The document summarizes a 2008 service redesign project for the Mattress Factory museum conducted by students at Carnegie Mellon University. The students conducted exploratory research including visitor observations and interviews. They identified core problems such as a mismatch between the museum's vision and public perception, wayfinding issues, and a negative perception of works-in-progress. The students proposed two concepts - a participation concept using tags and frames to encourage conversation, and a communication concept using signs and maps to clearly convey the museum's vision. Both aimed to enhance the visitor experience and perception of the Mattress Factory.
M.F. Hussain - Famous Painters For Kids – Mocomi.comMocomi Kids
Muqbool Fida Hussain, popularly known as simply MF, was an Indian modernist painter, Read more about M.F. Hussain, visit: http://mocomi.com/m-f-hussain/
This document summarizes a study on the role of internet banking in creating value for customers of private commercial banks in Bangladesh. The study used questionnaires to collect data from internet banking users on their satisfaction levels, reasons for use, and perceptions of benefits. Key findings indicated that while customers value benefits like convenience and 24/7 access, many remain unaware of internet banking benefits and have security concerns. The study recommends banks promote internet banking services, improve user-friendly interfaces, ensure secure customer information, and conduct further research.
The document criticizes artist M.F. Hussain for portraying Hindu goddesses in the nude in his paintings while depicting Muslim religious figures and his own family fully clothed. It argues this shows disrespect for Hinduism and is not true artistic expression. Examples given include paintings of a naked Goddess Durga with a tiger and Goddess Lakshmi on Lord Ganesha's head, in contrast to depictions of his fully clothed daughter and the Prophet's daughter. The document asks readers to judge the appropriateness and intent of Hussain's works, and suggests actions like complaining to embassies and boycotting his paintings to protest this issue.
This document provides an overview of contemporary Indian art, outlining its historical background and major artistic movements from the 1950s onwards. It covers early Harappan and Mauryan art, as well as regional Southern and Western Indian art. Key 20th century artistic groups discussed include the Calcutta Group, Progressive Artists Group, and Young Turks. Major post-Independence trends explored are the return to Indian themes in the 1960s, moving from realism to fiction in the 1970s, and expanding into new territories in the 1980s. Contemporary genres like installation art, conceptual art, modern art, live art, and media art are also introduced.
Mutual funds pool money from investors and invest it in stocks, bonds, and other securities. The money earned through investments and any capital appreciation is shared by unit holders proportionate to how many units they own. The document discusses the history of mutual funds in India from 1964 to present. It describes open-ended and closed-ended funds, as well as growth, income, balanced, and money market funds. The advantages of mutual funds include diversification, professional management, convenience, and tax benefits, while the disadvantages include costs and lack of control. Systematic investment plans allow regular investing of small amounts to achieve long-term goals through rupee cost averaging and the power of compounding.
The document discusses mutual funds, providing definitions and explaining the structure and key participants. A mutual fund is an investment vehicle that pools money from investors to purchase securities like stocks and bonds. The structure involves a fund sponsor, trustees, an asset management company, custodian, and distributors. The document outlines the roles and responsibilities of these participants, as well as the history and types of mutual funds.
M.F. Hussain - Famous Painters For Kids – Mocomi.comMocomi Kids
Muqbool Fida Hussain, popularly known as simply MF, was an Indian modernist painter, Read more about M.F. Hussain, visit: http://mocomi.com/m-f-hussain/
This document summarizes a study on the role of internet banking in creating value for customers of private commercial banks in Bangladesh. The study used questionnaires to collect data from internet banking users on their satisfaction levels, reasons for use, and perceptions of benefits. Key findings indicated that while customers value benefits like convenience and 24/7 access, many remain unaware of internet banking benefits and have security concerns. The study recommends banks promote internet banking services, improve user-friendly interfaces, ensure secure customer information, and conduct further research.
