Retailers Eye Machine Learning, Automation and the IoT to Evolve Shopping Experience – WWD

Computers that learn and think virtual robots as well as physical ones on store aisles to help shoppers will be the next wave of technology to permeate the fashion and retail markets.

After years of investments to support omnichannel commerce, retailers and brands are now looking at automation, machine learning, cognitive computing and the Internet of Things (IoT) technologies to evolve the shopping experience as well as improve product life cycles, according to the latest survey by solution provider Zebra Technologies. The 2017 Retail Vision Study queried close to 1,700 retail executivesfrom North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia-Pacific and theMiddle East.

Researchers of the report said over the next five years, retailers and brands will deploy smart technologies as a way to provide shoppers with new levels of personalization, speed and convenience. The study is a follow-up to a global report published in 2012.

The study revealed that nearly 70 percent of retail decision makers surveyed are ready to make changes to adopt the Internet of Things, and 65 percent plan to invest in automation technologies for inventory management and planogram compliance by 2021, the researchers said.

Tom Moore, industry lead for retail and hospitality in North America at Zebra Technologies, told WWD that he wasnt surprised by the findings of this years study. He cited the overwhelming interest in these topics by attendees at the National Retail Federation Big Show in January.

The results of the survey validate what my team is hearing everyday on the ground, Moore said, adding that retailers are looking for solutions to help them overcome the challenges of todays retail market, which has left many companies behind, he noted.

Moore said the brick-and-mortar retail market is undergoing a significant transformation, and technology is driving much of it. At NRF, for example, Moore said many of the discussions he and his team had with retailers centered on fulfillment. This means more than just getting a product to a consumer, he said. The goal is to fully integrate e-commerce with the physical store, which requires complete visibility of inventory on an stockkeeping-unitlevel. Indeed, regarding the integration ofonline and in-store, 78 percent of respondents in the survey said it was business critical to do so.

Retailers are also faced withother challenges such as retaining customers while acquiring new ones. Retailers and brands are expected to be masters of personalization, customization and convenience. The continued rise of online shopping will challenge retailers to provide unprecedented levels of convenience to help drive customer loyalty, the Zebra report noted. By 2021, 65 percent of retailers plan to explore innovative delivery services, such as delivering to workplaces, homes and even parked cars.

The survey found that nearly 80 percent of retailers will be able to customize the store visit for customers as a majority of them will know when a specific customer is in the store. This will be enabled through technology such as micro-locationing, allowing retailers to capture more data, accuracy and customer insights.

Mobile devices are expected to play an important role. To speed check-out lines, retailers are planning to invest in mobile devices, kiosks and tablets to increase payment options, the researchers noted. Eighty-seven percent of retailers will deploy mobile point-of-sale[MPOS] devices by 2021, enabling them to scan and accept credit or debit payments anywhere in the store.

And if theyre not already learning how to better leverage data, retailers are expected to make it a priority. By 2021, at least 75 percent of retailers anticipate investing in predictive and software analytics for loss prevention and price optimization along with cameras and video analytics for operational purposes and improving the overall customer experience, the report stated.

Regarding automation and robotics, the report said 57 percent of respondents believe automation will shape the industry by 2021 helping retailers pack and ship orders, track inventory, check in-store inventory levels and assist customers in finding items.

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Retailers Eye Machine Learning, Automation and the IoT to Evolve Shopping Experience - WWD

Think your job is safe from automation? Think again! – New Jersey 101.5 FM Radio

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As more and more businesses find ways to eliminate employees, Wendys being the latest, its predicted by Yuval Noah Harari in his new book Homo Deus; A Brief History of Tomorrow that in the coming years by 2020 artificial intelligence will make it possible to eliminate much more than service and manufacturing jobs. How about doctors, teachers, soldiers, and truckers to name a few? Harrari tells the New York Posts Reed Tucker I think we should be worried and worried now

According to a report issued in 2015 by McKinsey Global Institute, a business think tank, 95 percent of jobs should be safe until 2020, then technology will change the landscape rapidly.

Self driving cars will wipe out the trucking industry. An Uber truck has already made its first driverless delivery taking 50,000 cans of beer 120 miles from Fort Collins to Colorado Springs. Amazon has already opened stores where sales people and cashiers are not needed. In the military, soldiers can be replaced by robots and drones that will always get it right and cannot be tortured.

What about the higher paying jobs like teachers and doctors? A recent experiment found that a computer algorithm correctly diagnosed 90 percent of the lung cancer cases presented to it. This could make the general practitioner obsolete as well as schools. Teachers could be replaced by AIs which can be tailored for the specific needs of the student and placed in a smart phone.

So whats a worker to do? That will be the big question facing the future leaders as not everyone will be able to get a job in these new fields, yet we all will need to be supported.

Harrari talks about people dealing with not being needed and what they will do with their time. Will they immerse themselves in video games? drugs? What will drugs be like in the coming years? Will less harmful ones be developed and legalized?

The only way I can see for us to stay ahead of this rapidly advancing curve is to learn to do as many things as you possibly can and be ready to change and adapt to new things at a moments notice. Is your job robot proof? Is there something else that you can do that isnt? You should think about it, just in case.

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Think your job is safe from automation? Think again! - New Jersey 101.5 FM Radio

Ben Carson Says Slaves In America Were Just Low Wage Immigrants – The Ring of Fire Network

Dr. Ben Carson stated during a speech this week that many immigrants came to the US in the bottom of slave ships and worked longer hours for less pay, but they did it because they had a dream of a better life for themselves and their children. No, Ben, those were slaves. They were brought here against their will to work for literally nothing.Ring of Fires Farron Cousins discusses this.

Transcript of the above video:

Cousins: Dr. Ben Carson may have a PhD. He may have gone to medical school, but what this man really needs right now is a history lesson. Take a look at what he said during a speech earlier this week.

Carson: A man of dreams and opportunity. There were other immigrants who came here in the bottom of slave ships, worked even longer, even harder for less, but they too had a dream that one day their sons, daughter, grandsons, granddaughters, great grandson, great granddaughters might pursue prosperity and happiness in this land.

Cousins: Thats right, folks. Those people that the United States went overseas and rounded up, stole from their homes, stole from their homelands, those were just immigrants. They wanted to come over here stuffed in the bottom of those ships and work for lower wages than the white man because they all had a dream. They all thought they were going to come over here and make a better life for themselves and their kids. I am not a history buff. I dont know everything about US history, but I do know enough that thats not even close to what happened, Dr. Carson. At this point, its almost insulting to other doctors to even refer to you as Dr., so Im not going to call you that anymore. Youre just Ben because you are so ignorant that you do not deserve the title of Dr. at this point.

Those people that the United States ripped from their homelands were not immigrants. They were slaves. They were brought over here to work under hellish conditions for absolutely no pay what so ever and thats what they were. They werent immigrants. They didnt want to come here. They were kidnapped. They were stolen. Families were torn apart. They had no idea what happened. Thats what happened in United States history, Ben Carson. Your disgusting revisionist version of this isnt a front to every single American citizen, not just African Americans. Youre re-writing one of the ugliest parts of American history and ugly or not, it is part of our history. If we pretend that it didnt happen, thats even more insulting, but that is exactly what you are doing, Ben.

