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Informal Learning Flow is a content hub started by Jay Cross that collects and organizes the best information on the web around informal learning. We hope this will help you find good stuff, learn and stay current.
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1495 Articles match "Course","future"
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The Latest from Informal Learning Flow
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How Cheap Could Computing Get: Free? NComputing Thinks So
Ncomputing's CEO Stephen Dukker sees the model developing even further in the future, with that notional price for a "PC" dropping to well below $200. Of course, it'll never get there, as someone has to make a profit for the business to function. If you assume a desktop computer's a big box full of chips, hard drives and other paraphernalia, it's hard to see how to make it cheaper. Unless you go down the virtualization route: NComputing thinks the ultimate cost could be zero.
Fast Company
- Friday, March 19, 2010
User-Centered Innovation Is Not Sustainable
The Prius was a proposal — a vision that came from a better understanding of the future evolution of the socio-cultural and economic scenario. Only forward-looking executives, designers, and, of course, policy makers may introduce sustainable innovation into the economic picture. Last week I was in London at "The Big Rethink" conference of The Economist . Its goal was to explore the challenges of facing the world after the recession and how innovation and design could help address them.
HarvardBusiness.org
- Friday, March 19, 2010
Got Budget? Virtualization as Poster Child for Less Meetings
IT, of course, knows this also (especially since they are likely watching your network traffic). We see this as a future cloud inflection point, where instead of there "cloud services", we are all in one.
McKesson is a global health care leader that has 26 operating companies. The centrial IT group had the vision to automate "the last mile" of IT planning, the budget approval process.
ReadWriteWeb
- Thursday, March 18, 2010
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The Best from Informal Learning Flow
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The future of education – A course in futures thinking
had cleared my year to focus on some writing and, in the span of 3 days, had taken on the teaching of three courses (well… i’m teaching one of them twice). The course I’m going to be teaching twice, once f2f in Singapore next month and as an open course with George Siemens starting in mid-April, is about the future of education. The course description got me thinking though… Funny how these opportunities can present themselves sometimes. I
Dave's Educational Blog
- Monday, March 8, 2010
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Course and Courseware Fading - The Future of eLearning
Two very good recent posts by Jay Cross and Brent Schlenker discuss the Death of Courses. Courses and Courseware are not really dead and will never die out completely. believe that many courses will begin to include different kinds of interation. But, there will still be courses at the end of the day. If you read my blog you know that I've discussed similar themes (see Shift in eLearning from Pure Courseware towards Reference Hybrids and Start with Courseware or With the Other Stuff? ) and I have the same basic feeling that there is definitely a shift going on.
eLearning Technology
- Sunday, August 6, 2006
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Ten Futures
Drawing on Richard MacManus's 10 Future Web Trends , this is a bit linear, but has the virtue of identifying future trends, not things that are around today. That won't stop a slew of populists from claiming to 'know' where the global mind is headed (a la evangelists or Marxists) - though of course, except at a very macro level, the destiny of an individual is independent of the destiny of the global mind. 1. The Pragmatic Web Forget about the Semantic Web.
Half an Hour
- Thursday, September 6, 2007
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Old Growth Media And The Future Of News
say about the future of the news ecosystem, it’s essential that we
travel conversation about the future of news, we need to start by talking
about Within a few years, the web arrived, and soon after I was reading a site called Macintouch, which featured daily updates and commentary on everything from new printer driver releases to the future of the Mac clone business. The following is a speech I gave yesterday at the South By Southwest Interactive Festival in Austin.
I If you happened to being hanging out in
front front of the old College Hill Bookstore in Providence
stevenberlinjohnson.com
- Saturday, March 14, 2009
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The Future of Online Learning: Ten Years On
An MS-Word version of this essay is available at [link] In the summer of 1998, over two frantic weeks in July, I wrote an essay titled The Future of Online Learning. (Downes, We want a plan,” said my managers, and so I outlined the future as I thought it would – and should – unfold. In the ten years that have followed, this vision of the future has proven to be remarkably robust. Downes, 1998) At the time, I was working as a distance education and new media design specialist at Assiniboine Community College, and I wrote the essay to defend the work I was doing at the time. “We
Half an Hour
- Sunday, November 16, 2008
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The Future of Our Cities: Open, Crowdsourced, and Participatory
The conversation about the future of our cities should involve the people living in those cities. the MTA of course this is unthinkable. course these new sorts of user-built services are beginning to pop up anyway, even without the blessing of the city agencies they help. This is the future that is coming to our Guest blogger John Geraci has spent the last six years making life in cities better with the use of web technologies. His latest project, DIYcity.org, has web developers and urban planners all over the world teaming up to create open source tools for
OReilly Radar
- Monday, April 6, 2009
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Connectivism and Connective Knowledge Course blog
We've set up a course blog for our Connectivism and Connective Knowledge online course. The intention of the blog is to open up the conversation around course design and delivery and changing value points in education. The transparency will hopefully capture some of our (Stephen Downes and myself) thinking around course design and foster interaction with others on ways to improve delivery.
From From the blog:
We’re We’re
Connectivism Blog
- Tuesday, June 17, 2008
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The future of the training department
Most of this training activity assumed that you could prepare people for the future by training them in what had worked in the past. Complexity, or maybe our appreciation of it, has rendered the world unpredictable, so the orientation of learning is shifting from past (efficiency, best practice) to future (creative response, innovation). We march backwards into the future.”
by Harold Jarche and Jay Cross
Prior to the 20th Century, training per se did not exist outside the special needs of the church and the military.
TogetherLearn
- Friday, February 20, 2009
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Informal Learning 2.0
learning this past decade, as defined mostly by vendors, became courses online and PowerPoint conversion tools. The job of learning professionals must move to a macro level while the micro-design work, once the realm of course designers, should be done by each worker. Tags: future of learnin Enterprise 2.0 is the use of emergent social software platforms within companies, or between companies and their partners or customers , according to Andrew McAfee’s original 2006 definition.
TogetherLearn
- Wednesday, April 8, 2009
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eLearn Magazine’s 2010 Predictions
Google Wave is already set to become a very popular tool this year, and I think it represents the way that tools are going to evolve in the near future, that is that the social functionality found in standalone tools is going to merge and become amalgamated into more integrated “learning” tools. expect to see more inspired uses of technology to break out of the “course” mentality and start facilitating performance more broadly, as organizational structures move learning from “nice to have” to core infrastructure.
—Clark Four members of Internet Time Alliance submitted their thoughts to eLearn Magazine’s 2010 Predictions .
Wave Crests
Google
Internet Time
- Friday, January 8, 2010
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