginning of the voting survey, so you’ll be sure to know what each what means. Only the first question (pick your top choice) is mandatory. This survey isn’t very long. Question two lets you assign a general high/low priority to each of the 11 feature suggestions, while question 3 asks you to rank the 11 features in order of priority from 1-11. A text box or two allow you to make additional suggestions, and that’s it. The survey is anonymous, and will be open until Friday, July 10, 2009 at 11:59 PM UTC.

Vote now!


July 8, 2009 | 9:07 AM Comments  0 comments

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elemenous   elemenous Lucy Gray's TIGblog
Lucy Gray's profile

Embedding Books from Google Book Search

Just testing the embed feature in Google Book Search.



July 7, 2009 | 4:07 AM Comments  0 comments

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elemenous   elemenous Lucy Gray's TIGblog
Lucy Gray's profile

Official Google Blog: Google heads to grade school: New resources for K-12 teachers and students

Official Google Blog: Google heads to grade school: New resources for K-12 teachers and students. Because of all the NECC hoopla, I completely missed the mention of Google's presence at...



July 4, 2009 | 11:07 AM Comments  0 comments

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cherrie   cherrie Cherrie's TIGblog
Cherrie's profile

Rock Hard

If you're ever feeling down, rock hard like this kid:


July 4, 2009 | 6:07 AM Comments  0 comments

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jenergy   jenergy Jennifer Corriero's TIGblog
Jennifer Corriero's profile

Six Archetypes of Youth Change Makers

Since the founding of TakingITGlobal in 1999, I have been incredibly inspired by my interactions with thousands of young change makers from all around the world. Through my Masters Research on youth-led action in an international context along with exposure to other studies and international conferences examining the role of today's generation of youth as change agents, I have gained an important observation. My observation is that I have seen the emergence of Six Archetypes of Youth Change Makers, which provide a glance at the roles young people are taking on in the process of creating change.


The Dreamer

The Dreamer is the driver behind new ideas. Dreamers are often the first to articulate a long-term vision for the future and think big. It is the sense of aspiration, optimism and imagination of dreamers that drive progress, innovation and change.

The Megaphone

The Megaphone is a vocal advocate for change. Megaphones are very focused on delivering the message and will campaign tirelessly and work hard to lobby for a message to be heard. They inspire action through their words and help to shift priorities on the agenda.

The Spark Plug

The Spark Plug is a catalyst and has a gift for networking and connecting people. The Spark Plug is able to foster collaborations and bring many different organizations and individuals together in dialogue, convincing diverse interest groups to come together for a common goal.

The Task Master

The Task Master is often behind the scenes making things happen and is sometimes the under-rated player within a group or organization. Often, it is the Task Master who literally keeps things together by turning ideas into manageable tasks with actionable timelines. Task Masters are practical, objective-oriented individuals.

The Sherpa

The Sherpa serves as a guide who provides mentorship, insight and training through peer education. Sherpas are natural educators with a strong interest in learning and sharing knowledge. Sherpas value hands on experiences and are able to draw upon the expertise and resources of those they encounter.

The Storyteller

The Storyteller is often the documenter of an organization and its projects, preparing short stories, interviews, blogs, webcasts newsletters and more. Storytellers become a vehicle for spreading inspiration and sharing of best practices through identifying patterns and strengthening movements through recognizing exceptional individuals.

July 2, 2009 | 5:18 PM Comments  0 comments

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ChristyCavell   ChristyCavell Christy Walters's TIGblog
Christy Walters's profile

Thanks for the 45

thousand views. Poetry coming soon.

July 2, 2009 | 12:30 PM Comments  0 comments

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ChristyCavell   ChristyCavell Christy Walters's TIGblog
Christy Walters's profile

Oh, Canada.

I had the great opportunity of leading in the singing of the national anthem at a Canada Day concert yesterday so over the past couple of days I've been religiously singing the lyric. It struck me that, up to this point, they were just words that I would sing annually in a monontonous fashion. So I just thought I'd take the opportunity to say that I have true patriot love for the true north strong and free, just because.

