Showing posts with label development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label development. Show all posts

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Business Insider Is Hiring An Audience Development Manager for BI Studios

horse race winner


Business Insider is looking for a goals-oriented Audience Development Manager to join BI Studios, our in-house content marketing and production team.


BI Studios works with marketers to develop robust, engaging sponsor content in a variety of formats (text, videos, slideshows, and infographics) as part of their ad campaigns. The person in this role will be responsible for growing traffic and video views to that content, as well as fostering and strengthening audience engagement.


As Audience Development Manager, you will be optimizing organic and social media distribution, facilitating traffic partnerships, building partner relationships, and increasing revenue opportunities overall. You will work closely with marketing, business development, and ad operations to spearhead, coordinate, and drive sponsor content distribution and exposure.


Do you love diving into performance metrics and understanding them inside and out — and then improving upon them? Then this may be the job for you. The ideal candidate is a self-starter with a traffic, digital marketing, and/or brand-building background who thinks strategically and proactively about how to drive traffic and engagement. He or she should demonstrate expertise in Google Analytics, social media platforms, and other analytics tools, and have a strong understanding of current industry best practices and benchmarks. Experience at a major publisher or digital agency is preferred.


If this sounds like the perfect gig for you, please send your resume and three ways you will grow traffic for BI Studios to studiojobs@businessinsider.com. Thanks in advance for your interest.


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Politics



Business Insider Is Hiring An Audience Development Manager for BI Studios

Monday, November 4, 2013

World"s First Hypersonic Drone in Development

At Alternate Viewpoint, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Alternate Viewpoint and how it is used.


Log Files


Like many other Web sites, Alternate Viewpoint makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


Cookies and Web Beacons


Alternate Viewpoint does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


DoubleClick DART Cookie


  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on Alternate Viewpoint.

  • Google"s use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to users based on their visit to Alternate Viewpoint and other sites on the Internet.

  • Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy at the following URL - http://www.google.com/privacy_ads.html.

These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on Alternate Viewpoint send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.


Alternate Viewpoint has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.


You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. Alternate Viewpoint"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.


If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.



World"s First Hypersonic Drone in Development

Friday, November 1, 2013

Sweden’s cellphone addiction may hinder child development – study



Published time: November 01, 2013 13:02

AFP Photo / Jonathan Nackstrand

AFP Photo / Jonathan Nackstrand




Swedish children may be suffering emotional harm because of their mobile phone-dependent parents, a study has found. One in five parents in Stockholm confessed to having lost sight of their child in a “dangerous place” while focusing on a mobile device.


A new survey by YouGov revealed that one in five Swedish parents have been asked by their children to put their mobile phones down. The problem appears to be particularly prevalent in Stockholm where 1 in 3 children complain about their parents’ dependence on mobile devices.


“Parents put down their kids and pick up their phones. It’s like this all the time,” preschool teacher Anna Lindelöf told Swedish newspaper, Svenska Dagbladet. “Kids have to play by themselves while parents sit and stare at Facebook.”


The study included 521 parents from across Sweden, posing them the question: Have your children ever complained about your smartphone or tablet usage during activities or vacation?


The investigation’s findings have drawn the attention of medical professionals who believe the lack of attention could have detrimental effects on a child’s development.


Pediatrician Lars H. Gustafsson told the newspaper, Expressen, that it was unusual to observe a phenomenon usually associated with depressed parent in mentally healthy ones.


“I often see parents who don’t answer when their children talk to them,” Gustafsson said. “Smaller children need interaction all the time, in everything they discover. The absence of that interaction is very bad for children’s development.”


The Swedes are avid smartphone users, with 63 percent of adults using smartphones, according to Google data. Moreover, Internetbarometer, a Nordic statistics company, found that the number of adults between the ages of 25 and 35 who own a smartphone increased by 32 percent from 2011 to 2012.


Cases of child neglect because of internet addiction have become more commonplace over the last few years. Perhaps the most extreme case was recorded in South Korea in 2010 when a couple caused their three-year-old daughter to starve to death because of their addiction to online games.


Police authorities said the couple spent up to 12 hours every night at internet cafes playing a game called “PRIUS” which allows you to create your own virtual life.


The husband, 41, and wife, 25, also confessed to police that they had fed rotten, powdered milk to their daughter and had often spanked her.




RT – News



Sweden’s cellphone addiction may hinder child development – study

Monday, October 21, 2013

National Security Needs Bigger Role in Energy Development

An ‘all-of-the-above” approach is needed for U.S. energy production in order to secure America’s national security, according to retired military officials gathered at the Securing America’s Future Energy Conference last week.