The document criticizes artist M.F. Hussain for portraying Hindu goddesses in the nude in his paintings while depicting Muslim religious figures and his own family fully clothed. It argues this shows disrespect for Hinduism and is not true artistic expression. Examples given include paintings of a naked Goddess Durga with a tiger and Goddess Lakshmi on Lord Ganesha's head, in contrast to depictions of his fully clothed daughter and the Prophet's daughter. The document asks readers to judge the appropriateness and intent of Hussain's works, and suggests actions like complaining to embassies and boycotting his paintings to protest this issue.
This document provides an overview of contemporary Indian art, outlining its historical background and major artistic movements from the 1950s onwards. It covers early Harappan and Mauryan art, as well as regional Southern and Western Indian art. Key 20th century artistic groups discussed include the Calcutta Group, Progressive Artists Group, and Young Turks. Major post-Independence trends explored are the return to Indian themes in the 1960s, moving from realism to fiction in the 1970s, and expanding into new territories in the 1980s. Contemporary genres like installation art, conceptual art, modern art, live art, and media art are also introduced.
Mutual funds pool money from investors and invest it in stocks, bonds, and other securities. The money earned through investments and any capital appreciation is shared by unit holders proportionate to how many units they own. The document discusses the history of mutual funds in India from 1964 to present. It describes open-ended and closed-ended funds, as well as growth, income, balanced, and money market funds. The advantages of mutual funds include diversification, professional management, convenience, and tax benefits, while the disadvantages include costs and lack of control. Systematic investment plans allow regular investing of small amounts to achieve long-term goals through rupee cost averaging and the power of compounding.
The document discusses mutual funds, providing definitions and explaining the structure and key participants. A mutual fund is an investment vehicle that pools money from investors to purchase securities like stocks and bonds. The structure involves a fund sponsor, trustees, an asset management company, custodian, and distributors. The document outlines the roles and responsibilities of these participants, as well as the history and types of mutual funds.
Mutual funds pool money from investors and invest in a portfolio of securities like stocks, bonds and other assets. The presentation discusses the history, growth and regulations of the Indian mutual fund industry. It covers key concepts like the flow cycle, organizational structure, expense ratios and types of mutual fund schemes. The goal is to educate investors about mutual funds and how they can provide diversification and professional management.
Mutual funds pool money from investors and invest it in a portfolio of securities like stocks, bonds, and other assets. Investors share the income and capital gains or losses proportionate to their investment. Mutual funds offer diversification, professional management, affordability, and liquidity. Some risks include potential underperformance, costs, and taxes on capital gains. In India, the Association of Mutual Funds promotes and protects the interests of mutual funds and investors. Long-term capital gains from mutual funds are tax exempt.
This document provides an overview of mutual funds, including:
1) Mutual funds pool money from investors and invest it in stocks, bonds, and other securities to spread out risk. Profits and losses are shared by investors proportionate to their investment.
2) Mutual funds offer benefits like diversification, professional management, liquidity, and lower costs. They allow small investors access to a wide range of investments.
3) There are different types of mutual fund schemes categorized by their investments, objectives, and other features. Funds invest in stocks, bonds, sectors, indexes, and more.
4) Mutual funds are structured with sponsors, trustees, asset management companies, custodians
This document provides an overview of mutual funds, including their concept, types, advantages, organization, investment strategies, and growth in India. It discusses key mutual fund topics such as open-ended and closed-ended schemes, growth, income, balanced, and money market funds. The document also summarizes the history and growth of the mutual fund industry in India, from its beginnings in 1964 to recent growth and future prospects, with the industry expected to reach $800 billion by 2022 based on past growth rates.
The document discusses various types of mutual fund schemes classified based on maturity period, investment objective, and risk-return profile. Some of the key types discussed are open-ended schemes which allow continuous purchase and sale of units, close-ended schemes which have a fixed corpus and units are listed on stock exchanges, interval schemes which are open during predetermined intervals, equity/growth funds which seek long-term capital appreciation, income/debt funds which provide regular income, balanced funds which provide both growth and income, and money market funds which invest in short-term instruments and provide easy liquidity. Sector funds invest in specific industries while index funds invest in line with the composition of an index.
