AI & Big Data Reshape the Language Service Industry – Markets Insider

BRISBANE, Australia, Aug. 7, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Artificial intelligence (AI) and big data arepervasiveand disruptive in today's world. They transform the way people work and live, decision making processes and the landscape of industries. The language service industry is not an exception to this. What revolutionary changes have AI and big data brought to society? How would they reshape the language service industry? How would they benefit and inspire practitioners, service providers and clients in the future?

At the 21st International Federation of Translators Congress ( FIT 2017) held from August 3 to 5 in Brisbane, Global Tone Communication Technology Co., Ltd. (GTCOM), the exclusive strategic partner of the event, worked with some 1,000 professionals and experts to find out answers for the above questions and many other questions.

GTCOM CEO Eric Yu addressed the opening ceremony, sharing with participants how the advances in machine translation and AI technology have had a disruptive impact on the language industry, and how their application will greatly improveindustry-wide efficiency and provide easier access to smarter language services.

During the event, GTCOM unveiled the YEEKIT, a language tool integrating both AI and language technology, and presented YEESIGHT and other products incorporating the latest development in AI and cross-language big data technology, attracting great attention from local businesses and media.

At the forums sponsored by GTCOM, the management of the company, includingthe experts from world leading language service companies and organizations, and professors from prestigious higher-education institutions exchanged their views on the roles technology has played in the delivery of language services.Thisalso includedtranslation instruction and research, and they offered thought-provoking insights into the new challenges and opportunities for the language service industry.

Photo - https://photos.prnasia.com/prnh/20170804/1912128-1

SOURCE Global Tone Communication Technology Co., Ltd. (GTCOM)

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AI & Big Data Reshape the Language Service Industry - Markets Insider

In a world where machines and AI rule, re-skilling is the only way out – YourStory.com

Gartner says more than 3 million workers across the world will have a robo boss by 2018. High time businesses reorient skill development programs to help mid-level managers stay relevant.

In July, the Vodafone-Idea merger was approved by the Competition Commission of India (CCI). The mega deal will make the shareholders of both companies become part of the largest telecom company in India,and reward them in the future. It will also create a situation that can quickly escalate into a nightmare.

As many as 6,000 senior-level leaders will have overlapping roles in the new entity. Industry sources say at least 50 percent of these will have to be let go and will be not employable. These individuals, who have put in at least 20 years of work in various roles within the organisation, have not been trained to keep pace with the digital era. But turning unemployable at the age of 45 is scary.

If the scene in Mumbai is bleak, in Chennai, the offices of ZohoCorp seem to have a Zen vibe.

Co-founder Sridhar Vembu is analysing technologies that can impact his organisation and his employees. He leaves no stone unturned when it comes to upskilling employees and is betting on technical languages that work for Zohos applications. Sridhar spends a lot of time with his engineers and almost 400-odd engineers have moved from the coding server to building applications on Android. At Zoho, senior engineers are constantly relearning static languages (Scala and Java) and are even playing with dynamic languages (JavaScript, ActionScript, Ruby on Rails).Sridhar says:

We can build a global organisation the Indian way. Unfortunately, all organisations use the western concept of hiring and firing, and focus on boosting shareholder returns. It is the problem of leaders who dont understand the impact they have on employees fired; after all, they just followed what they were told.

He adds that it is the responsibility of leaders to ensure employees are up to date with new technologies.

Even if people are talking about AI, you need human capital to train these machines in understanding data. I believe in contextual learning and people in Zoho are learning from different teams at any given point of time, says Sridhar.

He continues to believe that human capital is the greatest advantage in this era than ever before.

Indians perform all rituals; unfortunately god has left the temple. Today, we have moved from being spiritual to being ritual, Sridhar says, implying that today everyone follows a leader or pursues a task, but neither the leader nor employees think about a holistic approach to learning and building systems.

Narayana Murthy, Chairman Emeritus of Infosys, at the founders farewell dinner in 2015 urged his organisation to follow compassionate capitalism. He had said, It was our belief that it is only through excellence in people that we could achieve such growth.

With machine learning and AI skills requiring a deeper understanding of the industry, a manager has to retrain himself and ensure that the death of old legacy of businesses like maintenance of code and quality testing jobs do not affect new hires or people five years into the job.

Manoj Thelakkat, Founder of Reflex Training Partners, says, Training modules have to change from time-based and certification programmes to contextual learning. He says his organisation is teaching senior managers through theatre and music to understand collaborating in the world of AI, preparing organisations to reskill staff rather than sack them by looking at an Excel sheet.

Corporates are reskilling and realising that AI does not mean losing jobs, but a realignment of jobs.

In a recent survey by PWC titled Bot.Me: A revolutionary partnership more than 50 percent of respondents believed AI could help better healthcare, financial management, security and education. Less than 40 percent believed that it could create income and gender equality. In the next five years, jobs such as tutors, travel agents, tax preparers, office and home assistants, health coaches, chauffeurs and general physicians will get replaced.

The survey was limited to developing markets where growth has stagnated and the population is aging. This falls right into the table for India as these AI programs will be built by engineers.

Vijay Ratnaparkhe, Managing Director of Robert Bosch Engineering and Business Solutions Limited (RBEI), believes that one must not forget that today India is building software for the world and we are the brains powering future solutions.

Robert Bosch and its 15,000-plus engineers are building software for cars, which are learning about living objects by using mono-chrome cameras, ultrasound, radar and LIDAR technology. These are the kind of roles that engineers must prepare for in the coming days.

As new technologies emerge, Infosys is investing in upskilling and has designed programs to help mid-management levels keep pace with change.

Richard Lobo, Executive VP and HR Head at Infosys, says: Automation and related technology are the way forward and must be embraced by employees, irrespective of their role or job level.

He adds that new avenues have evolved rapidly, which need the company to reskill people on newer technologies and hire from outside to meet gaps in the skill mix. These include areas like user experience, cloud-native development, AI and industrial IoT, Big Data, Analytics and Automation.

In this environment, it is important that employees showcase high learnability and the ability to re-skill themselves rapidly, Richard says.

Infosys has created game-based learning methodologies where the program focuses on taking disagreements and turning them into positive solutions. This program enables managers to consciously embrace differences of opinion and create an environment that cuts through the competitive nature of conflicts, promoting collaboration among teams and partners.

The company has invested in agile and feels that it is the only process they have devoted purely to the middle layer. Ever since Vishal Sikka took over as CEO he is preparing employees onDesign Thinking, where Infosys understands the entire technology requirement from the business perspective. The company has trained 1,42,218 employees so far and wants everyone in the company to go through that change.

Infosys also works with Stanford to train senior leaders. The Stanford Global Leadership Program had 36 graduates in the first quarter of this financial year. Seventy senior people have completed the program so far and another 40-plus are in the current batch.

This is one-of-a-kind program to build our next generation leaders, Richard says.

Last quarter, Infosys finished training 3,000 people on AI technology, 2,100 of them on the Nia platform. It has currently created a bank of 3,500 videos available and has also partnered with Udacity and Coursera for different skills.

There is a reason for this rush to train employees in new skills. Clients are now asking IT services to be more in line with client success in winning business.

Daimler AG, for example, is working with Bosch to launch a fleet of autonomous cars in a five-year time frame. For this form of business, a new framework of data analytics services, network and infrastructure needs to be created. It is here that IT Services want to take a bet. They will use the current set of resources to build these new IT requirements. The days of doling out CVs could reduce and the engineering community has begun living in fear. But it is an era of constant learning.

Rajesh Kumar R, Delivery Head, Retail, CPG and Manufacturing at Mindtree, the $900-million IT services company, says: With the advent of any new technology there will be some impact to certain jobs. However, the concern or fear is due to this short-term impact. Focusing on reskilling and technology education can help employees stay relevant.

He adds that irrespective of automation, collaboration is imperative to be successful in the current environment. For example, a startup ecosystem produces amazing innovation that corporates and governments can adopt. Similarly businesses of various sizes will address different segments of the industry and all these will need to work together to address demands. The future of the industry is moving towards a highly collaborative environment.

Automation is impacting mid-level managers because automation is now touching the so-called knowledge worker-related areas, once thought not automatable, Rajesh says. He adds that far more cognitive tasks will be automated in the coming years and automation will happen more rapidly as we progress.

At Mindtree, learning is driven by Yorbit, the companys online enterprise learning platform that has yielded great results in just a year of its launch. Multiple knowledge sources are brought into this platform to enable directed self-learning complemented with project-driven assisted learning to put knowledge into practice.

Automation is likely to impact cognitive routine tasks and will shift the focus of human intervention to cognitive non-routine areas. For example, with ATMs, banks are less worried about the mechanics of collecting and distributing cash, instead the workforce is focused on investment advices and customer relations. If we take the automobile industry, the human focus is more on innovation, design and less on core manufacturing where quality manufacturing is taken for granted with heavy robots driven automation.

Digital is prompting organisations across industries to reinvent and reimagine their employee enablement and engagement strategies for better business success. The correlation between employee engagement and business performance is becoming increasingly relevant.