Now getting into lyrics. Words may be powerful but when they become lyric, that power appears amplified times ten. Lyrics strike a chord (pardon the pun) beyond vocal expression: they connect sound, melody, rhythm and meaning to surpass the lexicon of mere dialect, extending into a whole other realm of feeling. I've said it numerous times, but music is my lifeboat; continuously reviving my soul. I love it on a whole other level.

July 2, 2009 | 12:16 PM Comments  0 comments

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ChristyCavell   ChristyCavell Christy Walters's TIGblog
Christy Walters's profile

20 years

I'm not a self-professed Pearl Jam fan, however, I've been paying attention to some of their lyric recently. I was reading an interview with Eddie Vedder commenting on the meaning behind their single "Indifference" and I thought the following passage profound:

"On average, we have maybe 50 to 60 years on the planet. And we probably have 20 years when we're a vital presence, when you can actually do something with your life.
So what are you going to do with that time?
Are you gonna enjoy it, not get involved? Or are you gonna try and do something to make some other peoples' lives better than they are? Even if those people don't even appreciate what you're trying to do. Even if you're not sure yourself that what you're doing is going to make any bit of difference."

It speaks for itself, my thoughts exactly (although I'm hoping your vital presence can outlast 20 years).

July 2, 2009 | 12:10 PM Comments  0 comments

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leapinGazelle   leapinGazelle ghazaleh's TIGblog
ghazaleh's profile

Maximize its use by minimizing its service


As one human being you don’t have enough brain cells and heart pulses to care for the people you have connected with in your life. It’s harder when you’re actually a good hearted person, because everyone wants your time. This social chatty internet shit makes it more confusing with how to spend your time living a healthy life. You’re not really “supposed” to be in touch with everyone you’ve met.

It’s harder for us to know who our true friends are and who really deserves our energy. So my suggestion is whoever makes you feel more comfortable in your own skin is worth your time. Others shouldn’t matter as much. The more real you are with yourself, and the more you surround yourself by people who “really” know who you are, the less stress you have to deal with.

Stop the frontin’. Your time is valuable and your brain shouldn’t be so distracted by caring about so many other problems. We all just have one body to deal with and one brain to be creative with and one heart to really squeeze and pour-your-love-out with. Maximize its use by minimizing its service.


July 2, 2009 | 10:07 AM Comments  0 comments

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thlee   thlee dokoohakoo's TIGblog
dokoohakoo's profile

National Blog Posting Month


Remember National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) back in November? You all used the opportunity to take a swing at churning out a 50,000-word novel on your blogs in only one month — some with great success!

There’s also NaBloPoMo, which has nothing to do with post-modernism, but with blogging! It stands for National Blog Posting Month.

It’s an even more fitting occasion for posting regularly to your blog on the topics that interest you. And maybe the best part is that it starts whenever you want it to! The only objective is to post every day for a month. So why not begin with July? To make it official, sign up here. It’s open to anyone with a blog, anywhere in the world.

The NaBloPoMo team provides a theme for each month, which isn’t mandatory, but is a nice way to gain inspiration that can kick off your daily updates.

Not into that? Then we suggest sticking to the stuff you’ve been blogging about all along — the things you experience and love — with the added caveat of keeping it on the regular.

If you run out of steam, you can always find ways to blog about the dozens of weird celebrations and holidays that take place in July, in addition to Independence Day in the U.S. — like Ice Cream Soda Day, Video Games Day, or Bugs Bunny’s Birthday.

To plug the WordPress community into your endeavor, we suggest using NaBloPoMo09 as a tag on each post you publish to your blog. They’ll show up on the tag results page, which is also a great place to get inspired by your fellow bloggers.

A note: Please refrain from commenting with questions about NaBloPoMo in response to this post. It’s not a WordPress project. Instead, check out their FAQ to learn more about its objectives and requirements.

Happy (daily) blogging!