Presentation On Mutual funds and its typesGurmeet Virk
The document summarizes a seminar presentation on mutual funds and their types. It defines a mutual fund as a trust that pools investor savings and invests in stocks, bonds, and other securities. It outlines the history of mutual funds in India in four phases from 1964 to the present. It also describes the different types of mutual funds based on maturity period (open-ended or closed-ended) and investment objectives (growth, income, balanced, money market, gilt, and index funds). Finally, it lists some major Indian mutual fund companies and the advantages of investing in mutual funds.
This document discusses internet banking. It begins with a brief history of internet banking starting in 1981 with four major New York City banks offering early home banking services. It then defines internet banking as conducting bank transactions online instead of in person. The document outlines the types of internet banking, services provided, how it works involving web servers and security, advantages like lower costs and convenience, disadvantages like security risks, and concludes that internet banking aims to provide valuable services to consumers by utilizing the internet.
This document provides information about mutual funds including their structure, types, history in India, advantages and disadvantages. It discusses that a mutual fund is a trust that collects money from investors and invests in stocks, bonds, money market instruments and other securities. The document outlines the key entities involved in mutual funds like sponsors, trustees, asset management companies, custodians and various distribution channels. It also summarizes the different types of mutual fund schemes and provides a brief history of mutual funds in India from 1964 to the present.
This presentation is about technology internet banking or net banking which is very essential and helpful in our daily life..so in this ppt basic and some advance concepts are highlighted. i am sure this will be very much help full for u
Internet banking allows individuals to perform banking activities online via the internet. It provides automated delivery of traditional and new banking products and services directly to customers through electronic and interactive communication channels. Some banks offer both online and traditional banking, while others are online-only.
The concept of internet banking developed alongside the world wide web in the 1980s. The first online banking services launched in the United States in 1994 and India in 1997. The Reserve Bank of India categorized internet banking into three types - information only, electronic information transfer, and fully electronic transactional - based on access levels.
Internet banking provides benefits like convenience, lower costs, faster transactions, and increased competition for both customers and banks. However, security risks and the
This document summarizes a service design project to redesign public health checkup reports in Korea. It describes the problems with the previous reports, including low rates of disease discovery and follow up. It then details the service design process used, including discovery, definition, development and delivery phases. Key activities like stakeholder interviews and prototyping are mentioned. The new design focused on trust, healthy habits and communication. Features included customized information flow, participation tools and before/after comparisons. Surveys found 93-94% of people better understood their health and planned to change habits due to the new report.
Miso Kim defense on Designing for Participationkimmiso
This dissertation examines the nature of service and participation through a dialectic approach. It explores whether there is an underlying principle of service, defines the nature of service through a historical analysis, identifies layers of participation, and applies the framework to conceptual models. The dissertation was submitted to Carnegie Mellon University's School of Design to earn a Doctor of Philosophy degree under the supervision of a dissertation committee.
The document discusses research into reorganizing the rates section of the Domestic Mail Manual (DMM). Currently, rates are organized by class. The team explored organizing rates by shape instead to align with the proposed shape-based information architecture. They created prototypes of rate tables incorporating visual elements and analyzed how to reflow the rate information into the new table of contents. Two options were proposed for the introductory rates section: organizing by shape with retail and discount methods together (Option 1) or organizing by method then shape (Option 2).
This document provides the rates for various mail classes including First-Class Mail, Express Mail, Periodicals, and Standard Mail effective June 30, 2002. The rates are broken down by mail format, weight, and level of presorting/automation. First-Class Mail rates range from $0.37 to $3.13 depending on weight and level of presorting. Express Mail rates are listed by weight in 1-pound increments up to 70 pounds. Periodicals rates include pound rates and piece rates that vary by zone and level of presorting. Standard Mail rates are provided for regular and carrier route mail by presort level and automation discounts.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive functioning. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
Jenny is a new member of a grocery co-op who is pregnant with her first child. She uses her co-op device to add items like spinach, wheat germ, and oatmeal cookies to her shopping list based on advice from her sister to increase her folic acid intake. At the store, her device guides her to items on her list and provides nutritional information. Edna, an experienced co-op member, uses her device to advertise her Lamaze class and share pregnancy tips by transferring information to the social table in the cafe. Jenny finds the tips on the social table helpful for her own pregnancy.