According to Gartner Research, by 2018 50 percent of team collaboration and communication will occur through mobile group collaboration apps. Organisations will have unified observational, social and people analytics to discover, design and share better work practices. While the workplace is transforming at a rapid pace, it requires your workforce to reimagine their future by adopting newer technologies. The role of leadership now also includes making the change easier for employees.

David Raj, EVP and HR Head at CSS Corp, an IT Services company, says: In this context, the mid-level management, the future leader/CXOs, in organisations also need to evolve and reinvent as traditional roles and structures come under increasing strain.

Indias IT workforce comprises roughly 1.4 million mid-level managers, and they are finding themselves at the centre of reskilling and restructuring conversations across organisations.

NASSCOM believes the IT industrys current reskilling focus is on emerging technologies like Big Data, Analytics, Cloud, IoT, Mobility, and Design Thinking, while also investing in emerging skills like Machine Learning, Natural Language Processing, Artificial Intelligence, DevOps, Robotic Process Automation, and Cybersecurity.

However, as Mohandas Pai, Chairman of Manipal Global Education and former member of the board of directors of Infosys, says: If growth beats job losses, employment will continue to grow. But we need to be prepared for automation.

There needs to be a constant evolution of skills by embracing concepts like job rotation and fluid teams.

David believes that adopting a mix of traditional and new-age learning methodologies, digital skilling platforms, along with a thrust on building full-stack professionals and institutionalising continuous learning, will play a pivotal role in creating the right differentiation and staying ahead of the pack.

Technology is changing fast and it is imperative for mid-level managers to seek out continuous learning opportunities.

Anand Venkateswaran, Vice President, Finance and Member, Board of Directors, Target India, says: We expose our managers to the latest technology trends, and provide opportunities where they can leverage these learnings to support personal development and drive business outcomes.

He adds that senior managers are given the opportunity to mentor and interact with startups to be in touch with the latest and most relevant industry developments.

Some of the technologies that managers have to reskill for are Machine Learning, Natural Language Processing (NLP), Python, Java, open source technologies and Computer Generated Imagery (CGI).

However, all this boils down to three things: leadership, an employees ability to learn and the corporates ability to train people quickly.

Employees should keep in mind that if they are working for a CEO or a corporate that does not believe in reskilling them, they must quit before they are sacked, Sridhar says.

According to Accenture, companies will have to adapt their training, performance and talent acquisition strategies to account for a newfound emphasis on work that hinges on human judgment and skills, including experimentation and collaboration. Their survey on the impact of AI on management revealed the following:

AI will put an end to administrative management work. Managers spend most of their time on tasks at which they know AI will excel in the future. Specifically, surveyed managers expect that AIs greatest impact will be on administrative coordination and control tasks, such as scheduling, resource allocation and reporting.

There is both readiness and resistance in the ranks. Unlike their counterparts in the C-suite, lower-level managers are much more skeptical about AIs promise and express greater concern over issues related to privacy. Younger managers are more receptive than older ones. And managers in emerging economies seem ready to leapfrog the competition by embracing AI.

The next-generation manager will thrive on judgment work. AI-driven upheaval will place a higher premium on what we call judgment work the application of human experience and expertise to critical business decisions and practices when information available is insufficient to suggest a successful course of action. This kind of work will require new skills and mindsets.

A people-first strategy is essential. Replacing people with machines is not a goal in itself. While artificial intelligence enables cost-cutting automation of routine work, it also empowers value-adding augmentation of human capabilities. The findings suggest that augmentation putting people first and using AI to amplify what they can achieve holds the biggest potential for value creation in management settings.

Executives must start experimenting with AI. Its high time executives and organisations start experimenting with AI and learning from these experiences. If the labour markets shortage of analytical talent is any guide, executives can ill afford to wait and see if they and their managers are equipped to work with AI and capable of acquiring the essential skills and work approaches.

With smart automation, quick robots and intelligent software bots becoming an integral part of the workforce, its critical that organisations and employees collaborate to forge the path ahead. Its the only way to deal with the charge of the light brigade.

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In a world where machines and AI rule, re-skilling is the only way out - YourStory.com

Friday Night Inc welcomes Krypted brand to its stable – Proactive Investors UK

Friday Night Inc () said its subsidiary, Alternative Medicine Association (AMA) is to start manufacturing and distributing products under the well-known Krypted vaping brand.

With most popular cannabis brands now wanting a presence in the critical Las Vegas market, AMA is attracting new brand-expansion conversations daily, and Krypted is the fourth brand to be added to Nevada-focused AMA's exclusive manufacturing and distribution network.

The Krypted team will be in Las Vegas next week for the kick-off meeting and to prepare for the initial production run, Friday Night revealed.

AMA has already obtained state approval for their logo and product names and the first sales should occur by 15 September.

Terms include making AMA the exclusive manufacturer & distributor in Nevada for an initial term of three years, renewable annually after that, with a 15% production royalty.

Krypted, a big name in the California vaping scene, is providing AMA with all packaging and marketing support.

Intriguingly, Friday Night said AMA would launch an apparel and merchandise brand on 15 August, so if you've ever wanted to wear a pair of AMA-branded socks, now's your chance.

AMA said it has recruited an industry lifestyle branding and marketing veteran to rebrand and establish a comprehensive lifestyle approach that will expand and maximize AMA's presence within the Vegas market.

Friday Night sees AMA as a lifestyle and a global brand that will transcend into multiple business verticals that support AMA's core business.

Meanwhile, Friday Night revealed that demand for recreational cannabis continues to increase.

We look forward to our next fiscal year that began on August 1st, 2017, and the new challenges and rewards this year will bring us. With everything going on, we are confident that we will continue to outperform," said Mark Zobrist, the chief executive of AMA.

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Friday Night Inc welcomes Krypted brand to its stable - Proactive Investors UK

Cocoa flavanols: new nutraceutical? – ProHealth

Reprinted with the kind permission of Life Extension.

July 28 2017.A review published on May 16, 2017 inFrontiers in Nutritionconcludes that Through a variety of direct and indirect biological actions, in part still speculative, cocoa and cocoa-derived food have been suggested to possess the potential to counteract cognitive decline and sustain cognitive abilities, particularly among patients at risk.

Valentina Socci and colleagues at Italys University of LAquila examined a number of studies that assessed the effect of cocoa flavanols (a type of flavonoid) on human cognition. They document improvements in general cognition, attention, processing speed and working memory, among other benefits. While healthy aged individuals benefitted from cocoa, effects such as these were pronounced among older adults whose memory and cognition was beginning to decline.

"This result suggests the potential of cocoa flavanols to protect cognition in vulnerable populations over time by improving cognitive performance, commented Dr Socci and Michele Ferrara, of the University of LAquilas Department of Biotechnological and Applied Clinical Sciences. If you look at the underlying mechanism, the cocoa flavanols have beneficial effects for cardiovascular health and can increase cerebral blood volume in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus. This structure is particularly affected by aging and therefore the potential source of age-related memory decline in humans."

Among women, cocoa consumption following a night of wakefulness has been found to counteract the impairment in cognition that would typically result. The effect led to improvement in working memory accuracy. This suggests a mental benefit for female shift workers or those withinsomnia.

"Regular intake of cocoa and chocolate could indeed provide beneficial effects on cognitive functioning over time, Drs Socci and Ferrara conclude. "Dark chocolate is a rich source of flavanols. So we always eat some dark chocolate. Every day."

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Cocoa flavanols: new nutraceutical? - ProHealth

There’s life in Moses after FA Cup disgrace – ESPN FC

Victor Moses

It was symmetrically fitting that Victor Moses claimed redemption from inside the same penalty box where he had earned disgrace just under three months ago.

With Chelsea ascendant after going behind, the Nigerian drive into the box, took one skip past Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, then went down under his own steam. There was no question about the second yellow card and the red card that followed, and Chelsea ultimately lost the FA Cup Final to Arsenal on a 2-1 score.

Vilification followed for the player who, under the tutelage of of Antonio Conte, had emerged as one of Chelsea's best performers in their blistering, if not emphatic run to the Premier League title. There were even some who questioned his future at Chelsea in the wake of that, even though he had only recently just signed a contract extension.

Overlooked by previous Chelsea managers and loaned out at every turn, Moses found himself a player reborn under Conte, with his eclectic mix of bounding attack combined with energetic defending finding favour in the sight of the Italian.

But his FA Cup Final setback set raised questions anew. Questions about his suitability and his durability for Conte's second season.

Those questions have been decisively by the Nigerian, and not just because of the goal he scored. Moses, as he had been for the best part of last season, was one of Chelsea's best players on the day. His direct running and quick feet a constant and worrying source of headache for Arsenal's defence.

It was from one of those that he shot the Blues in front. Hovering just between two defenders, Moses anticipated Gary Cahill's header, peeled away from the blindsided Gunners defence and took one sublime touch before lashing home from close range.

It was typical Moses. His best qualities on full display. But even more telling, it showed he had recovered fully from the toe surgery which kept him out of the Nigeria squad in June.

Pedro's red card signalled a Chelsea capitulation as Kolasinac headed Arsenal level and the Gunners went on to win 4-1 on penalty shootouts. But Moses can take comfort that some semblance of order can now be said to have been restored to his mini-world.