July 2, 2009 | 4:07 AM Comments  0 comments

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thlee   thlee dokoohakoo's TIGblog
dokoohakoo's profile

June Wrap-Up


Last month we launched the Yahoo! App and 360 importer so you can migrate your content to WordPress.com quickly and easily. And we introduced the SocialVibe widget, which helps you earn donations for the charity of your choice. July will bring more feature updates, and more of the themes and customizations you’ve been asking for. We’re listening.

Here are the stats for June:

  • 388,580 blogs were created.
  • 5,845,417 posts were published.
  • 411,540 new users joined.
  • 5,800,941 file uploads.
  • 3,633 gigabytes of new files.
  • 810 terabytes of content transferred from our datacenters.
  • 8,330,617 comments.
  • 6,841,633 logins.
  • 1,245,935,191 pageviews on WordPress.com, and another 1,245,882,985 on self-hosted blogs (2,491,818,176 total across all WordPress blogs we track).
  • 2,153,176 active blogs where “active” means they got a human visitor.
  • 1,447,021,840 words.

Plus:

You published 37,894 posts using the WordPress for iPhone app.

The new GigaOM Pro launched, powered by BuddyPress.

WordCamps in June: WordCamp Chicago, WordCamp RDU, WordCamp Brasil, and WordCamp Dallas.

WordCamps coming up in July: WordCamp Montreal and WordCamp UK.


July 2, 2009 | 1:07 AM Comments  0 comments

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damianprofeta   damianprofeta Damian Profeta's TIGblog
Damian Profeta's profile

Ahora mi blog está en www.damianprofeta.com.ar



Hola, mudé mi blog a otra dirección:
www.damianprofeta.com.ar!

Vas a ser redirigido automáticamente en cinco segundos.

En caso contrario, podés acceder haciendo click acá



June 28, 2009 | 9:36 PM Comments  0 comments

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leapinGazelle   leapinGazelle ghazaleh's TIGblog
ghazaleh's profile

how to keep creative


Make, move, make, move, make, move — nothing needs you for too long unless you are in love and/or have kids, and even then, you can still make and move. Help as many people as you can by providing service. But when I say too long, I mean stop when you’re full. By full I don’t mean your hopes and dreams — I mean pride and acceptance. By that I don’t mean give up — I mean stop and think about longevity and sutainability. By lasting I don’t mean doing what you’re told to survive  – I mean keep your spirit alive. By spirit I don’t mean God — I mean your self.

Train yourself to be creative because if you don’t, you’ll just miss out on reality. It’s all moving — just catch it when it comes and roll with it baby (yes, you are a baby). The only home you got is in your heart and the only thing that distinguishes you is your creativity. Practice moving around. By that I don’t mean travel the world — I mean face your fears and challenge your comfort.

That’s how you keep creative.


June 24, 2009 | 12:06 PM Comments  0 comments

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leapinGazelle   leapinGazelle ghazaleh's TIGblog
ghazaleh's profile

dead and gone?


Ever wonder if anything is dead when you think it’s dead?

Like when you get into an argument with someone you have a close relationship with, or when you lose a game, or when you promised to do something and you don’t live up to? Do you wonder if you lost something knowing you can never get back?

I thought about it and then I realized I’m too stubborn. I thought about being stubborn and then I realized that human beings have various degrees of stubbornness in them. My stubborn temperature rises in strategic situations where my decision affects a larger situation that it’s dependent upon.

I believe in moments of stubbornness one can learn most about themselves, others and completion of tasks. Nothing can survive or be complete on its own. It otherwise would not exist. This means that we as individuals must realize how important others are and how invisible we as individuals must be in the process of completion.

I believe everyone should aim to become invisible by controlling their times of stubbornness. In the society we live in, people are not like that, which means you have to always remember that.

Nothing is dead and gone, because if it was, you could never grow and mature as an individual. The way you handle and recognize your own stubbornness determines your level of maturity. So learn as much as you can about yourself by aiming to become invisible in your run to the finish line.

Pace yourself to win the marathon.


June 23, 2009 | 11:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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