In panels and discussions at the Washington, D.C., gathering, speakers made the point that while there should be pursuit of oil through new production venues, such as the proposed Keystone XL Pipeline, it also is important to pursue policies focused on diversifying fuels used in the transportation sector, including electric and natural gas vehicles.


Failure to take this approach, the conference concluded, could leave the U.S. at the continued mercy of foreign overlords of oil, such as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.


In an international arena that is increasingly unsafe and uncertain, this is unwise, said retired U.S. Marine Corps Commandant James Conway, who, along with Fred Smith of FedEx, co-chairs SAFE’s Energy Security Leadership Council.


“The term ‘All of the above’ that supporters of a multi-faceted approach to American energy don’t usually consider is the issue of national security,” Conway told Newsmax. “It ignores the fact we have to do something to reduce our dependence on a single fuel source because there are unfriendly nation-states –from the Middle East to Venezuela – on the other side.”


Although U.S. oil imports have decreased thanks to enhanced domestic production, the nation continues to import around 35 percent of the oil it consumes. This is a tremendous improvement from the 60 percent the U.S. was importing in 2005, but it is almost identical to the percentage of our oil imports in 1973, when the nation faced the Arab oil embargo.


“That speaks volumes,” Conway said.


While Conway and other SAFE leaders endorse greater domestic production, they have concluded that this is not enough to achieve the goal of security. They pointed out that even as U.S. domestic oil production was growing at a record pace in 2012, U.S. households, businesses, and public agencies spent a record $ 900 billion on petroleum fuels.


“Let’s put it another way,” said another member of the SAFE team, Ken Blackwell, a former Ohio state treasurer. “The Bush tax cuts have been erased at the pump in 10 years.Where the individual family’s annual expenditure on gasoline was $ 1,235 in 2002, gasoline expenditures in 2012 for the average U.S. household reached $ 2,912, or just under 4 percent of income before taxes.”


According to estimates from the Energy Information Agency, this is the highest percentage in 30 years, with the exception of 2008.


Along with supporting increased oil exploration, SAFE also supports pursuit of such alternatives as electric and natural-gas vehicles.


Founded in 2005, by retired Marine Gen. P.X. Kelley and Smith — chairman, CEO and founder of FedEx Corp., a Marine officer in Vietnam — SAFE advocates pursuing energy security through increasing domestic production of oil and gas and diversifying what fuels America’s transportation sector. Along with Conway, retired admiral and former Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair serves on the group’s board.


“We’re not picking winners and losers,” Conway emphasized. “And we feel alternative-energy sources are additions and not replacements for oil. However, we also must accept that increased oil production is only part of the equation. When you are talking about national security, this is crucial to understand.”


John Gizzi is chief political columnist and White House correspondent for Newsmax.


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



National Security Needs Bigger Role in Energy Development

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

NSA-Proof Secure Messaging App Hemlis Under Development By Pirate Bay Co-Founder


NSA-Proof Secure Messaging App Hemlis Under Development By Pirate Bay Co-Founder

Pirate Bay Co-founder Peter Sunde has announced his latest project, a secure messaging app for Android and iOS devices called Hemlis. Hemlis, which means sec…
Video Rating: 0 / 5



NSA-Proof Secure Messaging App Hemlis Under Development By Pirate Bay Co-Founder

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Sustainable Development Goals After 2015


United Nations – Reducing the proportion of undernourished people by half until 2015 was one of the Millennium Development Goals that the international community set in 2000. It will not be reached: At least 870 million people worldwide – and one child in five – still go hungry; this in a world where we already produce enough food today to feed nine billion people in 2050.


Further progress towards reaching this goal can be made in the remaining months, but we must ask ourselves what comes afterwards. The debate on the so-called Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), to be reached by 2030, has already begun. On Wednesday, Sep. 25, heads of states and governments will meet in New York.


Defeating hunger remains a priority. This is not simply a matter of providing everyone with enough food; crucial for the future of all human beings is how this should happen.


“Food security and nutrition for all through sustainable agriculture and food systems” must be set as one of the fundamental goals of global development. It is therefore imperative for agricultural policy to change course, as requested in 2008 by IAASTD, the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development. The same message was reiterated in the Rio+20 Declaration “The Future We Want”.


What constitutes sustainable agriculture?