If there is one thing Moses has shown during the course of both life and career, it is that setbacks only serve to make him stronger. On the basis of his Community Shield showing, it would seem to appear that the box of tricks still has a few more tricks waiting to pop up.

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There's life in Moses after FA Cup disgrace - ESPN FC

Explore Nature: Hike Bay Ocean Spit – North Coast Citizen

Hike along Bay Ocean Spit road, learn about coastal bays & estuaries, and discover the history of a lost town.This guided hike will also highlight the 50th anniversary of the Oregon Beach Bill, a legislation ensuring public access to all 363-miles of Oregon coastline, and inform on updates to closing gaps along the Oregon Coast Trail.

This ~5 mile journey is a moderate to easy hike that winds along and over dunes at the intersection of Tillamook Bay and the Pacific Ocean. Discover how the bay and dunes formed and changed over time, experience the story of a great town and its demise and more during this great beach and bay hike.

FREE and open to the public (registration required), the hike will be led by Chrissy Smith of Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS,Kristen Penner of Garibaldi Cultural Heritage Initiative, and Connie Soper, author of Exploring the Oregon Coast Trail. The event is part of theExplore Natureseries of hikes, walks, paddles and outdoor adventures. Hosted by a consortium of volunteer community and non-profit organizations, these meaningful nature-based experiences highlight the unique beauty of Tillamook County and the work being done to preserve and conserve the areas natural resources and natural resource-based economy.

Experience the unique landscape of our coastline, the story of a long lost town buried beneath the salal, and learn about new efforts to preserve Tillamooks historical legacies.Join us in discovering the natural wonders and history of this special place!

Note:

Date & Time: Hike is scheduled for August 16, 2017 from 1 p.m. 4 p.m.

Event Information: There are no bathrooms or drinking water facilities on this hike. Please bring water and snacks. Weather on the Oregon Coast is unpredictable and trails can be slick and muddy if it rains. Please be prepared and bring appropriate gear and clothing.

Difficulty: A majority of the hike route is relatively flat, graveled road and beach. There are two sections that require climbing steep sand banks (~1 mile in length). The trail can also be overgrown in sections. Please dress appropriately, wear sturdy shoes, and evaluate your comfort walking on soft, sandy trails.

Location: Near Cape Meares, OR. The park is a 20 minute drive from downtown Tillamook. Please register for driving directions.

Cost:No charge. Tax-exempt donations to Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS to enable programs like this are encouraged, but not required.

Registration: Required and available at EventBrite.com. For a link to the registration page, please visit ExploreNatureTillamookCoast.com or the Friends of Netarts Bay WEBS Facebook Event page.

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Explore Nature: Hike Bay Ocean Spit - North Coast Citizen

Boomtown realtors frustrated by lack of product – Western Investor (subscription)

By

December 18, 2013

Realtors in two northern B.C. boomtowns are frustrated by a lack of product in the face of huge buyer demand. Sherry Hart, broker/owner of Royal LePage Fort Nelson Realty said much of her time is spent trying find clients the ideal property when it is not being offered for sale. Harts said that in many cases owners are simply not prepared to sell, regardless of the terms being offered. There is vacant industrial land, but the lack of available contractors creates a dilemma for those wanting a turnkey building, she said. Fort Nelson is among the northern towns fueled by natural gas investments, including at least seven new LNG plants and related work. Fort St. John is a northern centre for the natural gas fields and BC Hydros proposed $7.9 billion Site C dam, which is about seven km. from the city. It can be frustrating at times, says Ron Rodgers, owner/managing broker for Northeast B.C. Real Estate. I had a group of investors in my office the other week with $4 million to spend and they were prepared to sign on the dotted line right away. However, I didnt have a list of investment opportunities for them to choose from. There are a lot of investors who are looking forcommercial and/or industrial real estate in the Fort St. John area, both locally and from out of town. Financing can also be a problem. Even with all of the attention and the huge potential of northern B.C., getting mortgages and financing is still problematic for many investors, developers and business owners because we are told by the banks that we have a resource based economy Rodgers said. Ironic, isnt it? There is still caution among smaller investors, Rodgers added. After all, no LNG plants have actually been built and Site C will be facing public hearings for months before a decision is made. Until full commitments are made for these projects and actual contracts are signed, there are not a lot of commercial real estate sales that have been completed. While there is a good demand for retail and office space, the highest demand in this area will always be for industrial space to accommodate the many businesses that service and develop the oil and gas reserves in this area. For a full report on boomtown real estate, see the January issue of Western Investor.

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A resource-based economy makes Russia a country of fools – www.MICEtimes.asia (press release)

Why does a state with mass higher education is not needed

Russia is one of the few countries where higher education is accessible to most citizens. Thats just the demand for that knowledge is small. This is the conclusion reached by the authors of a joint study by Boston Consulting Group (BCG), Sberbank, Worldskills and Global Education Futures.

Its most qualitative human capital of the Russian exports, but the one that remains untapped. A resource-based economy is absolutely not value knowledge, according to the study. Therefore, the incentives to master the difficult professions a bit. So, the doctor in Russia earn on average only 20% more of the driver. For comparison: in the USA the difference is 261%, Germany 172%, in the emerging Brazil 174%.

While the public higher education quality of personnel in Russia does not improve, analysts say. The new economy requires not only theoretical knowledge and programming skills, but also creative, analytical thinking, ability to work in conditions of uncertainty. Meanwhile, the current education system orients young people to technical and routine work teaches us to act according to the instructions.

As a result, the demand for these graduates is small. Many receive diplomas and work where diplomas are not needed. This does not need a long time to learn, stated in the study. According to analysts, 26% of graduates would as well learn less than five years. However, the Russian education system focused on enrollment, not on actual business needs, conclude the authors of the study.

There is another problem. Over 20 years of wide-ranging reforms, from 1995 to 2015, the structure of the labor market in Russia has changed slightly. The main employer is still the public sector, even in state-owned companies and small and medium business, and large new corporations, less than one third of all employees.

According to analysts BCG, the matter is compounded by the fact that unemployment in Russia is one of the lowest almost does not react to GDP changes. Worldwide if GDP is falling, unemployment is growing, we can even decrease. In such an environment, even if a person has a need for a new economy knowledge and skills, to apply them it would be nowhere. This means that in the future Russia can be claimed by any modern professional, summarize experts.

See also: Russia is preparing an attack on the Western sports

You need to knowledge in Russia again became in demand, will lead the economy out of the impasse?

I work in higher education since 1974, says the Chairman of Russian economic society. SF Sharapova, Professor of international Finance (University) Valentin Katasonov. And for four decades to observe the process of its degradation. Part of this degradation stems from the fact that universities are not quite adequate applicants. But do the universities contribute their mite, and considerable.

So there is, in my opinion, because the goal of the current system of higher education is not the training of qualified specialists, and in the formation of a certain type of human consciousness.

Our universities form a person who should be most manageable. Not only in terms of their economic activities, but in the broadest sense. From this point of view, the system of higher education is the pipeline for release, sorry for the harshness, fools. Because the most valuable resource in a market economy, in my opinion, is a fool. No kidding, the market model is banal will not work.

For the first time in the observed pattern: when a person comes to the first year of University, apparently he still thinks, asks some questions. But by the end of a University course the average student is usually sick. He begins to stereotype, and to see the world as if through a narrow window.

Believe me, it hurts me to say on this topic. But I do believe that the current higher education system does not generate and destroys man.

SP: This system prepares specialists?

The fact of the matter is that the professionals it prepares. But the damage from this system outweigh the positive results.

SP: This is purely a Russian problem?

Oddly, no. We sometimes idealize the higher education system in the West. In fact, problems there are no less acute. In Spain about 50% of graduates cant find work in the specialty. In Russia the share of people with higher education who work in low-skilled areas, about the same as in OECD countries 20%.

See also: 28 years before the Apocalypse - the prospects for Russia without oil

In short, this is a global problem. And I believe her roots stretching the learning process. Once in the West as in the USSR was a ten-year secondary education. Now in the American schools for 12 years. Once in our country was a five year system of training in higher education. Now it takes 6 years: four years undergraduate, two graduate.

Such tightness of the learning process in time only makes the chaos. And most importantly because of this young man much later enters the labour market.

SP: If the education system in Russia was normal, it would have had a multiplier effect on the economy?

Of course, not only on the economy. The education system needs to form the personality of the person. Keep in mind that in Soviet times the universities we are not only taught we were brought up. And no one was embarrassed. On the contrary, universities have emphasized that the conduct of not just the process of transferring some of the knowledge and skills, but also the process of education.

Without this education, I believe there can be no civil society. After all, the man is the primary as a citizen, not as a narrow specialist.

If in Russia there will be a full-fledged civil society, there will be a normal economy. I think that the destruction of the educational component is a major problem and the current system of education, and the country as a whole.

Primary still the structure of the economy, under which is formed the labor market, said the President of the Union of entrepreneurs and tenants of Russia Andrei Bunich. And you can say that there is full compliance. If the economy developed, it required a proactive, energetic, creative shots. If it is raw, it is enough to two thirds of the population was engaged in unproductive work. Hence the huge army of security guards in our country, hence the situation in which a significant part of the working-age population has no qualifications, and odd jobs.