You know, at this point I have to wonder if any of the stories about you, that movie with Cuba Gooding Jr., did any of that shit actually happen? You are by far one of the dumbest people in American politics today. Im sorry, I find that hard to believe that you could have ever been successful at cutting open peoples heads and tinkering with their brains when you dont even know that slaves were slaves and not immigrants. Thats very concerning to me, Ben, because this is basic US history. My children are in elementary school and they know more about US slavery than you do. That shouldnt be the case.

Im at a loss at this point for the rampant stupidity in revisionist history coming out of not just the Republican Party, but mainly the Trump Administration itself. These people are so disconnected from reality that theyre actually causing harm to the American public and to American discourse at this point. You cant have an intelligent conversation with these people. You cant have a rational conversation with these people. All you can do is sit back and watch as the flurry of stupid flies from their mouths and hope that nobody in that crowd, nobody listening to this garbage actually believes it. Unfortunately, theyre Republicans so they probably do.

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Ben Carson Says Slaves In America Were Just Low Wage Immigrants - The Ring of Fire Network

Italian Nationalists Vent Fury Following Migrant Camp Fire – Breitbart News

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The two men were residents of the Big Ghetto, a shanty town near San Severo in southern Italy inhabited mostly by migrant agricultural workers.

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The town, which has been in place for nearly two decades, was made up mostly of makeshift huts constructed from wood, cardboard, and plastic. It was engulfed in flames within minutes after a fire broke out on Thursday night, according to local reports. The two men killed are thought to have been from Mali.

Commenting on the incident on Facebook, Lega Nords Matteo Salvani didnt hold back in his condemnation of the left, who he blamed for encouraging migrants to flock to Italy only to work for a pittance in precarious circumstances.

Two immigrants from Africa, exploited as slaves in the countryside [] are dead tonight because of a fire (the seventh!) in the slums where they lived, in the province of Foggia, Salvini wrote.

More blood on the hands of the bleeding heart left, who encourage thousands of wretches to come to Italy, promising them everything and leaving them to die.

His solution: Stop the departures, block the boats, deport the illegals, fight the traffickers, implement a minimum wage to prevent slavery and exploitation, and to defend Italian agriculture.

It can be done, and, in fact, it should be.

Salvinis broadside comes just weeks after the European Unions own border service, Frontex, admitted that search and rescue (SAR) operations in the Mediterranean Sea are perversely increasing the number of migrant drownings, as reliance on rescue ships is prompting smugglers to use ever less sturdy vessels to transport their human cargo.

TheFrontex Risk Analysisfor 2017 admits: SAR missions close to, or within, the 12-mile territorial waters of Libya have unintended consequences.

Dangerous crossings on unseaworthy and overloaded vessels were organised with the main purpose of being detected by EUNAVFOR Med/Frontex and NGO vessels.

Migrants and refugees encouraged by the stories of those who had successfully made it in the past attempt the dangerous crossing since they are aware of and rely on humanitarian assistance to reach the EU.

According to UNHCR figures, 487 people died or went missing in the Mediterranean Sea attempting to cross to Europe between 1 January and 5 March this year.

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Italian Nationalists Vent Fury Following Migrant Camp Fire - Breitbart News

OPINION: Grammar knows best – NW Evening Mail

AS a semi-product of the grammar school system, I welcome wholeheartedly prime minister Theresa Mays plans for a grammar school revolution.

Mrs May will announce this week that the ban on new grammars is to be reversed and 320m is to be set aside in todays budget for new free schools, many of which are expected to be grammars.

I describe myself as a semi-product of the old grammar school system because I was one of the unfortunate children of the 1970s caught in the fire of the abolition of the grammar school system. In 1979, at the age of 14, my convent grammar in Barrow ceased to exist; the teaching nuns were put out to grass; and the pupils were scattered around various schools in the area - something that would cause outrage today, no doubt.

One of the most strident and oft-parroted criticisms of the grammar school system is that putting children through the trauma of the 11-plus exam is cruel and unfair; that deciding on the path they must take at such a formative age is iniquitous.

Both of which are untrue.

The 11-plus exam was, for me, no more stressful (in fact, considerably less so) than doing my cycling proficiency test. My mum took the wise decision not to tell me I was taking this exam and I simply turned up at St Marys Catholic school in Ulverston one day for the headmaster Mr Maguire to tell me I was doing a little test that day with another pupil. We duly did the test and went back to join the rest of our classmates. No big deal because in those days children were brought up via need-to-know parenting methods, rather than todays insistence on over-sharing of information and including kids barely out of nappies in major family decisions.

The other main criticism levelled at grammar schools is that selective education is inherently unfair and divisive, a criticism that is, at best, naive.

When I arrived at Ulverston Victoria High School in September 1979, I discovered there were no fewer than 12 sets for maths and English. Sets one to four were for the academic high flyers heading for university; sets five to eight for the middle-of-the-road kids heading for the world of work sooner rather than later; and sets eight to 12 for those pupils who were either too naughty or too dim to trouble the education system very much at all. Educationally, the differing groups barely mixed and not much more socially, either.

Other than the fact that all these children wore the same uniform, they more often than not experienced very different school lives from each other.

Of course, if pupils did well, there was always the possibility of moving up a set or more just as under the old system pupils who failed their 11-plus could sit it again and move to their local grammar school at a later date.

Selection in educational terms has become a taboo, yet it is difficult to understand why. The sporting world is selective, so why not the academic world too?

Grammar schools gave clever children from poorer backgrounds real opportunities in life; and the abolition of them was a huge educational setback, leaving many potential high flyers to the mercies of the bog standard comps which have done such a great disservice to so many of our children.

Under Mrs Mays new proposals, the inherently unfair system whereby free transport for pupils is provided only for those attending non-selective schools will be overhauled; with free transport being provided for pupils from poorer families to travel up to 15 miles to a selective school. Thats a real step in the right direction.

A reversal of the ban on grammar schools is long overdue. It was an iniquitous measure which has been to the detriment of far too many children left to flounder in inadequate and failing comprehensive schools. The grammar a school and technical school system worked well; and their abolition was a mistake. It is a mistake from which Brexit Britain needs to learn and learn quickly.

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OPINION: Grammar knows best - NW Evening Mail

Close-Up: Ava DuVernay – Varsity Online

Danielle Cameron dissects the work and cultural importance of the director of Selma and 13th

Manohla Dargis of The New York Times describes Ava DuVernays 13th as powerful, infuriating, and at times overwhelming. I cannot disagree with Dargis words. Correlating Americas current mass incarceration of African Americans to the abolition of slavery in 1865, 13th is, quite simply, one of the most brutally energising films that I have seen. Rather, I want to emphasise how Dargis description is relevant to DuVernays entire body of work. 13th is a timely high-profile embodiment of the palpable activist energy that flows throughout DuVernays films, both factual and fictional.