Widely spread forms of industrial, conventional agriculture are not sustainable. With high-yielding varieties and a heavy reliance on fertilisers, water, pesticides, and energy, it has delivered impressive yield increases, but only by exhausting its own production base in the long run.


It not only depends on high levels of inputs, but also leaves behind degraded soils, polluted water, and depleted biodiversity. According to the often-cited IAASTD report, 1.9 billion hectares of land are already affected by degradation due to unsustainable use. This comes at an annual cost of around 40 billion dollars and negatively affects the livelihood of 1.5 billion people worldwide.


Industrial, conventional and certain forms of traditional agriculture are also major contributors to climate change. Meanwhile, the rural populations in developing countries remain mired in poverty.


This form of food production must be replaced by sustainable forms of agriculture, which maintain and restore natural soil fertility, protect water sources and promote biodiversity. Sustainable agriculture has economic and social benefits while remaining within the natural boundaries of our planet.


The aim here is not the maximum conceivable yield but a sustainable and environmentally supportable yield. This is certainly enough to nourish the nine billion people who will inhabit the earth by mid-century.


According to the “Green Economy Report” published in 2012 by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), food availability per capita could be increased through sustainable production methods by 14 percent, creating millions of new jobs in rural regions in the process, and thus alleviating poverty. At the same time, agriculture could reduce its ecological footprint.


The main players here are small-scale farmers. Worldwide, 70 percent of food production comes from small farms, which collectively use 40 percent of the world’s arable land. They would be able to nourish people in developing countries, but will have to be supported in this endeavour.


They need guarantees regarding the ownership and rights of use for their land, better access to education, information and markets, as well as fair prices for their products. Rural infrastructure and services are a key factor in this and must be promoted much more intensively by state and international authorities.


Above all, the position of women must be improved. Women play a key role in food production, but earn less and have fewer rights. According to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), equal access to education and agricultural resources in Africa would boost harvests by 20 to 30 percent.


A significant challenge that needs to be urgently addressed is food waste. Worldwide, a third of what is produced goes to waste. Developed countries have a particular responsibility to act: they throw away 222 million tonnes of food every year, which is approximately the annual harvest of sub-Saharan Africa.


Finally, a fairer trading environment is critical. The rules of agricultural trade will have to be adapted to take into account the needs of small-scale farmers. At present, this is not the case.


Developed countries need to reform their agricultural subsidies and trade policies. Government payments coupled to production, in addition to export subsidies, expose farmers in developing countries to unfair competition and can therefore impede their production. These subsidies must be converted to payments for ecosystem services and public goods.


Land grabbing, the acquisition of fertile land by financially strong investors over the interest of the local land users, must be stopped. Activities that exacerbate food price volatility, such as financial speculation on food commodity futures markets, must be reined in.


Food security and nutrition for all through sustainable agriculture and food systems


According to these models, a sustainable development goal should comprise the following elements:


1. End malnutrition and hunger in all of their forms, so that all people enjoy the right to adequate food at all times.


2. Ensure that all smallholders and rural communities, in particular women and disadvantaged groups, enjoy a decent livelihood and income, and secure their right to access productive resources, such as land and water, everywhere.


3. Achieve the transformation to sustainable, diverse and resilient agriculture and food systems that conserve natural resources and ecosystems. The loss of fertile land is not acceptable. Instead, land degradation must be minimised and inevitable degradation compensated through regeneration and restoration measures.


4. Minimise post-harvest food losses and food waste.


5. Establish inclusive, transparent, and equitable legislative and other decision-making processes on food, nutrition, and agriculture at all levels.




Truthout Stories



Sustainable Development Goals After 2015

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

NRA Show 2013: Defensive Shooting Skills Development


If you made it to the defensive shooting skill development seminar taught by Rob Pincus at this year’s NRA show in Houston, Texas, you may have thought for a moment you were doing yoga for gun enthusiasts. Pincus stood on a table demonstrating perfect form, while a room full of a couple hundred folks mimicked his movements, hands raised in the air. It was a thing of beauty.


Pincus—who is the owner of ICE Training Company and is also a longtime author, trainer and consultant—made his case for the “warrior expert theory,” which states that through frequent and life-like training, students can learn how to recognize and respond to a threatening incident in a consistent, efficient way. In plain English, it means the more you perform the necessary muscle movements required of a defensive situation, the more successfully you will execute those skills in the moment you need them most.


“We’re all gun enthusiasts here, and the number one reason we have guns is ultimately to protect ourselves,” Pincus said. “That means we all have a right—and I would say a responsibility—to learn how to properly defend ourselves with the appropriate firearms.”