This document provides an agenda and map for the Global Service Jam taking place in Pittsburgh from February 24-26, 2012. The jam will be held at the Margaret Morrison building at Carnegie Mellon University. Over the course of the 48 hour event, participants will work in teams to ideate, develop, and present prototypes for projects to solve social problems. The agenda outlines activities for each day, including brainstorming, prototyping, mentor feedback, and a final presentation session.
The document provides information about various services and colleges at Carnegie Mellon University, including parking locations and options, dining, housing, computing services, the seven colleges, and buildings and visitor information. It lists the seven colleges and provides more details about parking garages and locations.
Control is an important factor in user interface and service design. In services, control issues are magnified as control is split among many stakeholders and constraints. The document proposes a framework for understanding control with three types: behavioral, cognitive, and decisional. Behavioral control is direct action capability. Cognitive control involves information access and experience appraisal. Decisional control is capability of choice. Design lenses are introduced as tools to frame control-related design problems. A case study of airport travel uncovered control perception issues and opportunities through user research.
Mutual funds pool money from investors and invest in a portfolio of securities like stocks, bonds and other assets. The presentation discusses the history, growth and regulations of the Indian mutual fund industry. It covers key concepts like the flow cycle, organizational structure, expense ratios and types of mutual fund schemes. The goal is to educate investors about mutual funds and how they can provide diversification and professional management.
Mutual funds pool money from investors and invest it in a portfolio of securities like stocks, bonds, and other assets. Investors share the income and capital gains or losses proportionate to their investment. Mutual funds offer diversification, professional management, affordability, and liquidity. Some risks include potential underperformance, costs, and taxes on capital gains. In India, the Association of Mutual Funds promotes and protects the interests of mutual funds and investors. Long-term capital gains from mutual funds are tax exempt.
This document provides an overview of mutual funds, including:
1) Mutual funds pool money from investors and invest it in stocks, bonds, and other securities to spread out risk. Profits and losses are shared by investors proportionate to their investment.
2) Mutual funds offer benefits like diversification, professional management, liquidity, and lower costs. They allow small investors access to a wide range of investments.
3) There are different types of mutual fund schemes categorized by their investments, objectives, and other features. Funds invest in stocks, bonds, sectors, indexes, and more.
4) Mutual funds are structured with sponsors, trustees, asset management companies, custodians
This document provides an overview of mutual funds, including their concept, types, advantages, organization, investment strategies, and growth in India. It discusses key mutual fund topics such as open-ended and closed-ended schemes, growth, income, balanced, and money market funds. The document also summarizes the history and growth of the mutual fund industry in India, from its beginnings in 1964 to recent growth and future prospects, with the industry expected to reach $800 billion by 2022 based on past growth rates.
The document discusses various types of mutual fund schemes classified based on maturity period, investment objective, and risk-return profile. Some of the key types discussed are open-ended schemes which allow continuous purchase and sale of units, close-ended schemes which have a fixed corpus and units are listed on stock exchanges, interval schemes which are open during predetermined intervals, equity/growth funds which seek long-term capital appreciation, income/debt funds which provide regular income, balanced funds which provide both growth and income, and money market funds which invest in short-term instruments and provide easy liquidity. Sector funds invest in specific industries while index funds invest in line with the composition of an index.
Presentation On Mutual funds and its typesGurmeet Virk
The document summarizes a seminar presentation on mutual funds and their types. It defines a mutual fund as a trust that pools investor savings and invests in stocks, bonds, and other securities. It outlines the history of mutual funds in India in four phases from 1964 to the present. It also describes the different types of mutual funds based on maturity period (open-ended or closed-ended) and investment objectives (growth, income, balanced, money market, gilt, and index funds). Finally, it lists some major Indian mutual fund companies and the advantages of investing in mutual funds.
This document discusses internet banking. It begins with a brief history of internet banking starting in 1981 with four major New York City banks offering early home banking services. It then defines internet banking as conducting bank transactions online instead of in person. The document outlines the types of internet banking, services provided, how it works involving web servers and security, advantages like lower costs and convenience, disadvantages like security risks, and concludes that internet banking aims to provide valuable services to consumers by utilizing the internet.