This situation has changed dramatically, need to change the economy. Then rebuilt and the educational system, and knowledge it useful.

2017, micetimes.asia. All rights reserved

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A resource-based economy makes Russia a country of fools - http://www.MICEtimes.asia (press release)

FG Wants States to Enhance Revenue Profile with Waste Products – THISDAY Newspapers

By Emmanuel Ugwu, Umuahia

The federal government has advised state governments to start thinking of ways to exploit the revenue potential in the heaps of waste products that have become common place in most cities and rural communities across the nation. To prod state governments to start making money from refuse heaps, the federal government has launched the National Waste-to-Wealth Programme with appropriate technology whereby states could make money from wastes and enhance their internally generated revenue (IGR) profile.

Minister of science and technology, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu flagged-off the programme at Abia State government house, Umuahia for the Southeast zone, where he called on the state governments to key into the programme, adding that the new programme would be launched in all the six geopolitical zones. He expressed optimism about the viability of the waste to wealth project, saying that all Nigerians must embrace the programme as it would help create both wealth and jobs. Explaining how states could make money from waste products, Onu said that electric power can be generated from wastes, organic fuel for domestic and industrial use is also available in refuse heaps while organic fertilizer can also be produced for use in the farms to enhance food production. I am confident that this programme, if properly implemented, will help our great nation, Nigeria to effectively convert the huge amount of waste generated in both our rural and urban areas into very useful products to promote the happiness of our people, he said.

According to the minister, the deployment of appropriate technology to realise the programme would further strengthen the place of science, technology and innovation in our search for a new beginning andhelp move our economy from being resource based to become knowledge based and innovation driven for the good of all. Onu stressed that the nation has a lot to benefit from turning heaps of garbage to generate wealth as it would usher in a new order of sustainable development and enduring prosperity for the nation. It will help create wealth and jobs, reduce poverty, help defeat hunger and stimulate national consciousness in the power of science and technology as an important instrument for nation building, he said. Furthermore, the minister expressed confident that through this National Waste-to Wealth programme, by using appropriate technologies no waste would be wasted as what becomes waste for one household can become useful for another, he said. The science and technology minister dispelled any doubt about the possibility of waste generated in one household becoming a source of wealth for other people, insisting that science, technology and innovation would make it possible.

According to him, the new initiative of using waste to create wealth was part of the commitment of the All Progressives Congress (APC) led federal government to do all that is necessary in the best interest of the nation to accelerate the pace of national development driven by science, technology and innovation. I am confident that we will our objective because we are driven by the love of country, Onu said, adding that every Nigerian irrespective of social status, religious persuasion and ethnic origin has the right to live a decent life.

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FG Wants States to Enhance Revenue Profile with Waste Products - THISDAY Newspapers

Let’s talk about a supplemental income – The Hindu

There has been a lot of discussion on universal basic income (UBI) in both developed and developing countries. The primary objective is to enable every citizen to have a certain minimum income. The term universal is meant to connote that the minimum or basic income will be provided to everyone irrespective of whatever their current income is. The adoption of a universal basic income can impose a burden on the fisc which is well beyond the capabilities of most developing countries, including India. In discussing the applicability of the concept of basic income to India, three questions arise. The first is whether it should be universal or restricted; the second is what the level of minimum income is and how this is to be determined; and the third is about the financing mechanism for implementing such a scheme.

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Above all, there is a philosophical question, whether support to vulnerable sections should be in the form of goods and services or as cash. Cash gives the discretion to beneficiaries to spend it any way they like. But it is assumed they would be wise in their discretion. On the other hand, the provision of services or goods directly to beneficiaries may be directed to achieve certain objectives in terms of nutrition or health or education. In the provision of services, the concern is about leakages and quality of service. Some countries have adopted a middle path of conditional transfers, which means that transfers in the form of cash are subject to the condition that they are spent on meeting defined needs.

However, as far as India is concerned, we are not starting with a clean state. There are a whole lot of services provided by the state, and it would be impossible to knock them off and substitute them with general income support. We need to think of income support as a supplement to services already provided even though a hard look at some of the provisions is absolutely essential. Poor quality of services from government-run institutions has become a matter of concern.

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The price of fiscal folly

Coming to the concept of the UBI, it is necessary to first decide whether income supplements should be universal or limited to certain easily identifiable groups. Most calculations involving the provision of income to one and all are beyond the capabilities of the present Central government Budget unless the basic income is fixed at too low a level. It is extremely difficult to cut so-called implied subsidies or hidden subsidies in order to fund resources, as some proponents argue. These supports range from subsidised bus fares to subsidised power tariff. The attempt must be to think in terms of reducing the number of beneficiaries using easily definable criteria. Elaborate exercises for identification will defeat the purpose. It is true that a universal scheme is easy to implement. Feasibility is the critical question. There is also the consideration of fairness. But strict targeting will run into complex problems of identification.

The issue whether the scheme should be universal or restricted depends on the level of basic income that is proposed to be provided. If we were to treat the cut-off used to define poverty as the minimum income, then the total fiscal burden would be enormous. This apart, there is no consensus regarding what that cut-off should be. Our analysis using different poverty lines shows that poverty is concentrated around the poverty line. In fact, more than 60% of the total poor lies between 75% of the poverty line and the poverty line. Therefore, what is needed is a supplement to fill the poverty gap. One alternative would be to determine the required income supplement from the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS). The total annual income supplement can be equivalent to 100 days of the wages prescribed under the MGNREGS. This is equivalent to 20,000 per year. This amount can be treated as the income supplement.

Also Read

The hidden agenda of benevolence

The next question is who the beneficiaries should be. Here again, it is difficult to cover the entire population. Even providing one person per household with this income will mean 5 lakh crore per annum, which is 3.3% of GDP. Perhaps what is feasible is a scheme which limits the total expenditure to around 1.5 to 2% of GDP, which is between 2 lakh crore and 3 lakh crore. We need to evolve a criterion which can restrict the total cost to this amount. One way of doing it will be to limit it to all women above the age of 45. This is an easily identifiable criterion because Aadhaar cards feature the age of the person. However, this is only one alternative. But others may be thought of. Restricting the beneficiaries to the elderly or widows or those with disabilities may have only a limited impact. Making available a minimum of 20,000 per year for almost 10 crore people which means a total expenditure of 2 lakh crore must make a dent on poverty since at least half of them would be for the poor or people a little above the poverty line.

The feasibility of raising even 2 lakh crore is not easy. Some analysts have suggested that we can remove all exemptions in our tax system which would give us enough money. Apart from the difficulties in removing all exemptions, tax experts advocate removing exemptions so that the basic tax rate can be reduced. Perhaps, out of the 2 lakh crore which is needed, 1 lakh crore can come from the phasing out of some of the expenditures while the remainder must come from raising additional revenue. Perhaps, one can phase out the MGNREGS, which will realise close to 40,000 crore. The employment scheme is very akin to the proposed scheme. Fertilizer subsidies are another item of expenditure which can be eliminated. Perhaps, requesting higher income groups to forego supplemental income will reduce the expenditure, as has been done successfully in the case of cooking gas.

To conclude, introducing the UBI is unrealistic. In fact, the concept of a basic income must be turned essentially into a supplemental income. Such a scheme will be feasible provided we restrict the beneficiaries to groups which can be easily identified. This restriction essentially comes from fiscal compulsions. Regarding finances, it is not easy to remove all implicit subsidies. The design for financing the scheme has to be viewed in a more pragmatic way. Restricting the fiscal burden to 1.5 to 2% of GDP seems desirable and feasible. Half of this can come from phasing out some of the existing expenditures while the other half can come by raising fresh revenue. Lastly, the proposal here refers only to the income supplement that can be provided by the Central government. Similar efforts can be made by the respective State governments, if they so desire.

C. Rangarajan is a former Chairman of the Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister and a former Governor, Reserve Bank of India. S. Mahendra Dev is Director and Vice Chancellor, Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research, Mumbai

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Let's talk about a supplemental income - The Hindu

Kevin Van Meter celebrates the revolutionary heart behind everyday resistance – Street Roots News

Progressive organizers should pay more attention to small acts of rebellion, says the Portland author of 'Guerrillas of Desire'

HBO is currently catching criticism for rolling out a new show called Confederate an alternative history where slavery never ended because the Confederacy won the Civil War. Widespread criticism may very well end the show before it begins; last December, A&E was forced to cancel a show called Generation KKK a series that promised in-depth profiles of Klan families after it was revealed that the crew had made cash payments to Klansmen.

To put the creative work at HBO into perspective, it helps to remember that there are ways in which the Confederates already won the Civil War starting with the permitted rise of the KKK and the terrorism that instituted Jim Crow. According to historian James Loewen, the history thats been taught to Americans in school is largely the one promoted by the United Daughters of the Confederacy one that goes out of its way to hide widespread resistance to slavery and undermines continued efforts at liberation.

Another possible reason Americans dont think about this resistance is that we typically dont talk about social change unless we see it happening on a grand scale. Rebellion and revolution catch everyones attention; the small acts that made them possible typically do not.