Her first feature-length film, I Will Follow(2010) is a study of a woman grieving for her late aunt during the time of Obamas first inauguration. Next, DuVernay wrote and directed 2012s Middle of Nowhere,in which a medical student is suffering a different kind of grief: her husband has received an eight-year prison sentence. In 2015, Selma depicting the Selma to Montgomery march, with a brilliant performance by David Oyelowo as Martin Luther King was released. Her pieces all have predominantly, if not exclusively, African American casts. Through her focus on African American experiences and their individual yet intersectional textures, DuVernay reminds her viewer that the political is personal and the personal is political.

13th is a timely high-profile embodiment of the palpable activist energy that flows throughout DuVernays films, both factual and fictional

DuVernay tells her viewer that filmmaking is a valid way of putting pressure on the structures we wish to change. In conversation with Oprah Winfrey about 13th, DuVernay said she wanted a film and an ending that would motivate people to do something about the systems of oppression continuing to surround ethnic minorities. She chose this conclusion to be a photo collection of, as she says, black people in everyday moments, their lives mattering. Soundtracked by Commons Letter to the Free, the closing moments of 13th may feel like a reprieve from the blistering pace of the 100-minute long documentary. But it is in this reprieve that you find yourself reflecting on all you have heard and witnessed reflecting and then feeling motivated to enact a change.

A crucial reason why I draw inspiration from DuVernay as both a filmmaker and activist is her refusal to speak down to people. Over the past few years I, as a mixed race woman, have become increasingly tired of Im-more-woke-than-you conversations. These conversations see people competing to seem the most aware, the most concerned about to be the dominant voice of change, when activism needs to arise out of collaboration. Going on more marches than a fellow supporter of the same causes does not make you a better activist. Identifying as an activist for any movement does not give you license to condescend to others. These conversations belittle, alienate and harmfully hierarchize activism. DuVernay and her work refuse to do this. She says that, on the one hand, she made 13th to be a primer for people who know nothing about Americas prison industrial complex and its relation to race. On the other hand, DuVernay made 13th so people who already knew about African American liberation history could fit all the pieces of the puzzle together. Such a policy of inclusion, dialogue and education through activism is apparent in DuVernays whole filmography.

VisCourse: The Bond Complex

DuVernay remains one of cinema's most groundbreaking directors. She is the first African American woman to win the Sundance Award for Best Director and have her work nominated for both Best Picture and Best Documentary Feature by the Academy. With intelligence, grace and calculated anger, DuVernay and her work embody and speak to the many forms of action for social change. Long may her example continue to inspire

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Close-Up: Ava DuVernay - Varsity Online

Marc Lamont Hill’s one-sided view of racism in the Middle East – Jerusalem Post Israel News (blog)

In a recent article (Why I Applaud The NFL Players Who Spoke Out Against Israel) addressed to Michael Bennett and the other NFL players who recently boycotted a trip to Israel, author and activist, Marc Lamont Hill urged the players to consider the political ramifications of attending the trip, the letter drew on the undeniable connections between the struggles faced by Black and Brown communities in the U.S., and Palestinian, Afro Palestinian, Eritrean and Sudanese communities in Israel and Palestine.

While Hill is eager to draw connections between the struggles faced by Black and Brown communities in the United States and struggles of populations in Israel and Palestine, he completely ignores the struggles faced by Africans in the Arab World, which exist in the form of institutional racism and even slavery. The omission of any discussion regarding the more serious racism in the Arab World is puzzling, since Hill recently experienced Arabracism first hand while in Egypt on December 30, 2016:

Hill concluded his stop was attributable to White Supremacy, suggesting Arabs are incapable of racism without western influence. That argument would be more plausible if Hill was referring to former colonies like Haiti or Rwanda, where the European colonists created racial division among the local populaces, but the Arab countries, which have been engaging in theSlave Trade long before the start of the Atlantic Slave Trade?The same Arab Slave Trade that wasin some instances far morebrutalthan the Atlantic Slave Trade; for instance,Arabs would castrate theirAfrican slaves (discussed byDr. Marcus Garvey Jr., son of Marcus Garvey who founded the Negro Improvement Association in America)?

As an aside, Garvey also mentioned some of the slave merchants and financiers wereJewish. Garveywas,however, incorrect to portray that participation as being collective among Jews. The roles of Jews in the Atlantic Slave Trade as merchants and financiers were extremely marginal. Louis Farrakhanthe former leader of the Nation of Islam and arguably ananti-Semiteclaimed in his book, The Secret Relationship, the Atlantic Slave Trade was dominated by Jewish merchants and75 percent of the slaves owned in the South were owned by Jewish slaveholders. Farrakhan also claimedHarold Brackmans 1977 dissertation for the University of California, Los Angeles, on the history of black-Jewish relationssupportedhis claims in The Secret Relationship. Brackman refuted his dissertation supported any of Farrakhans conclusions in a letter to the New York Times, Jews Had Negligible Role in Slave Trade. Brackman also claimed the role Jewish merchants played in the Atlantic Slave Trade was marginal, citingJacob Rader Marcus, who argued the role played by Jewish merchants accounted for considerably less than 2 percent of the traffic. Brackman further claimedit was impossible for 75% of the slaves in the South to be owned by Jewish slave owners: In 1860, there were about 15,000 Southern Jews and 4 million slaves. If 3 million (75 percent) were so owned, this would mean 200 slaves for every Jewish man, woman and child, or 1,000 slaves for every Jewish head of household. Jews owned only a fraction of 1 percent thousands, not millions of the enslaved population. Winthrop D. Jordans article in the Atlantic, Slavery and the Jews, also refutedFarrakhans claims.

As for slavery in the Arab World, John Alembillah Azumah, author of The legacy of Arab-Islam in Africa,arguedthe expansion of Islam into Africa and the dehumanization of non believers under Islamic Sharia Law created the Arab Slave Trade. Azumah alsopositedthe reason African slaves where castrated was, because, the Arabs believed Africanshad an ungovernable sexual appetite. Azumah alsonotedArabs distinguished between Black and White slaves, referring to White slaves as Mamluk and to Black slaves as Abid. Further, Azumah mentioned the Arab historian, Ibn Khaldun,wrotethe negro nations are as a rule submissive to slavery, because they have attributes that are quite similar to dumb animals.

The Arab Slave Trade, unlike the AtlanticSlave Trade, is still ongoing in Arab countries likeNorth SudanandMauritania, and oppressive conditions still exist in many other Arab countries. InKuwait(There are still slaves in the world 1964), it wascustomary for rich Kuwaitis to give their children an African slave as a birthday present. Slavery was abolished in Kuwait in 1963, but abuses of migrant workers still persist in Kuwait according toHuman Rights Watch. Slavery was abolished in Saudi Arabia in 1962; in Yemen in 1962; in the United Arab Emirates in 1963; in Oman in 1970; and in Qatar 1952. However, despite the abolition of slavery in Qatar in 1952, it was still practiced 12 years later when the documentary,There are still slaves in the world, wasfilmedin 1964. Qatar recently abolished its Kaflar system that forced foreign workers to seek their employers permission to change jobs or leave the country and Qatar has beenaccusedby Amnesty International of using forced labour to prepare for the 2022 World Cup.