This document provides information about mutual funds including their structure, types, history in India, advantages and disadvantages. It discusses that a mutual fund is a trust that collects money from investors and invests in stocks, bonds, money market instruments and other securities. The document outlines the key entities involved in mutual funds like sponsors, trustees, asset management companies, custodians and various distribution channels. It also summarizes the different types of mutual fund schemes and provides a brief history of mutual funds in India from 1964 to the present.
This presentation is about technology internet banking or net banking which is very essential and helpful in our daily life..so in this ppt basic and some advance concepts are highlighted. i am sure this will be very much help full for u
Internet banking allows individuals to perform banking activities online via the internet. It provides automated delivery of traditional and new banking products and services directly to customers through electronic and interactive communication channels. Some banks offer both online and traditional banking, while others are online-only.
The concept of internet banking developed alongside the world wide web in the 1980s. The first online banking services launched in the United States in 1994 and India in 1997. The Reserve Bank of India categorized internet banking into three types - information only, electronic information transfer, and fully electronic transactional - based on access levels.
Internet banking provides benefits like convenience, lower costs, faster transactions, and increased competition for both customers and banks. However, security risks and the
This document summarizes a service design project to redesign public health checkup reports in Korea. It describes the problems with the previous reports, including low rates of disease discovery and follow up. It then details the service design process used, including discovery, definition, development and delivery phases. Key activities like stakeholder interviews and prototyping are mentioned. The new design focused on trust, healthy habits and communication. Features included customized information flow, participation tools and before/after comparisons. Surveys found 93-94% of people better understood their health and planned to change habits due to the new report.
Miso Kim defense on Designing for Participationkimmiso
This dissertation examines the nature of service and participation through a dialectic approach. It explores whether there is an underlying principle of service, defines the nature of service through a historical analysis, identifies layers of participation, and applies the framework to conceptual models. The dissertation was submitted to Carnegie Mellon University's School of Design to earn a Doctor of Philosophy degree under the supervision of a dissertation committee.
The document discusses research into reorganizing the rates section of the Domestic Mail Manual (DMM). Currently, rates are organized by class. The team explored organizing rates by shape instead to align with the proposed shape-based information architecture. They created prototypes of rate tables incorporating visual elements and analyzed how to reflow the rate information into the new table of contents. Two options were proposed for the introductory rates section: organizing by shape with retail and discount methods together (Option 1) or organizing by method then shape (Option 2).
This document provides the rates for various mail classes including First-Class Mail, Express Mail, Periodicals, and Standard Mail effective June 30, 2002. The rates are broken down by mail format, weight, and level of presorting/automation. First-Class Mail rates range from $0.37 to $3.13 depending on weight and level of presorting. Express Mail rates are listed by weight in 1-pound increments up to 70 pounds. Periodicals rates include pound rates and piece rates that vary by zone and level of presorting. Standard Mail rates are provided for regular and carrier route mail by presort level and automation discounts.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive functioning. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
Jenny is a new member of a grocery co-op who is pregnant with her first child. She uses her co-op device to add items like spinach, wheat germ, and oatmeal cookies to her shopping list based on advice from her sister to increase her folic acid intake. At the store, her device guides her to items on her list and provides nutritional information. Edna, an experienced co-op member, uses her device to advertise her Lamaze class and share pregnancy tips by transferring information to the social table in the cafe. Jenny finds the tips on the social table helpful for her own pregnancy.
This document provides an agenda and map for the Global Service Jam taking place in Pittsburgh from February 24-26, 2012. The jam will be held at the Margaret Morrison building at Carnegie Mellon University. Over the course of the 48 hour event, participants will work in teams to ideate, develop, and present prototypes for projects to solve social problems. The agenda outlines activities for each day, including brainstorming, prototyping, mentor feedback, and a final presentation session.
The document provides information about various services and colleges at Carnegie Mellon University, including parking locations and options, dining, housing, computing services, the seven colleges, and buildings and visitor information. It lists the seven colleges and provides more details about parking garages and locations.