Its only in recent years that these small acts have begun to get their due. In 1985, James C. Scott coined the phrase everyday resistance in his book Weapons of the Weak Everyday Acts of Peasant Resistance. One method of resistance uncovered by Scott was the simple act of running away a tactic used repeatedly by slaves in the Americas.

Now, local activist and scholar Kevin Van Meter has made an original contribution to this study in Guerrillas of Desire: Notes on Everyday Resistance and Organizing to Make a Revolution Possible, published by AK Press and the Institute for Anarchist Studies.

Part history and part theory, Guerrillas of Desire brings together moments as diverse as the Zapatista uprising in Mexico, to wildcat factory strikes in Michigan, to peasant rebellions in Europe to the feminist revolt against housework. All of these struggles, Van Meter said, are joined by their efforts to resist imposed work, and in doing so, they fight to create more time for all the things the world actually needs including the ability to thoughtfully care for each other.

Street Roots sat down with Van Meter who will speak at 7:30 p.m.Aug. 10 at Powells Books, 3723 SE Hawthorne Blvd., Portland to discuss his thoughts on everyday resistance and why hes convinced that progressive organizers should pay more attention to it.

Stephen Quirke: Your book describes capitalism as a structure that imposes work and shows the various ways work can be refused in different contexts. Why is it important to think about capitalism and resistance to it in this specific way?

Kevin Van Meter: In Guerrillas of Desire, I argue that the central operating mechanism in a capitalist society is the imposition of work, both in its waged form, as we usually think of it, but also in its unwaged form as unwaged housework that is, reproducing workers ability to work and social reproduction meaning, the work of reproducing the larger society. We will spend more time working in our lives than doing any other activity besides sleeping, and if you combine the time working and the time recovering from working, there is nothing else that we will spend more time doing between birth and death.

As it turns out, what most people do all day is pretty terrible, or unnecessary, or not fulfilling, or not conducive to creating a just and equitable society. When looking at the last 500 years of capitalism of chattel slavery, those employed in the agricultural sector, and those working in fields, factories, workshops as well as bedrooms, kitchens, classrooms, and now offices and the larger service economy Ive found a ceaseless, unending refusal of work. If we live in a society that honors work, that sees work and our working lives as definite factors in our self-understanding and self-worth, then why are so many people refusing the imposition of work in small ways stealing office supplies, taking longer breaks, feigning illness, slacking off, finding quicker ways to accomplish work tasks as to make the work easier or more enjoyable? I think this is an important question to answer.

S.Q.: How does this relate to the title, Guerrillas of Desire?

K.V.M.: Human beings desire all sorts of things, from human touch and companionship, to contributing to society and being productive with friends and neighbors to seeing themselves as part of something larger than themselves and their immediate family. I see these desires as a striving for more than the contemporary society can provide. Because we live in a class-based capitalist society, how many people are forced to work at crummy jobs that shouldnt exist rather than contribute their passions and real talents to the world? How many people are too busy working at crummy jobs to contribute to the larger political, social, civil, and cultural society? I believe no, I am convinced that the desires that emerge from human beings speak to a world beyond this one.

S.Q.: Why do you encourage readers to think about small and discrete acts, as opposed to self-conscious rebellion?

K.V.M.: I ask readers to think about small and discrete acts rather than larger social movements or rebellions since these are common, everyday and taking place all the time. Actually, everyday acts of resistance outnumber self-conscious rebellious acts a thousand or possibly a million fold. Self-conscious rebellious acts and uprisings are exceedingly rare, especially in a society so rife with domination and control. The question I always ask is not why are people rebelling, but why are people not rebelling more. And when we start to look at everyday life, we begin to see how all sorts of people, in all kinds of jobs, in all areas of life are rebelling and trying to create a world of their own making.

S.Q.: You argue that a generalized revolt against work already exists. How is this occurring?

K.V.M.: We live in a society where everyone must work. If you dont work to obtain a wage you starve, and you arent granted clothing or shelter. And, of course, we know from research conducted that many unhoused people are in fact working but just dont make enough money to afford rent. So in a society that forces most of its members to work at jobs that arent fulfilling, that arent democratic, that dont speak to their needs and talents and abilities and their possibility to grow, or when they are fulfilling we dont have much control over them and the work process, we shouldnt be surprised that there are those of us who refuse this regime of work. And looking at both the historical record and contemporary society, we find that it is the norm more common than not that there is a generalized revolt against the imposition of work at a particular job and to the idea that in order to live, to survive, we must work at jobs that are neither fulfilling for the individual nor beneficial for the larger society.

S.Q.: You suggest that organizers on the left need to practice reading the struggles and circulating them. What does that look like in practice?

K.V.M.: While I believe that left organizers can contribute to the creation of a better world, I think that we fool ourselves into thinking we are the catalyst or main progenitor of this new world. When we inquire into the actually existing needs and desires of working and poor peoples and discover the struggles taking place around survival and creating a life worth living, then we are grounded in how people are rather than what we want them to be. We need to listen to and record these struggles. Then by circulating them through stories, cultural products, political essays and presentations, we can begin to amplify and intervene in a new society, a new social order that is more just and fair then the one we now inhabit, as it emerges.

S.Q.: You really focus on the idea of self-liberation in your book. In the section on American slavery ,you emphasize that slaves in America were always in the process of liberating themselves, and this led to other people supporting them in various ways.

K.V.M.: Yes and the historical research on this not only undermined the dominant narrative about Africans in the United States, historically and present, but it also undermined the narrative that there needed to be some party or leadership or union structure. Slaves, peasants and workers historically have really liberated themselves. The great failure of the contemporary union movement is the assumption that youre waiting for union leadership or a union organizer for people to resist on the job. People are not waiting for revolutionary consciousness. Theyre not waiting for the left. People understand their situations and people are organized, just in order to survive in this terrible society that we live in. And we should honor them. And, arguably, that is the largest wellspring of any other form of resistance.

Nat Turner talks about this in his confessions that what led him to rebellion was running away, and stealing, breaking tools, all these other acts. And he didnt need any scholar or union bureaucrat to tell him to do that. He developed those leadership skills out of those processes of self-reflection, self-activity, and self-liberation.

S.Q.: You also write that the slave revolts led to the struggle for the eight-hour work-day. Can you explain this in more detail? Did waged workers learn about slave resistance and think we can do that too"?

K.V.M.: I think we can certainly point to that in a couple of places. But I also dont want to separate these into separate categories of workers. We want to see people as more dynamic. Theres a circulation of struggle thats constantly taking place. And we dont want to separate the slave as a figure and the worker as the figure, because very often its the same figure. Their strongest form of resistance was running away. But that figure could then be re-enslaved. That figure could then become a semi-waged worker. We want to see the complexity of the dynamics and not focus on just these categorical identities.

S.Q.: You argue that the run-up to the American Civil War was in many ways a revolutionary situation. What are the implications of this? Why dont we talk about the war this way?

K.V.M.: First and foremost, I think it is important to emphasize again that the slaves freed themselves. The mass exodus of slaves from the plantations into marooned communities, and north via the Underground Railroad forced the federal government to respond with the Fugitive Slave Act. Innumerable thefts and the illicit economy, in which both blacks and whites participated, forced local governments and vigilantes to raid grog shops and publicly punish pilferers and their accomplices. The palpable fear felt by the white slaveholding class, not just economically but for their very lives, was the direct result of slave rebellions nearly 250 actual or attempted rebellions took place during American slavery. And this fear pushed the South toward war. As with ever major economic and political crisis in the U.S. since, compromise was reached chattel slaves were provided limited freedom as wage slaves under Jim Crow, blacks were granted civil rights. Both were compromises to prevent the emergence of a strong black community and a directly democratic society based in racial equality. In this way, I and other scholars would argue that the black freedom struggle that began under slavery was then, and is now, revolutionary. And we dont talk about the Civil War in this way because our telling of the story in the present has actual, real political implications today.

S.Q.: You talk about organizing all the way down. Is this a way of saying that people are already resisting, and we need to find out how thats happening, and identify with it do that kind of imaginative work?

K.V.M.: Thats exactly what Im trying to say. I want to redefine the role of the organizer as someone whos circulating struggles, whos not the central figure. Because whats most important is the existing struggles that are taking place. The underlying assumption of left radical organizing is that people are uneducated, unagitated, unorganized. I think Ive shown over the last 500 years of struggle against capitalism that that assumption is empirically wrong.

S.Q.: Do you think the abandonment of Reconstruction hurt the workers movement?

K.V.M.: If you can take a good sector out of the working class and immiserate them, then it decreases the overall classs ability to fight back. Thats been the struggle against white racism for so long until everyone is free, none of us is free. That is materially and actually correct.

The argument I want to make is that capital and the state respond to our overt and everyday forms of struggle. Theyre responding to us; were the primary figure. They need to capture our work. They need to make sure that were constantly reproducing these gender and racial hierarchies. And as long as the system functions, it will continue to impose these things upon us.