“Our rights and responsibilities have been under attack the last three months, and up to this point we have successfully maintained them,” Pincus said to a packed house of NRA members well aware of the recent threats to the Second Amendment, but maybe less aware of the need for self defense training. “It is up to us to make good on those freedoms we’ve fought so hard to protect.”


With experience as a law enforcement officer and executive protection agent, Pincus has taken his training methodologies and used them to equip law enforcement agencies and combat groups around the world. He also developed the Combat Focus Shooting program, which was designed to be the most efficient defensive firearms training available today.


Core Components
At the heart of the ICE (integrity, consistency, efficiency) training is the concept of intuitive defensive shooting—the assertion that training must work within the framework of what the body does naturally and train it to be as consistent and efficient as possible. That means reality-based training, constant repetition to build muscle memory and a basic understanding of how the body naturally functions.


Pincus stresses trainees understand the importance of context when preparing themselves for defensive shooting skills. First, it means understanding most defensive pistol stops are psychological. While hitting your target is certainly optimal, the psychological impact of being fired upon must be taken into account. If an intruder flees after an errant shot, the stop is still successful.


Second, Pincus trains his students to make their shots in the high, center chest, from an average distance of 9 to 15 feet. Since most defensive scenarios take place in that range, training must mirror those distances. In the same way, students must prepare themselves with “defensive accuracy” in mind, concerning themselves not with groups on a target but overall threat deterrence. Success is measured not ultimately by tight groups on a stationary paper target, but on whether or not a hostile force is stopped.


When it comes to developing consistency, Pincus maintains there’s no substitute for constant repetitions of the proper and most efficient techniques. That means, for example, preparing yourself to shoot unsighted at shorter distances and sighted with one eye closed at the high end of the 9 to 15 foot range. This means Pincus helps students intuitively adjust for a target at 9 feet versus one at 20.


Balance of Speed and Precision
Ultimately, Pincus said, all that training comes down to successfully balancing speed and precision. The deciding factor is distance, which determines how precise a shooter needs to be. At 9 feet, it matters less than at 15. Either way, the number of successful hits on a target comes down to your application of skill in that moment. Speed is more of a result of confidence to make a shot at a certain distance, in a particular setting. Put it all together and you’ve got multiple shots in a hostile threat, high center chest, that form a counter ambush stopping their attack. That is, after all, the main point.


With the events of the last three months now on paper and a political environment ablaze with talk of gun control and mounting restrictions, Pincus said Americans are once again waking up to the necessity of protecting their right to self defense. And as they do, the need for specialized training in defensive shooting—as well as utilizing the right kind of firearms—is more paramount than ever.




Guns & Ammo



NRA Show 2013: Defensive Shooting Skills Development

Monday, May 6, 2013

NRA Show 2013: Defensive Shooting Skills Development


If you made it to the defensive shooting skill development seminar taught by Rob Pincus at this year’s NRA show in Houston, Texas, you may have thought for a moment you were doing yoga for gun enthusiasts. Pincus stood on a table demonstrating perfect form, while a room full of a couple hundred folks mimicked his movements, hands raised in the air. It was a thing of beauty.


Pincus—who is the owner of ICE Training Company and is also a longtime author, trainer and consultant—made his case for the “warrior expert theory,” which states that through frequent and life-like training, students can learn how to recognize and respond to a threatening incident in a consistent, efficient way. In plain English, it means the more you perform the necessary muscle movements required of a defensive situation, the more successfully you will execute those skills in the moment you need them most.


“We’re all gun enthusiasts here, and the number one reason we have guns is ultimately to protect ourselves,” Pincus said. “That means we all have a right—and I would say a responsibility—to learn how to properly defend ourselves with the appropriate firearms.”


“Our rights and responsibilities have been under attack the last three months, and up to this point we have successfully maintained them,” Pincus said to a packed house of NRA members well aware of the recent threats to the Second Amendment, but maybe less aware of the need for self defense training. “It is up to us to make good on those freedoms we’ve fought so hard to protect.”


With experience as a law enforcement officer and executive protection agent, Pincus has taken his training methodologies and used them to equip law enforcement agencies and combat groups around the world. He also developed the Combat Focus Shooting program, which was designed to be the most efficient defensive firearms training available today.


Core Components
At the heart of the ICE (integrity, consistency, efficiency) training is the concept of intuitive defensive shooting—the assertion that training must work within the framework of what the body does naturally and train it to be as consistent and efficient as possible. That means reality-based training, constant repetition to build muscle memory and a basic understanding of how the body naturally functions.