In response to the questionHow could theArab Slave Trade still exist in the age of the United Nations?Sir Robert Maughamargued in 1964: in one word the answer [as to why slavery still exists in the Middle East] is oilthe civilization of the Cadillac has superseded the civilization of the Quran.

Additionally inTunisia, institutional racial discrimination is still practiced. TheAl Jazeera documentary, Tunisias dirty secret, discusses racial prejudice, violence, and segregation, such as separate buses for Black and Arab Tunisians.

In addition to avoiding the issue of Arab racism entirely, Hill also finds it paramount to combat unfair criticism of Islam, which he deems to be a form of racism. OnCNNHill argued Sam Harriss critique ofIslamthat Islam was the mother-load bad ideaswas unfair, when viewed in the context of other religions, and racist, despite the fact that Islam in not a race. However, Sam Harris has never examined Islam in isolation, but rather through the lenses of other monotheistic faiths, such as Christianity and Judaism. Harris even hadarguedthe Old Testament has verses that are even more violent than the Qurans.

Hills his accusations of Israeli racism, while ignoring the far more serious Arab racism, and his hyperbolic shielding of Islam from objective criticism as racist, raises questions of a possible bias Hill might have in favor of bothArabs and Islam. In anotherCNNdebate, Hill stated, Ive read the Quran thousands of times in Arabic. Undoubtedly, reading any work a thousand times goes well beyond the realm of scholarship, let alone in Arabic, which is not Hills native language. Further, Hills voracious reading of the Quran seems tocomport more with a religious reading of the Quran. Devote Muslims can claim to have read the Quran thousands of times in Arabic, because they practice and study the Quran daily.

However, being Muslim doesautomatically mean Hillhas a bias against Israel or that he would purposely ignore the racism of Muslim Arabs towardsAfricans in North Africa and the Middle East. Yet, that possibility should not automatically be dismissed, either.There is a prominent Black Islamic organization in America that has unequivocally been shown to put its own interests before Black Americans, while simultaneously advocating for the rights of Black Americans. That organization is the Nation of Islam, which came to prominence under the Honorable Elijah Muhammed (Muhammed), and Hill has professed to be influenced by Muhammed:

A short but beautiful conversation with The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan. I did more listening than talking, but I did manage to tell him about the influence of The Honorable Elijah Muhammad on my formation and consciousness to this day.

According to Malcolm X (Malcolm),neitherthe Nation of Islam nor its then leader, Muhammed, was truly concerned with endingthe plight of Black Americans. Malcolm also discussed how Muhammad disgracefullyfatheredeight, out of wedlockchildren, with six of his teenage secretaries, all of whom he publicly isolated and embarrassed within the Nation of Islam. Malcolm even went as far as to say Muhammed was not even a man[for his treatment of those secretaries] much less a divine man. Malcolm also regretfully discussednegotiationsbetween the Nation of Islam and White Supremacist leaders in the 60s. Worst of all was thebombingof Malcolms house by the Nation of Islam. Captain Yusuf Shaw of the NYPD and a member of the Nation of Islamdeniedthe Nation of Islam was responsible for the bombing, and the Nation of Islam claimed Malcolm set fire to his own house. That incident was tragicallyironic, because when White Supremacists burned down Malcolms home in Michigan, when he was six-years-old, the policeblamedthe arson on Malcolms father. It seems when Malcolm joined the Nation of Islam, he merely traded one form of oppression for another.

It is also no secret that Malcolm was not a supporter of Israel; however, Malcolm was never deceptive in any of his claims and candidly believed them to be true when he made them; and he genuinely cared about the civil rights of Black Americans. For instance, when Malcolm realized after traveling to Mecca thatIslam as it was taught by the Nation of Islam was false (e.g. Whiteswere not capableof following Islam because they areinherently evil or that the Honorable Elijah Muhammedwasa prophet), he changed his views and adopted mainstream Islam. Malcolm, from his exposure to White Muslims in Mecca, was also able to realize that for Muslim Whites, identifying as Whitehadno substantial meaning, whereas for White Americans, identifying as White meant boss. Had Malcolm not been assassinated, he would have likely come to realize only White Supremacists in America identify as White. Jewish, Italian, German and Irish Americans, who haveall suffered discrimination by White Supremacists in American, identify by their ethnic origins rather than their race. White Supremacism in America, on the other hand, is limited only to actual racists who choose to identify with race overtheir own historic cultural-ethnic backgrounds, such as Richard B. Spencer and David Duke.

As for Farrakhan and Hill, both of them have questionable views on Malcolm. Farrakhan called Malcolms assassinationdeserved, a position he maintained until 2000, when heapologizedfor his views and statements on 60 Minutes with Mike Wallace. Similarly, Hill questioned the sexuality of Malcolm in 2006 when he posted on his website: Malcolm X Was Gay? but later claimed he was indebted to Malcolm and his legacy:

Why is Hill so vocal on Israel and so silent on the racism practiced in the Arab World is a question I do not have the answer to. Unfortunately, Hills animus towards Israel has never been clear and is usuallycouchedin the Palestinian propaganda term, occupation, which is used by many Palestinian activists to justify the terrorism Israelis face on a daily basis. As to whether the occupation is genuinely Hills motive for unfairly condemningIsrael, we can only speculate.

It is, however, important to learn from Malcolm's mistake. By advocating for the Nation of Islam, Malcolmgrew and strengthened a "criminal organization" that was just as oppressive and corrupt as the society he was trying to reform. While Hill urges Michael Bennett and the other NFL players to look at the struggling of "Palestinian, Afro Palestinian, Eritrean and Sudanese communities in Israel and Palestine, Hill does not urge them to examine that struggling within the context of the region or its history. However, Malcolm after leaving the Nation of Islam did urge his followers not to form the habit of listening to what others say without weighing things for themselves, and I urge everyone interested in the Israel Palestine conflict to do just that:

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Marc Lamont Hill's one-sided view of racism in the Middle East - Jerusalem Post Israel News (blog)

International Women’s Day 2017 Be Bold For Change – St. Lucia Times Online News (press release)

Saint Lucia will join the rest of the world on Wednesday March 8th 2017, in observance of International Womens Day. The day celebrates the social, economic, cultural and political achievement of women in its advocacy to create awareness of the contribution of women to the development of society as positive agents of change.

The theme for this years observance is Be Bold For Change. It challenges each individual to be leaders within the spheres of influence by engaging in a practical action to narrow the gender gap and help women and girls realize their full potential.

The Division of Gender Relations and several other agencies in Saint Lucia have planned a number of activities to mark this years observance, which began with a Praise and Worship Service on Sunday 5th March, 2017, at the Victory Pentecostal Church in La Resource Vieux Fort.

The highlight of this years observance will be a series of Empowerment Seminars for Women to be held in communities around the island. The seminars will focus on personal empowerment for women to enable them to form healthy relationships with themselves and others, to be Bold For Change that will allow them to transform their lives and communities as leaders and change agents. The Empowerment Seminars will be held on evenings to facilitate greater participation and will include topics such as self-esteem, independence, and respect and love for self, others, community and country.