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Kevin Van Meter celebrates the revolutionary heart behind everyday resistance - Street Roots News

Activists to form legal committee to address potential loopholes resulting from abolition of Article 308 – Jordan Times

Activists to form legal committee to address potential loopholes resulting from abolition of Article 308
Jordan Times
The success of repealing Article 308 and the debate that occurred afterwards are a good lesson for the women's movement and they will allow us to evaluate our work and build on it for the future, Shakhsir told the gathering. Meanwhile, Regional ...

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Activists to form legal committee to address potential loopholes resulting from abolition of Article 308 - Jordan Times

Worrying drop in student nurse applications in Cumbria – News & Star

Student nurse applications have dropped dramatically in Cumbria at a time when local hospitals are struggling to recruit, a union has warned.

Unison has blamed the Government's decision to scrap nursing bursaries, meaning they will no longer get help with living costs.

Figures show a 30 per cent drop in applications, with 340 fewer than last year, for nursing courses at the University of Cumbria.

This is even higher than the 23 per cent average drop in applications nationally since the decision to abolish bursaries.

The abolition of bursaries is having a triple impact on Cumbria - fewer opportunities for people to train in NHS professions, fears of more job losses at the university, and even worse recruitment problems for our hospitals.

David Atkinson, Unison regional organiser, warned that it will mean that there will be even less nursing recruits coming through in future - yet even now local health trusts cannot fill key posts.

Across north and west Cumbria it has been widely reported that there is a major shortage of nurses and doctors at the present time - one of the main issues flagged up in the Success Regime consultation.

Staffing difficulties have already led to temporary bed closures at community hospitals, with nursing shortages also one of the main reasons for the decision to permanently remove medical beds from Maryport, Wigton and Alston hospitals.

North Cumbria University Hospitals NHS Trust has also continually struggled to find enough nurses, at one point looking to bring in staff from abroad in order to plug gaps.

The University of Cumbria has confirmed the drop in applications, but stresses it was already oversubscribed so can still fill all of the existing vacancies on its nursing courses.

But Mr Atkinson is worried about the long term impact, at a time when recruitment is one of the main challenges facing the local NHS.

He added that proposed redundancies at the university - with 100 jobs at risk due to falling student numbers - could potentially further fuel the nursing crisis facing the county.

Mr Atkinson said: The abolition of bursaries is having a triple impact on Cumbria - fewer opportunities for people to train in NHS professions, fears of more job losses at the university, and even worse recruitment problems for our hospitals.

Bursaries provided a route for people to get the skills they need to work in the NHS. Many are now put off by having to take on massive debts while training.

Cumbria needs a skilled and qualified workforce to provide high-quality health services, and we need opportunities for people to train and re-train. It is already becoming evident that the abolition of the bursary is doing harm to our county."

Mr Atkinson went on to demand that Carlisle MP John Stevenson to "put his constituents before his party and join the call for the bursary to be reintroduced".

The University of Cumbria's chief operating officer, David Chesser, confirmed the drop in applications.

As UCAS have reported, there has been a national decline in nursing applications across universities in the UK for 2017/18 entry. As such, the University of Cumbria has also seen a decline in applications this year to our nursing and midwifery courses. This decline can be attributed to the requirement for student nurses to pay tuition fees following the removal of the NHS bursary," he said.

We have responded to the removal of the bursary by offering additional support with placement travel costs, and by providing free uniforms to students starting these courses in 2017."

He stressed that their courses for the coming year are still full.

We are limited in the number of places we can offer on nursing and midwifery courses, so while we have seen a significant reduction in the number of applicants, we still have more applications than places, but importantly there is selection process and eligibility criteria, which applies for all these courses," explained Mr Chesser.

"The university is very fortunate that a high proportion of the applications received are of excellent quality, enabling us to select the highest calibre applicants for these courses."

He added that they are now looking at other options for future.

Looking to the future, next year the University of Cumbria hopes to offer nursing apprenticeships, funded by the employer, and it is anticipated that this alternative will also be a popular training route for potential nurses," he added.

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Worrying drop in student nurse applications in Cumbria - News & Star

"Technology should look like something in your grandmother’s room" says Oki Sato – Dezeen

Designers should rethink the high-tech look of gadgets according to Nendo founder Oki Sato, who has also called most of today's smart devices "useless".

The prolific Japanese-Canadian designer said that contemporary gadgets were designed to "look like technology", when they should instead blend in with home interiors or the environment they belong in.

He said that as well as being less distracting on the eye, this approach would help to reach potential consumers who are currently alienated by technology.

"I think the technology shouldn't look like technology; it should look like something in your grandmother's room, and it should blend into everyday life," Sato told Dezeen. "It shouldn't distract you, and it should be linked with your feelings and your emotions."

"It's important that it doesn't look high-tech that scares people sometimes," he continued. "When I design things that use technology, I try to think if my grandmother can use it. I think it's very important that she doesn't get scared."

Sato is known for working on roughly 400 projects at a time; however, he has so far resisted designing gadgets or incorporating internet-of-things (IoT) technology into his products.

He said he was sceptical about such smart devices, because in the absence of electricity or Wi-Fi, they could be rendered useless.

"I feel that more than 99 per cent of these things are useless in a way," said Sato. "You have these super-high-tech toilets, for instance, which warm your butt, which flush, which create music, which do everything for you, but then you notice that all these Japanese guys come to America or Europe where the toilets do nothing for you and they get afraid of it."

"It's kind of strange isn't it? You lose your smartphone and you can't even wash your butt anymore!"

The rise of the IoT, which sees ordinary household objects turned into networked devices that speak to each other via the internet, has already spawned connected kettles, smart doorbells and a toothbrush that tracks your oral hygiene habits.

Established industrial designers have turned their attention to networked technology in recent years, including Philippe Starck, who created voice-controlled smart radiator valves for Netatmo, and Barber and Osgerby, who produced the Beeline connected bike compass through their creative consultancy MAP, while San Francisco-based Yves Behar has made such devices his specialty.

Diverse brands are also dabbling with the IoT from IKEA with its Tradfri smart lighting to Herman Miller with its Live OS office furniture.

However, Sato has stayed mostly analogue in his output, and also said he is wary about how much technology is used in the design process.

"Technology is good, of course, but it's kind of dangerous in a way," Sato said. "At the moment we have eight 3D printers in our studio working 24 hours a day, and if we lose electricity we can't design things any more. In the end the sketchbook works the best."

"I think we really need to find a balance between technology and things that do not use any electricity or have anything to do with the internet."

Sato spoke to Dezeen at the opening of Nendo's Invisible Outlines exhibition, which provided a calming white sanctuary for the harried visitors of Milan design week earlier this year.

He founded Nendo 15 years ago after graduating from Japan's Waseda University with a masters in architecture. The studio is best known for its furniture and product design, which has ranged from tangled tables for Cappellini to a construction-inspired rocking horse for Kartell.

Sato joins Rem Koolhaas in expressing concern about the trend towards ubiquitous networked devices. Koolhaas criticised the lack of privacy protection, while British motoring group The AA have picked up on the devices' potential vulnerability to hackers.

Sato was placed first in the list of designers in the inaugural Dezeen Hot List, our guide to the most newsworthy forces in global design.

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"Technology should look like something in your grandmother's room" says Oki Sato - Dezeen

Did Tampa’s Airport bet its future on a technology of the past? – WTSP 10 News

Noah Pransky, WTSP 9:07 PM. EDT August 06, 2017

Passenger jet airliner plane arriving or departing Tampa International Airport in Florida. (Photo: mokee81, Thinkstock)

TAMPA, Florida Its 2017. Tampa International Airport continues to set new passenger records and move forward with its multibillion-dollar expansion project. But for as proactive as the airport authority has been on constructing its future, it appears to be taking a slow and reactive approach toward a technology rapidly changing its business model: ridesharing.

Uber and Lyft have dramatically altered how passengers get to and from the airport, causing significant drops in airport revenues from parking and rental cars the two traditional ground transportation options the airport has bet its future on and planned Phase 1 of its expansion around.

Weve made this huge bet on rental cars that I dont know if its going to pay off, said State Sen. Jeff Brandes (R, St. Petersburg), who helped initiate an audit of the airports multi-phase construction project last legislative session. I would love to see them move faster (on emerging technology).

After 10Investigates July report on how the Hillsborough County Aviation Authority will initiate new fees on Uber, Lyft, and taxicab fares from the airport, the investigative team dug into the airports budget and found the fees come after the agency missed several projections on parking and rental car revenues.

The airport also hadnt adjusted its master plan to accommodate the disruption caused by new technology until this summer, when it added new curbsides at each terminal and scaled back Phase 2 of its expansion, even though Uber was first introduced to the Tampa market five years ago at the Republican National Convention and started impacting airport revenues at least two years ago.

According to business management firm Certify, ridesharing now accounts for 63 percent of U.S. business travelers ground transportation expenses, eclipsing rental cars (29%) and taxicabs (8%) combined.

The largest portion of the airports construction project adds people movers that will connect travelers with a new, centralized rental car facility. The facility has been heralded by Tampa International Airport (TIA) CEO Joe Lopano as one that will "give our guests access to twice as many rental car choices" andremove 8,000 cars per day from airport roads.