Pincus stresses trainees understand the importance of context when preparing themselves for defensive shooting skills. First, it means understanding most defensive pistol stops are psychological. While hitting your target is certainly optimal, the psychological impact of being fired upon must be taken into account. If an intruder flees after an errant shot, the stop is still successful.


Second, Pincus trains his students to make their shots in the high, center chest, from an average distance of 9 to 15 feet. Since most defensive scenarios take place in that range, training must mirror those distances. In the same way, students must prepare themselves with “defensive accuracy” in mind, concerning themselves not with groups on a target but overall threat deterrence. Success is measured not ultimately by tight groups on a stationary paper target, but on whether or not a hostile force is stopped.


When it comes to developing consistency, Pincus maintains there’s no substitute for constant repetitions of the proper and most efficient techniques. That means, for example, preparing yourself to shoot unsighted at shorter distances and sighted with one eye closed at the high end of the 9 to 15 foot range. This means Pincus helps students intuitively adjust for a target at 9 feet versus one at 20.


Balance of Speed and Precision
Ultimately, Pincus said, all that training comes down to successfully balancing speed and precision. The deciding factor is distance, which determines how precise a shooter needs to be. At 9 feet, it matters less than at 15. Either way, the number of successful hits on a target comes down to your application of skill in that moment. Speed is more of a result of confidence to make a shot at a certain distance, in a particular setting. Put it all together and you’ve got multiple shots in a hostile threat, high center chest, that form a counter ambush stopping their attack. That is, after all, the main point.


With the events of the last three months now on paper and a political environment ablaze with talk of gun control and mounting restrictions, Pincus said Americans are once again waking up to the necessity of protecting their right to self defense. And as they do, the need for specialized training in defensive shooting—as well as utilizing the right kind of firearms—is more paramount than ever.




Guns & Ammo



NRA Show 2013: Defensive Shooting Skills Development

Saturday, April 20, 2013

What You Need To Know About Building iPhone App User Interfaces

There are several crucial questions you need to get answers for, before attempting to build iPhone app user interfaces. If we speak of interfaces, we are referring to the points of contact and interaction between the users and the iPhone apps. Simply put, if you see the screen where the iPhone users get to interact with the iPhone apps, that is the interface. It is also the screen where data may be entered. Manipulation of the app also takes place there. If the app is supposed to give a feedback or a result, it displays the said results through the screen.


App developers, when developing the apps, are inclined to build the user interfaces early on. We in fact have some developers who prefer to start by building the user interfaces, before proceeding to create the underlying functionality. But in some cases, the user interfaces are built later in the development process, when the underlying functionality of the app has already been completed. It depends on you how and when you would want to build your interfaces. However, there are bound to be some questions still that you must get the answers for before you can start. You will find that the answers to these questions will have a large impact on the final design of the interface.


Before building your user interface, you must first find out who will be using them and you have to ask who, specifically, the eventual users will be. An iPhone app that is targeted for kids and young children is bound to have an interface that is colorful so as to appeal to them. On the other hand, if the app you are attempting to build is for corporate use, you will have to use color carefully, and organize its \’screens\’ in a manner which ultimately makes it (the app) come across as a \’serious corporate app.\’ You would have to employ the same level of care if you are building the interface of an app that has senior citizens as the targeted users. They are not too keen on too bright colors and designs that could cause sensory overload.


Next, you\’d have to get an answer to the question as to the role or function that the iPhone apps are supposed to serve. This will actually be the main determinant of how you go about designing the interfaces. The ultimate objective here is to come up with interfaces that facilitate optimal collection of data from users, and optimal display of feedback to the users of the iPhone app.


Now on to the third question. In what type of environment are the iPhone apps supposed to be used in? At the most basic level, you will have already figured out that the apps are to be used in a mobile computing environment, using the iOS (which is the operating system powering iPhones). But you have to consider many environmental variables. You may, for instance, want to know whether the app is to operate within a browser (as a web-app), or if it is to be a stand-alone application, interacting directly with the operating system. A web app should have an interface that must be configured in such a way that it will be compatible with the chosen browser. You also need to ensure that it is synchronized with the other browser features, such as back, forward and \’refresh\’ buttons.


Mappsolutely is without a doubt a leading Software Development provider. In order to find out more about how to develop an application, stop by www.mappsolutely.com



What You Need To Know About Building iPhone App User Interfaces