In an effort to recognize and celebrate women who are leaders in the workplace, the Division of Gender Relations has invited business places and organizations to showcase the careers and responsibilities of women in a Festival of Women in the Workplace. The Festival will involve the display of some of the jobs held by women within the organizations, highlighting the nature of services provided, the academic and skills requirements for the specific posts and opportunities for employment in similar positions. It is expected that the Festival of Women in the Workplace will be open to the general public, including students and prospective employees as it seeks to mentor young women and guide career choices.

This years observance will cumulate with the launching of a publication entitled Running in Heels: Women and Politics in Saint Lucia 1961-2016.

A number of other agencies have also planned activities for this years International Womens Day including:

The St Lucia Civil Service Association (CSA) in collaboration with womens activists group Raise Your Voices has organized a Movie showing on March 8th at Caribbean Cinemas featuring the movie Hidden Figures, which portrays the challenges women faced in the workplace. The CSA will also be hosting a Luncheon Lecture on March 10th 2017. The event will take place at Bel Jou Hotel, La Pansee, Castries. Contact the CSA at 45 23903 for further information.

The Folk Research Centre has planned a Panel discussion on the topic The Challenges of Women in Todays Social and Cultural Setting. The discussion take place on Saturday March 18th 2017, from 3:00 p.m. at the FRCs headquarters at Mount Pleasant.

Celestial Self- Development Centre will be holding its annual Vital Voices Global Mentoring Walk on Saturday 11th March 2017. Call 45 31924, email:[emailprotected] or WhatsApp 518 2370 for details.

The Womens Committee of the St. Lucia Teachers Union in collaboration with the St. Lucia Teachers Credit Cooperative will hold their Annual Womens Conference on March 8, 2017 at 1:00 p.m. at the Golden Palm Events Center.

The embassies of Spain and Mexico and the Alliance Francaise are organizing a cultural and social celebration, which will emphasize the role of women in the Arts. The cultural event entitled She.Lc 2017 is a presentation from Saint Lucian artists who will be playing Spanish, Mexican and English music along with theatrical and dance pieces dedicated to women. She.Lc 2017 will take place on March 8th from 7:00p.m. at the National Cultural Center. Admission to this event is free.

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International Women's Day 2017 Be Bold For Change - St. Lucia Times Online News (press release)

Video Of The Week #24: Astroid Boys Foreigners (Feat Sonny Double 1) – God Is In The TV

With the likes of Stormzy and Skeptabecoming successful, Grime has well and truly crash landed into the mainstream this year. And not before time, a strain of British hip-hop that melds urgent delivery, telling tales of street life over skittering beats and samples. Its perhaps the most organic youth music sound to emerge in the last few years. Now the tentacles of its influences have reached South-Wales, Cardiff collective Astroid Boyswhose work has been reflecting the multi-culture of Cardiffs C10 postcode reflecting a life of nights out, gangs, nbsp; discrimination and personal empowerment through struggle.

Joined by fellow Cardiffian Sonny Double 1, Foreigners takes a downtempo beat, that sounds like car alarms going off and allows each member toscatter brutally honest bars that hold up a mirror to themes like gun crime, police corruption, the Muslim Ban and Brexit. We know that you dont like the foreigners, goes the cutting refrain as the crew lay out lyrics rife with pointed social commentary, and prescient wit My hair is on Donald Trump/My swag is on Donald Duck,and surprising crescendos that have as much in common with hardcore punk as they have urban music. Its accompanied by a similarlystark video, street corners, dimly lit back streets and police raids, its a snapshot of life on the margins.

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Video Of The Week #24: Astroid Boys Foreigners (Feat Sonny Double 1) - God Is In The TV

Our view: Sports program for disabled students is welcome – Winston-Salem Journal

A bill to renew funding for a pilot sports-participation program for students with disabilities is not just a welcome instance of bipartisanship. Its also a bit of legislation about which we can all feel good.

A 2015 bill passed by the state legislature provided up to $300,000 in annual financing for the 2015-17 budget years toward developing pilot, community-based, adapted sports programs for kindergarten through 12th grade. Based on a federal civil rights edict, it required equal access to extracurricular athletics for students with disabilities.

Two state representatives from Forsyth County, Democrat Ed Hanes and Republican Donny Lambeth, have filed a new bill to extend the program, providing up to $300,000 annually for the 2017-19 budget years, the Journals Richard Craver reported recently.

Hanes and Lambeths pilot program, like the one before it, is designed to develop specific strategies to overcome barriers to the participation of students with disabilities ... and incorporate a philosophy of personal empowerment for those students.

Physical education is important to all children, but particularly important to those with some disability with limited options, Lambeth told the Journal.

Lambeth couldnt be more right. Children with physical disabilities are capable and can benefit from physical education and exercise. This bill will help ensure their needs are met.

Because there are questions about the best approach, this bill provides funding for the department to work with a local district to develop a program and to monitor its effectiveness, Lambeth told the Journal.

Programs could be conducted in one or more local school administrative units, including local universities, community colleges and other community organizations, the Journal reported.

The cooperation exhibited here is no doubt informed by the best instincts of governing to improve the lives of our citizens. While some states like Texas are cutting resources for disabled children, we in North Carolina can see the benefit clearly, to the children, their families and to our society as a whole.

Kudos to these legislators, in these contentious days, for working together for the good of our states citizens.

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Our view: Sports program for disabled students is welcome - Winston-Salem Journal

Westfield HS to Host Female Student Empowerment Symposium – Patch.com

Westfield HS to Host Female Student Empowerment Symposium
Patch.com
The event, organized by a committee of school staff, teachers and students, will feature breakout sessions on personal image, dating, as well as health and wellness. A fashion show highlighting the school's human services classes and student models is ...

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Westfield HS to Host Female Student Empowerment Symposium - Patch.com

What the Health Documentary Shocks, Educates, and Empowers – Clearly Veg (blog)


Clearly Veg (blog)
What the Health Documentary Shocks, Educates, and Empowers
Clearly Veg (blog)
The new follow-up film by Cowspiracy team Kip Anderson and Keegan Kuhn will make your brain explode and then help you piece it back together by inspiring personal empowerment and meaningful measures to take against the state of modern animal ...

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What the Health Documentary Shocks, Educates, and Empowers - Clearly Veg (blog)

Jeremiah Program Gives Families Home to Help Rise Out of Poverty – TWC News

AUSTIN, Texas - Its a celebration thats more than a year in the making.

We are so excited to be opening our campus and being able to impact these families two generations at a time, said Shannon Moody, executive director of the Jeremiah Program.

More than 44,000 female-headed families live in poverty in Austin. The Jeremiah Program gives these families a place to live while the mom pursues higher education.

It's an approach that helps the kids too.

If we focus on just the mother, the children may not get the education needed to start kindergarten ready to be successful, said Moody.

Marissa Martinez, 19, says her move to the campus will take some weight off her shoulders.

People frown upon young mothers, and especially at 14. That was very, very young, you know what I mean? And people believed I couldnt do it, said Martinez.

Getting on campus wasnt easy. To live here, women face rigorous program criteria, followed by a 12-week personal empowerment course.

We invite them to move in to a beautiful two-bedroom apartment. We have early childhood education that starts at infant level and goes up to age four, said Moody.