But the 8,000 cars reflect short trips taken on the airports main roads and back roads not the terminal curbsides, where there is often the most congestion, especially as ridesharing grows. And those estimates were based on a 2011 study, taken during peak season, and prior to the beginning of ridesharing in Tampa.

The airport hasnt yet addressed the increased congestion from Uber and Lyft vehicles picking passengers up at the curbsides.

Planned fee schedule

Were we too late? Maybe, Lopano said, responding to a question about the speed of which the airport has responded to new technology. But I think we have the right solution.

SLOW TO PIVOT ON RIDESHARING

As recently as April 2017, one airport executive downplayed the impact of ridesharing when asked by board members, suggesting the airport has merely pulled the numbers down a little bit on its future revenue projections.

But despite record growth in passengers expected to cross 10,000,000 enplanements for the first time this year rental car transactions at Tampa International stopped growing after 2015, while annual revenues have dropped by $4 million since then.

And the airport will miss its parking revenue estimate by more than $3 million in 2017 despite more travelers heading to the airport.

Some supporters of ridesharing say adjustments for the changing transportation model are coming too late, while some in the taxi and limousine industry say the new fees on rideshare pickups are also long overdue. But none seem happy the airport wants to charge $5 per pickup to make up for lost rental car and parking revenues.

Thats a huge increase to our passengers, said Tom Halsnick, owner of Black Pearl Limousine. Three dollars should be the maximum for the fee (the airport) can charge.

Ive always had some concerns about how the rental car numbers would play out, Brandes said. I want to look at their numbers and say, how is rideshare disrupting the rental car business? How many people arent parking long-term now because its cheaper simply to take an Uber or Lyft to the airport?

10Investigates first questioned Lopano about the risk the airport was undertaking with the rental car facility back in 2015.

The airport authoritys 2018 budget, presented to the board on Thursday, finally acknowledged that competition from ride-sharing is impacting parking revenues.

And rental car taxes, which are the main source of funding for the airports multi-billion-dollar construction, will only pull in $43 million in 2017; thats more than $2 million below projections and more than $1.5 million below 2016 numbers, despite surging passenger growth. Profit-sharing from TIA rental car companies is also down millions in the last two years.

But Lopano says the few million dollars lost in ground transportation has been made up in better-than-expected cargo and concessions revenues, and the airports overall revenues are proof things are going well. Although the overall figures missed several earlier estimates and goals, the $216 million in 2017 revenue will be the airports highest ever. Expenses are below revenues and the airport's reserves have grown.

We are good stewards of this asset, Lopano said. Its one of the best assets in our region (and) were continuing to grow...Air service continues to go up; our international service has doubled...so the local people can rest assured that the airport is going to be in good shape.

Lopano also points to another big-picture benefit of creating the rental car facility: freeing up space in the airports garage and main terminal for future expansion.

Thats the importance of this (project is) to allow growth in this building without having to go to a new one, Lopano said of the nearly 50-year-old airport facility.

RIDESHARE, LIMO, TAXI FEES

Lopano says adding pickup fees for Uber, Lyft, taxis, limos, and shuttles is simply shifting some of the airports expenses to the companies that profit there, just as it does with rental car companies, airlines, and other concessionaires.

TIA CEO Joe Lopano

Each time a Lyft or Uber vehicle picks up passengers at the airport, the companies will use their respective apps GPS to impose a $3 fee. The companies will then self-report the numbers and remit payments to TIA. Taxicabs, shuttles, and courtesy vehicles will start paying similar fees in the spring when the airport installs AVI technology, similar to SunPass readers. All prices will then climb by $1 in October 2018, and by another $1 in October 2019.

Its appropriate for us to recover our costs, Lopano said, referring to the airports cost to maintain its roads, lots, and other transportation-related expenses. Everyone who uses the airport to make money should pay their fair share airport.

Airport executives repeatedly said the amount of the pickup fees higher than most other airports in Florida was determined by its annual ground transportation expenses, divided by the number of expected commercial pickups.

Consulting firmLeighFisher estimated TIA's annual ground transportation expenses to be $5.4 million per year: $500,000 of which was direct ground transportation expenses; $3.8 million due to indirect expenses like airport administration and roads; and $1.1 million to depreciation on resources like parking lots and the airports main parkway. It also includes a $160,000 annual bill to maintain theAVIsystem plus a depreciation schedule on the system of $188,000 annually.

I question that figure, Halsnick said of the airports ground transportation costs. A (planned fee of $5 per pickup) is a huge difference (to customers)...sometimes a deal-breaker.

CHEERLEADER-IN-CHIEF

Lopano is a tireless advocate for the airport, consistently rated by passengers as one of the three-best in the nation. And he says the best is yet to come when construction is done.

Its going to be pretty awesome, Lopano said. We broke a record for passengers; we broke a record for revenues; so I think the performance (to-date) speaks for itself.

Lopano received a job performance rating of 4.96 out of 5.00 from board members last week, and is due to receive a $60,000 raise next April, taking his salary to $452,898.

He is popular among business leaders and his board. But for as easily as Lopano and his administration have provided good news to the airports board members, the flow of news about possible challenges has been considerably slower.

During an April 2017 budget workshop, aviation authority board member and county commissioner, Victor Crist, asked about financial challenges the airport was facing from Uber and Lyft.

The airports executive vice president of finance and IT, Damian Brooke, responded, when you look at our transactions for the rental cars right now, the transactions are actually holding firm.

Brooke did not disclose that the rate of passengers who rent cars at TIA was dropping or that those who rented cars were spending considerably less on rental cars.

He continued to tell the board, what we have done in these projections is weve taken a very conservative approach in the parking ground transportation side because as we look forward, you know, with the growth of (ridesharing) so and so forth, weve pulled the numbers down a little bit, again just to be conservative.

But four months ago when the comments were made, the airport and many other airports around the country already had significant evidence ridesharing was hurting revenues and disrupting business models.

That business model will again be under the microscope on Wednesday, whenLopano and his staff meet with the companies that rate the airports billion-plus dollars in bonds. Two years ago, Lopano boasted to 10Investigates about the airports plan and rental car numbers, the guys on Wall St. liked it.

If the agencies still like the plan, it could help the airport lower future interest rates. If the bond rating agencies are concerned about any red flags, it could cost the airport millions.

CHANGES UNDERWAY & TIAs FUTURE

Tampa International Airport is in the process of revamping its restaurants, shops, and concourses. Its expansion/modernization project will also open up more space and consumer options in the main terminal as well as operational improvements behind-the-scenes.

Phase 1 of the project, which includes the rental car center and people mover system, is expected to finish in early 2018.

Phase 2 funding was just approved by the airport board and will bring among other things additional curbsides at each terminal to alleviate congestion from rideshare pickups and drop-offs. But Phase 2 has been scaled down; now less complex and less costly than originally proposed.

Future construction (Phase 3) could add a new D airside terminal to accommodate a need for new gates, but Lopano says TIAs gates are actually underutilized right now since airlines are running bigger planes and selling a higher percentage of their seats.

Brandes says he would like to see the airport move faster on new technology, but there is still time to have discussions about a future with electric and autonomous vehicles. He even suggested the rental car facility could be a future hub of the regions autonomous vehicle fleet if the shared economy replaces individually-owned vehicles.

Lopano responded to Brandes' vision by saying the airport is keeping its options open and is in a good position to pivot toward new technology when the time comes.

Find 10Investigates' Noah Pransky on Facebookor follow his updates on Twitter. Send your story tips confidentially to npransky@wtsp.com.

2017 WTSP-TV

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Did Tampa's Airport bet its future on a technology of the past? - WTSP 10 News

School Crossings: 1:1 technology explained – Chippewa Herald

In less than a month school will be back in session and the school districts 1:1 M-Powered Learning Initiative will be underway. During the 2017-18 school year, each student in grades 6-12 will be issued an individual district-owned Chromebook to be used at school and home for educational purposes. Previously, the school district offered students computing devices at a ratio of approximately one device for every 1.5 students, but the shared devices were only accessible at limited times during the school day.

While there will likely be some concerns and difficulties that the school district will need to work through with this initiative, it is anticipated that the value and potential benefits of providing all students with a device is well worth any problems that will be encountered.

According to an overview prepared by the school districts technology department, it is expected that this initiative will provide the access needed to reliably integrate technology tools for facilitating quality learning experiences, while helping to engage students in critical thinking, communication, collaboration, and creativity.

An introductory video and a wealth of other information about the 1:1 initiative is available on the school district website (www.tinyurl.com/sdmampower), but a few of the basic questions and answers for the program include:

Should school families or community stakeholders have any questions about the 1:1 technology initiative in the School District of the Menomonie Area , I invite you to visit me at the Administrative Service Center on Pine Avenue, or contact me at 715-232-1642. More information about our schools can be found on the school district website (www.sdmaonline.com), and I regularly post school-related information on Twitter (www.twitter.com/sdmaonline) and Facebook (www.facebook.com/menomonie.schools)

Thank you to SDMA Technology Team and Director of Technology Services Katie Krueger for contributing to this article.

Joe Zydowsky, Ph.D. is the district administrator for the School District of the Menomonie Area.

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School Crossings: 1:1 technology explained - Chippewa Herald

This insanely advanced technology could power a future colony on Mars. – SYFY WIRE (blog)

When you think of Siemens, you might think of everything from generators to LED screens to one of the big-name sponsors behind PBS programmingbut start thinking in terms of Martian habitats.

Joining the race to Mars right behind Tesla and SpaceX mogul Elon Musk is the industrial manufacturing monolith, whose experience in generating energy could possibly power a human colony on a planet that would otherwise be perilous to our survival. Sunlight that filters through the reddish dust in what could pass for an atmosphere can be harnessed by solar panels. The same wind that obliterated most of its atmosphere can be the force behind sustaining human life. Mars may be devoid of water and oxygen, but it has no shortage of potential energy.

"Mars will be the ultimate microgrid," claims the companys website. "With no centralized power sources, communities will one day rely on decentralized energy systems."

Siemens future Martian technology was inspired by something much closer to Earth. When the people of the Aboriginal Wiyot reservation north of San Francisco recently experienced glitches in power due to interferences from the Pacific Gas & Electric power grid, Siemens joined forces with them to devise a method to fuel the reservation that would be both reliable and environmentally conscious. The microgrid that was the brainchild of this thinking runs on a 500-kilowatt array of REC Solar solar panels and a Tesla battery storage system, among other instruments. Maintenance is overseen through a computerized management system that determines where power resources are best used.

The best part? Power from the grid can be replaced even when its down.

This is the same type of technology Siemens hopes to someday use to keep a Martian colony flourishing, though requirements are bound to change on an alien planet lacking an atmosphere. Siemens Energy Management director of microgrid and renewable integration Clark Wiedetz is unsure of the variables that will make sense for Mars, but at least the microgrid is not dependent on cloud computing, which would be impossible to access 33.9 million miles from Earth. Maintenance in the Wiyot reservation is mostly overseen by the residents with some remote assistance, which is the same expected of astronauts journeying into deep space.

Tesla and SolarCity also recently installed a microgrid run by batteries and solar panels that power an entire island for three days, even with overcast skies. Considering all that dust obscuring the view on Mars, this could be one more small step toward mankind going Martian.

(via Seeker)

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This insanely advanced technology could power a future colony on Mars. - SYFY WIRE (blog)

EJ Dionne Jr.: How technology is making us strangers to each other – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

EJ Dionne Jr.: How technology is making us strangers to each other
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Mr. Dunkelman, a fellow at Brown University's Watson Institute, is no Luddite when it comes to technology. But the author of the 2014 book The Vanishing Neighbor has a healthy obsession with how people connect with each other (or fail to), and his ...

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EJ Dionne Jr.: How technology is making us strangers to each other - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

TCA17: Marvel Inhuman’s executive producers defend work in progress pilot – SYFY WIRE (blog)

The Beverly Hilton ballroom got chillier than normal on Sunday at the Television Critics Association press tour talk with the executive producers and cast of ABC's Marvel's Inhumans.

When executive producers Scott Buck and Jeph Loeb were asked by a reporter if the unfinished pilot provided to TCA reporters was the show they always intended to make, or if it was compromised by the challenges of using IMAX, Loeb responded that the question sounded more like an editorial comment and he wasn't clear of what was being asked. The reporter clarified the query,asking if what was screened was the version of the show intended, Loeb responded icily that, "The show you have seen is not the finished product."

Set to premiere in IMAX theaters on September 1st with a 75-minute version of the first two episodes, and then drop with an expanded 84-minute premiere with new footage on September 29th on ABC, Marvel's Inhumans is the first-of-its-kind partnership between a broadcast TV series and IMAX. With less than a month before the series drops in theaters, there's been plenty of speculation by press and fans if the ambitious alien characters (including a giant time-traveling dog and a character with prehensile hair) would be doable on a TV budget and time crunch.

In the meantime, Loeb did confirm that because of the Inhumans storyline on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., "You do know [the Marvel's Inhumans characters] are aware of what is happening in the continuity of S.H.I.E.L.D. But this series has its own story. And the Inhumans part of S.H.I.E.L.D. are their own story."

Loeb reiterated Inhumans is a story "about two brothers, told in a Shakespearean way, and the woman in between them." He is referring to the brothers of Black Bolt (Anson Mount) and Maximus (Iwan Rheon), who have diametrically opposing ideas of how to deal with Earth. Plus there's a very complicated relationship with Bolt's wife, Medusa, (Serinda Swan), who functions as her husband's interpreter, and her childhood friendship with Maximus that creates tension to this day amongst the trio.

As to Medusa, who sports flaming red hair that comes to life via CGI and can grab and fight independently, actress Swan admitted it's been a learning process to figure out how to make it work. "The wig is very heavy. People say I have such good posture but it's my head being pulled backward," she laughed. "[Hair like this] has never been done before so there are going to be issues. Software had to be built for it. But there are definitely days shooting in Hawaii that a four-pound wig felt like a cat cuddling on my head. Then sometimes, you feel Cher-like and fabulous as it also changes her stature. Her hair is prehensile. Everyday Medusa with straight hair is relaxing." Swan characterized her active hair as "a second character. It's a serious roommate that is always in your business."

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TCA17: Marvel Inhuman's executive producers defend work in progress pilot - SYFY WIRE (blog)

Ag Progress Days manager eager to retain traditions – Altoona Mirror

Mirror file photos by Gary M. Baranec David Gan demonstrates the features of some of the drones he was exhibiting and selling during the 2016 Ag Progress Days. Jesse Darlington Jr., the interim manager of the exposition following the retirement of longtime manager Robert Oberheim, said technology has benefitted the agricultural industry.

Ag Progress Days has a new leader, but hes not exactly a rookie.

Jesse Darlington Jr., a facilities coordinator in Penn States College of Agricultural Sciences, was named interim manager of the exposition following the retirement of longtime manager Robert Oberheim.

I had been site manager for 20 years, so this isnt anything new to me, just a little more work. Bob Oberheim created a great show over the years; I would be crazy not to keep it that way, Darlington said.

Ag Progress Days, Pennsylvanias largest outdoor agricultural exposition, will be held Aug. 15-17 at Penn States Research Center at Rock Springs.

Ag Progress Days features the latest technology and research exhibits, educational programs and guided tours. It is one of only three agricultural exhibitions in the country sponsored by a major university. Exhibits showcase the latest in Penn State research, as well as information on best management practices and changing regulations in the agricultural industry.

The big thing is technology in agriculture. It is exciting where we have been going over the last 20 years. With technology, we have drones, we have autonomous tractors. Technology is here. You have crops producing more on smaller acreage. It is exciting, and you need to keep up with it, Darlington said. The Ag Progress Days exposition is a must-see for all farmers, growers and anyone with an interest in agricultural advancements.

About 45,000 visitors are expected to converge on the 500-plus exhibitors from 34 states and four provinces of Canada.

Of the expected attendees, more than 60 percent are actively engaged in agriculture or related professions.

People come to become more educated, whether they are taking a cooking class or helping youth become more familiar with 4-H programs. People want to learn more about equipment and practices, Darlington said.

Field demonstrations are always a draw at Ag Progress Days.

A new demonstration in 2017 will spotlight pull-type, no-till corn planters. Other demonstrations will feature hay mowers, rakes and tedders, hay balers and bale handlers, Darlington said. All demonstrations are weather-permitting.

Darlington encourages producers attending Ag Progress Days to ask questions of Penn State faculty specialists and extension educators and talk with experts about the latest research findings, best practices, business issues and governmental regulations that could affect their operations. Information will be available on issues related to dairy, livestock and crop production; animal health; soil conservation; water quality; and ag renewable energy.

As usual, Ag Progress Days will have plenty of activities at the 4-H Youth Building where children can learn about 4-H programming in science, engineering, technology, citizenship, leadership and healthy living. They can find out how to get involved with 4-H, play with rabbits, see robotics demonstrations and learn about farm and home safety and plant diseases.

This years youth building will showcase the variety of activities that can be done in 4-H, said building coordinator Jeanette Blank, 4-H education program associate and teen program manager, in a statement. We are also excited to be hosting the first Ag Olympics event for our 4-H families and alumni, as well as the public.

Pennsylvania Farm Bureau will have numerous exhibits and activities including learning opportunities for young visitors inside its exhibit building.

Visitors can catch up on the latest legislative issues, talk with representatives offering money-saving member benefits and enjoy fun and educational activities geared toward children all under one roof.

Ag Progress Days is a highlight of the summer for farm families across Pennsylvania, because it offers an opportunity for farmers to learn more about new advances in agriculture and technology, obtain updated information on key issues impacting their businesses and a chance to socialize with other farmers and friends from across Pennsylvania, said PFB President Rick Ebert in a statement.

Sponsored by Penn States College of Agricultural Sciences, Ag Progress Days is held at the Russell E. Larson Agricultural Research Center at Rock Springs, 9 miles southwest of State College on Route 45. Hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Aug. 15; 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Aug. 16; and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Aug. 17. Admission and parking are free.

For more information, visit http://apd/psu.edu.

Mirror Staff Writer Walt Frank is at 946-7467.

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Ag Progress Days manager eager to retain traditions - Altoona Mirror