With housing secure, Martinez says her sights are set on a college education in surgical technologya task made easier through Jeremiah.

Safe affordable housing for my sons and I while I get my degree and go to a university as well, said Martinez.

It's been an uphill battle of Martinez, but she has plenty of motivation.

I feel like my sons both know their mother tries. My oldest son knows my mommy goes to college and that shes trying. I hope to give them the sameI hope theyre better than me but I like to show them that I work hard for them.

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Jeremiah Program Gives Families Home to Help Rise Out of Poverty - TWC News

Family planning key to women empowerment – K24 TV

Photo: Family planning. Photo/Courtesy

Collins Baswony

As Kenya today joins the rest of the world in commemorating the International Womens Day 2017, we must renew our commitment towards forging a better working world a more gender inclusive world One path towards achieving gender equality in the workplace is investing in family planning services to ensure access to high quality and affordable services.

Access to family planning services helps girls and women to achieve their ambitions. Whether they are in school, in formal or informal employment, women (and their partners) who have the benefit of choosing when to have children, how many and how much time between them (spacing), stand a better chance of achieving their goals.

Studies show that women who plan their children alongside their personal and family goals are able to attain their academic and professional dreams, get higher incomes and participate in social activities in their communities.

American philanthropist Melinda Gates, a prominent family planning advocate, has told her personal family planning story many times. Last year, she wrote in a letter about the role of family planning in helping her and her husband plan their family as they were building their business.

Also read: Alcohol task force begins collecting samples

Gates said it was not by coincidence that her three children were born when they were born and exactly three years apart. This can be the story of every Kenyan woman: that they can have a family but still pursue career or business dreams.

But for that story to be complete, Kenyan women need access to family planning services. Sadly, Kenya has a high number of women who want to either stop or delay childbearing but are not using any contraception.

According to the latest data, 20 per cent of married women are in that category. #BeBoldForChange This years International Womens Day, whose theme is #BeBoldForChange, provides an opportunity for Kenya to evaluate and renew its commitment towards ensuring that women who need family planning services can easily access them.

Also read: Pomp and colour as PiliPili FM re-launches

Considering that six out of 10 users of family planning services get them from public health facilities, both the National and County governments must invest invest in the services.

Such investment, especially by County governments, are crucial in educating Kenyans about benefits while dispelling the myths and misconceptions surrounding family planning.

Investing in Family planning is also vital now more than ever before because resources from development partners and international donors are shrinking.

The reinstatement of the global gag rule by US President Donald Trump only made the situation worse. For Kenya to contribute to creating a more gender inclusive world, we must make family planning services available to them. The writer is a communications practitioner working with an international development organisation. [emailprotected], twitter: @BwanaCollins

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It’s the Technology. Period. – The Financial Brand

Doing more, better, with a smaller workforce, is the main outcome we should expect from the systemic and systematic application of advanced technology in the financial services industry. Is the industry ready?

By Pascal Bouvier, Venture Partner at Santander InnoVentures

As of December 2016, theBureau of Labor Statisticsshows the US financial services industry employing 8.4m people. This figure includes credit and non credit intermediation, securities and insurance activities. For good measure, we may want to add payroll, collection agencies and credit bureau activities, which increases the tally by an additional 400k for a grand total of 8.8m. Lets label this Fact #1.

For the past 6 years, the financial services industry has undergone a transformation, attempting to shed its industrial age structures, rebuilding itself alongside new digital paradigms. The first transformative steps have focused on the digitization of front end processes and systems.

As we cycle through these first steps, we are made aware of the next steps the industry is (or will) undertake digitizing middle office and back office processes and systems. Terms and technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), straight through processing, robotics, process automation, blockchain or distributed ledgers are all connected to a meta intent to modernize and increase the industrys productivity. Lets label this Fact #2.

Innovation is the process whereby technology is applied to human processes, with the resulting outcome beingincreased productivity. In other words, innovation enables humans to do more with less. This has invariably led established industries to produce more with less labor, or die trying. Witness agriculture and manufacturing. Lets label this Fact #3.

Newly elected President Trump ranon a Make America Great Again platform, which in part means the creation of domestic jobs, or the repatriation of offshored jobs to the US. Arguably this dialectic has focused mostly on the manufacturing, energy and extraction industries. Lets label this Fact #4.

We also know the Trump administration has made known its intent to free the US economy from its regulatory debt, which includes financial regulatory debt (which in and of itself is worthy exercise although the devil is in the details). I discussed the Executive Order regarding the US financial systemhere. The purpose of this intent is obviously to facilitate job creation. Lets label this Fact #5.

The US financial services industry has, much like its manufacturing brethren, engaged in offshoring. We need to unpack this statement though. Global banks (retail, commercial or i-banks) have offshored jobs, not the entire industry, and certainly not regional, community banks or domestic insurers. Further, global banks have offshored certain categories of jobs such as low level IT, risk management and compliance to locations with a lower cost of labor.

Thusly, the aggregate amount of US financial services jobs lost to offshoring is probably minimal. I would venture a guess of no more than 150k jobs lost to offshoring (arguably I might be completely off). Further, some of this offshoring might very well be grounded in sound business decisions, such as the need to have global support operations in multiple time zones across the globe.

Additionally, it remains to be seen whether deregulation or the lack of enforcement of current regulation will help with financial services job creation per se. The demise of brick and mortar branches as the primary distribution channel for a financial product is not regulatory driven. It is borne out of societal changes enabled by new technologies. The slow unbundling and rebuilding of traditional financial services models is a byproduct of the internet age.

I cannot avoid concluding that any push to force large banks to repatriate jobs back to the US will not yield significantresults, and that any deregulation push as a basis for job creation is a weak proposition at best. Therefore the desired outcomes powering Fact #4 & Fact #5 (bringing jobs back to America and creating new jobs) are questionable, regardless of how well meaning the intent is.

On the other hand, financial institutions, are under assault frominnovative fintech startups and ravenous tech companies like Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple (GAFA). The industry also is serving a younger consumer base withdrastically different appetites and behaviors compared to their predecessors. This leaves no other choice but to complete their transformations towards greater productivity.

Tomorrows banks will discharge their regulatory burden with but a fraction of the number of employees needed today. Tomorrows insurer will reach consumers with a digital brokerage workforce at odds with current prevalent distribution channels. Buy and Sell side institutions are today actively deploying advanced technologies that makes them brutally efficient at pre-trading, trading and post trading activities.

Everyone is betting on a conversational banking/insurance model via mobile social media apps. I am not even attempting to draft a comprehensive list of transformational changes, yet readers will clearly decipher the inevitable conclusion namely that the probability the financial services industry will employ fewerpeople in 5 to 10 years from now is much higher than the probability aggregate employment will remain unchanged or increase.

No amount of political nudging, deregulation, or trade re-engineering will prevent or reverse the consequences of technology innovation. We are left with attempting to decipherone unknown: How many jobs will the US financial services industry shed in the next 5 or 10 years, and how swift will the shedding occur? Fact #2 & #3 loom larger and stronger.

How will the impact of such dislocation be tackled? 8.8m workers is not a small number and, as the last US presidential election has proven, not paying attention to technology dislocation is unsustainable.

Notice how certain European governments treat their domestic banks as employment stabilizers and do their utmost to ensure no material waves of redundancies occur. Will the US follow this path? If so, will this furtherenable GAFA and fintech startups? More importantly, which will be the new demand curves created on the back of this dislocation?

I am sure the CEOs of most financial institutions have not failed to notice all technology companies have a much higher revenue per employee ratio than traditional banks or insurers. You have been warned and make sure to check how the statistics behind fact #1 will behave going forward Its the technology. Period!

All content 2017 by The Financial Brand and may not be reproduced by any means without permission.

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It's the Technology. Period. - The Financial Brand

Using technology to fight climate change – BetaNews

2016 was the warmest year on record --around 1.2degrees C warmer than pre-industrial levels to be exact. Whilst this doesnt sound very much, evidence has already shown that an average rise of 1degree C across the whole of the Earths surface would result in huge changes to the climatic extremes we see today.

Meanwhile, our forests and oceans arent faring much better. The significant decline of the planets rainforest has been documented throughout my lifetime and, according to a report last year by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, by 2050 there could be more plastic by weight in our oceans than fish. Add to this the recent findings that the Earth is on track to lose two-thirds of its wildlife by 2020 and its easy to see that we are already in a pretty dire state.

Unbelievably, there are those who still insist on denying the existence of the worlds environmental crisis, and worryingly, some of these are in pivotal positions when it comes to what happens in the next 10 years. This by the way is the period in which many experts believe we still have a chance to mitigate the rise in global temperatures.

Now, dont get me wrong, Im far from being an eco-warrior, but, like many, I am increasingly aware of climate change and the inescapable implications this has for us all; particularly since the most recent findings indicate these could become severe within a much shorter timescale than previously thought. I believe its clear to most rational people that we all have a part to play in halting the rise of global temperatures and even small gestures help such as, boiling less water for hot drinks or turning down the central heating by a degree or two.However, as individuals, making an "industrial scale" impact feels far more challenging. Having been involved in the application of technology for most of my working life, I wonder if this could be the great enabler of change that will make the single, largest difference.

Technology in a wider form already plays a huge part in the mitigation of global warming. Renewable energy and carbon entrapment are good examples of this.Yet the proliferation of such technology is often at the mercy of government investment and other incentives, which can ebb and flow depending upon the eco-political priorities being played out by governments at any given time.Information technology on the other hand is all pervasive, both in business and everyday life. Disruptive technology like artificial intelligence, virtual reality and augmented reality are dominating industry conferences at present but with little mention of "tech for good." So is the industry taking the climate crisis as seriously as it should?

There is actually growing evidence to suggest that tech initiatives which support the environment are on the increase and are of growing interest to the investment community.New types of funding programs are being put in place to support these, a recent example being the Barclays Unreasonable Impact Initiative.This is a partnership between Barclays Bank and Unreasonable Group, which has launched the worlds first international network of accelerators, specifically focussed on scaling up entrepreneurial solutions designed to solve some of our most pressing societal and environmental challenges, while helping to employ thousands of people worldwide.

All sorts of great initiatives have and are being developed as a result of this funding. An example being the RT7000, a highly innovative solution to the problem of end-of-life plastic, developed by Recycling Technologies. This UK startup has developed a chemical recycling machine capable of processing up to 7,000 tonnes of plastic waste per annum that would otherwise end up being landfilled, incinerated, exported at cost or dumped illegally. As part of the recycling process, the RT7000 produces a valuable hydrocarbon named Plaxx which can be used as an alternative to heavy fuel oil in the marine industry, so it is contributing to the circular economy.

In addition, some of the well-known philanthropic figureheads from the world of IT have declared their intention to back new tech initiatives that have a positive impact on the environment.Billionaire philanthropist and investor Bill Gates is launching a $1 billion fund called Breakthrough Energy Ventures to invest in new forms of clean energy. Gates has gathered a group of 20 like-minded investors, including a number of Silicon Valley tech venture capitalists, to join him in the fund which will invest in scientific breakthroughs that have the potential to deliver cheap and reliable clean energy to the world.

The cynic in us probably thinks that "responsible investments" by certain companies are simply an effort to offset all of the unfavorable things they are involved in and this raises perhaps the biggest dilemma we face. In the developed world, we have all grown accustomed to our lives as they are: cheap, plentiful food, energy on demand, a "throw-away" attitude to consumer electronics, the list goes on.Its inconceivable that we can reverse this trend in the short term, particularly as demand from the developing world escalates and politicians shy away from imposing any restrictions that will affect jobs and local economies. Its an intractable problem.So if we cant reverse it in the time we have, we must find a way to ameliorate it and I think technology will have a big part to play in this. Innovations such as the RT7000 might be seen as a drop in the ocean compared to the scale of the climate problem were facing, but its a positive step forward by an industry that has always shown leadership and could really help offset the damage already done.

That being said, our planet is facing a huge crisis and in reality, we cannot fully alleviate the environmental impact of the way we all live and work.Despite my optimism in the part technology has to play in helping to offset this, we shouldnt have a false sense of security and be complacent that it alone will solve the climate crisis. Every individual has a responsibility to do something on a personal level, whether that is full blown lobbying, or simply turning off a light when you leave the room-- as the saying goes, from small acorns The worst-case climate scenarios could see the world face an ecological meltdown by 2050, well within the lifetime of current generations. At this point it will be out of anyones hands, so failure is definitely not an option.

Andrew Moore has worked in the IT services industry for over 25 years. During this time, he has held senior sales and business management positions with Cap Gemini, Data Sciences and IBM and has been responsible for the development and growth of business operations spanning the UK and Europe.

Published under license from ITProPortal.com, a Future plc Publication. All rights reserved.

Photo Credit: red-feniks/Shutterstock

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Using technology to fight climate change - BetaNews

Successful Aging: How to find entry points in adding technology – LA Daily News

Q I bought my 80-year-old mother a new iPad. She opened the box, threw up her hands and said, I cant do that. What can I do to help her learn the new technology? My tech savvy 30-year-old daughter volunteered to teach her. Any advice how my daughter can be most effective?

B.K.

A Dear B.K.:

To provide tips for effective tech mentoring, lets begin by understanding some of the reasons for resistance. Opposition to technology is not a new story, according to Calestous Juma, professor at the Harvard Kennedy School. In his book Innovation and Its Enemies: Why People Resist New Technologies (Oxford University Press. 2016), Juma refers to 600 years of technological controversies ranging from attacks on coffee, the printing press and margarine to debates on the potential impact of alternative intelligence, drones and 3-D printing.

He notes that society supports technology when it is perceived as an addition to our lives, embracing our desire for inclusion, purpose, challenge, meaning and alignment with nature. If technology diminishes an aspect of our humanity, he notes there is resistance.

That resistance filters down to individuals and in particular older adults. Here are some barriers as suggested by librarian and writer Renate Robey in a guide for librarians in how to teach technology:

Lack of perceived benefit or need: To be motivated to learn the new technology, older adults need to understand exactly what the benefit will be. Such benefits include being part of a grandchilds life, keeping up with family happenings, playing online games or researching family history.

Negative feelings about social media: Older adults may be frustrated and annoyed that communication has drastically changed from making phone calls and personal visits to email, tweets and Skype.

Fearful about internet safety: A deep mistrust of placing personal information on a computer is another barrier. The concern is real and is called internet fraud. Pop-up browser windows that simulate virus-scanning software can fool victims into either downloading a fake anti-virus program (at a cost) or an actual virus that opens up information on the users computer to scammers.

Computer anxiety: Fearful of breaking the computer or making a mistake can easily lead to computer anxiety. Many older adults were brought up in a school environment where the initial answer to a question had to be correct and making mistakes resulted in a lower grade.

Cognitive or physical issues: Normal changes with age can present learning obstacles. Declines in vision, memory, dexterity and mobility may make it difficult to perform simple tasks like handling a mouse. Ability to read is key. Yet, about two in five older adults indicate they have a physical or health condition that makes reading difficult, according to the Pew Research Center.

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B.K, since your daughter volunteered to be your mothers personal tutor, heres a draft of a possible script that addresses some of the barriers.

Daughter: Hi, Grandma. I know you want to stay in touch with me, but I live 3,000 miles away. I have a way for us to be part of each others lives. Lets begin with the new iPad you received as a gift for starters and learn about email. I will set it up for you. Note that doesnt mean we cant talk on the phone. Using email will just make us closer.

Know that you cannot break the computer and there are no permanent mistakes. If you misspell a word, it can be corrected. We are using a touch screen so you dont have to deal with a mouse. And remember, there is no rush. I am going to write down all of the instructions. Well use the instructions as I demonstrate the process and for practice well write lots of emails together. After I leave, you can always contact me or Mom when you see something on the screen you dont understand. You have my email address and phone number.

When you are comfortable with email, we can learn about Skype where we actually can see one another and talk. Youll love it. Actually, if you like, we can start with Skype.

Grandma, I love you.

Hopefully Grandma is relaxed with a pace that is comfortable for her and with practice, time, repetition and reaping the rewards of staying in touch with her granddaughter, shell become tech savvy.

Thanks, B.K., for your good question. At some point in our tech world, we all are learners.

Note: Most of our communities have classes on technology for older adults.

For more information, go to Helendenn@aol.com; also see http://www.HelenmDennis.com for previous columns.

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Successful Aging: How to find entry points in adding technology - LA Daily News

Pinterest brings its visual search technology to the web – TechCrunch


TechCrunch
Pinterest brings its visual search technology to the web
TechCrunch
Pinterest has been ramping up its efforts in visual search to make its search and discovery features more useful, but today it's opening up the technology a bit more with an integration into the company's Chrome browser extension. With the updated ...

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Pinterest brings its visual search technology to the web - TechCrunch

Investment in Marketing Technology Increasing – eMarketer

March 8, 2017

Marketing technology has become a fact of life, as new data from digital agency Squiz attests. Roughly two-thirds of senior marketers surveyed in Australia, the UK and the US have invested heavily in marketing technology over the past year, the study shows.

Another third of respondents said they have either invested a little to add to their existing marketing technology stack, or have taken their first steps in marketing technology.

Most senior marketers surveyed (62%) said theyre leveraging marketing technology to better understand customers and prospects. Over half of respondents said theyre doing so to automate processes and reduce time on administration, and almost as many said theyre using marketing technology because they want to take a data-driven approach to marketing.

Interestingly, nearly 40% said theyre using marketing technology to remain relevant against competitors.

Marketing technology has become a standard part of managing a business. Many companies have become comfortable enough with the concept to shift away from their initial focus on platforms, and to focus instead on data.

The number of marketing technologies used varies by company, but a November 2016 survey from Conductor, a web presence management and search engine optimization company, revealed that many US marketing executivesmore than six in 10use between six and 20 marketing technologies.

Rimma Kats

Forget the notion that Gen X is a small market: It isn't. The real problem for marketers is that Xersthough now earning and spending more per household than other generationsare financially stressed. The good news? Their digital usage, along with their TV viewing, makes them eminently reachable.

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Investment in Marketing Technology Increasing - eMarketer

Making the Case for Identity Management Technology – eMarketer

Jason Rose Senior Vice President of Marketing Gigya

Many companies dont think of identity management as a staple component of their marketing technology stack. But as more channels and touchpoints become part of the customer journey, brands have to start thinking strategically about matching customers identities across devices and engagements. Jason Rose, senior vice president of marketing at identity management vendor Gigya, spoke with eMarketers Maria Minsker about the importance of understanding customer identities.

eMarketer: Can you explain identity management? Why should it be a part of a brands marketing technology stack?

Jason Rose: Brands have websites, newsletters, mobile apps, loyalty programs and other touchpoints, but customer identities arent always synced up across these properties. Identity management should be part of the marketing technology stack because without it, when a customer signs up for an email newsletter and sets preferences there, another channellike the companys appwill have no notion of those preferences, so content wont be personalized.

This is where customer identity comes into play. A customer identity management system would become the central hub for understanding who a customer is and what their preferences are. It would help brands serve better personalized experiences across different properties.

A customer identity management system would become the central hub for understanding who a customer is and what their preferences are.

eMarketer: How do companies tackle the identity problem if they dont have a management tool in place?

Rose: Most often, we run into do-it-yourself solutions. The concept of creating an online account with a brand through a registration and login screen has been around forever. Often companies have built these themselves, and they likely built them before mobile existedor back when it was a smaller portion of the experience.

The omnichannel digital experience didnt exist, privacy concerns werent as high and there werent as many regulations. Things are different now, and if brands think they can handle it themselves, theyve got another thing coming.

eMarketer: When you say identity management, can the technology actually pinpoint a specific customer, or is their identity matched across different channels while still remaining anonymous?

Rose: Our whole reason for existing is to help brands make anonymous customers known. For example, Turner [Broadcasting System] is one of our big customers. When someone goes to CNN.com and signs up for a news alert, that person identifies themselves and opts in. If that customer wants to go beyond the alert and actually set up a CNN.com account, Gigyas [registration-as-a-service (RaaS) tool] supports that process and ties those two things together. That way, all the information provided ends up associated with the account.

Our whole reason for existing is to help brands make anonymous customers known.

eMarketer: How does an identity management tool integrate with other tools in the marketing technology stack?

Rose: By leveraging a single sign-in, were able to do a number of things. For example, we can share preference data with a content management system [CMS], or connect to a [customer relationship management] CRM and email marketing system. We can also integrate with a solution like AdRoll for ad servicing, and relay customer preferences to make sure theyre getting the types of ads they want to see.

eMarketer: What advice do you have for companies shopping around for an identity management tool? What should they look for?

Rose: As you look for an identity management tool, think about how you are using each interaction with the customer to build the relationship. Earlier I gave the example of signing up for alerts, and eventually creating a full accountwe call that progressive identity-building. Companies need to think about how each step can be woven into the customer journey, and then look at vendors that can support each of those steps.

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Making the Case for Identity Management Technology - eMarketer