Control is an important factor in user interface and service design. In services, control issues are magnified as control is split among many stakeholders and constraints. The document proposes a framework for understanding control with three types: behavioral, cognitive, and decisional. Behavioral control is direct action capability. Cognitive control involves information access and experience appraisal. Decisional control is capability of choice. Design lenses are introduced as tools to frame control-related design problems. A case study of airport travel uncovered control perception issues and opportunities through user research.
This document summarizes the history and development of service design in South Korea. It discusses how service design efforts began in 2008 with publications and conferences, and have grown to include government partnerships, education programs, and large scale projects and events like DesignDIVE, which aims to advance service design practices and their application across various industries in Korea.
The document shows that regions with higher adult male literacy rates tend to have higher rates of lung cancer. Europe and Central Asia have the highest literacy rates at 99% and highest lung cancer rates at 54 cases per 100,000 men. In contrast, Sub-Saharan Africa has the lowest literacy rates at 66% and lowest lung cancer rates at 6 cases per 100,000 men. The document suggests that literacy programs may have the unintended effect of increasing lung cancer incidence.
Particle is an iTunes addon for the iPad that brings music to life through a visualizer interface. It functions as both a visualizer and full media player, reacting and adapting to music playback through touch interaction. Particle provides an intuitive way to listen to and interact with music libraries by making music manipulation feel more organic while maintaining full iTunes functionality.
1. The bronze altar and laver were located in the outer courtyard of the tabernacle for sacrifices and washing. The altar was made of acacia wood overlaid with bronze.
2. The incense altar inside the tabernacle was made of acacia wood overlaid with gold. Priests burned incense on it twice daily and the high priest made atonement on it once a year.
3. The Ark of the Covenant inside the tabernacle was a gold-covered chest containing the tablets of the law. It was carried by poles inserted into gold rings and flanked by two golden cherubim.
The document discusses designing church spaces to better facilitate interaction and participation. It proposes distributing workers throughout the seating area so they can influence others. The speaker would move around and involve observers, helping influence spread from the inside out. By nurturing leaders who nurture others, and designing levels of interaction, the space could reach its full potential for discussion, input and feedback, creating an interactive rhetorical situation. Future considerations include developing the concept further and exploring other external factors.
Particle is an iTunes addon for the iPad that brings music to life through a visualizer interface. It functions as both a visualizer and full media player, reacting and adapting to music playback through touch interaction. Particle provides an intuitive way to listen to and interact with music libraries by making music manipulation feel more organic while maintaining full iTunes functionality.
This document discusses user-oriented approaches to designing news services. It describes how service design focuses on the journeys and touchpoints that consumers experience over time rather than just individual episodes. The document also discusses service blueprinting, a method created by a CitiBank executive to help design and analyze service processes. It emphasizes exploring services from the perspective of different audiences like customers, support, news providers and vendors. The goal is to design user-centered interfaces that focus on what consumers really care about rather than just service design details.
The document is a student paper about light-years as a unit of distance that measures time. It explains that a light-year is the distance that light travels in one year, and is often used to measure galactic distances. It then discusses how the vast scale of light-years makes the concept difficult for humans to comprehend. The paper proposes explaining light-years using a two-dimensional representation that frames the phenomenon in more relatable human terms.
The Science of Learning: implications for modern teachingDerek Wenmoth
Keynote presentation to the Educational Leaders hui Kōkiritia Marautanga held in Auckland on 26 June 2024. Provides a high level overview of the history and development of the science of learning, and implications for the design of learning in our modern schools and classrooms.
Information and Communication Technology in EducationMJDuyan
(𝐓𝐋𝐄 𝟏𝟎𝟎) (𝐋𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐨𝐧 2)-𝐏𝐫𝐞𝐥𝐢𝐦𝐬
𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐥𝐚𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐈𝐂𝐓 𝐢𝐧 𝐞𝐝𝐮𝐜𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧:
Students will be able to explain the role and impact of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in education. They will understand how ICT tools, such as computers, the internet, and educational software, enhance learning and teaching processes. By exploring various ICT applications, students will recognize how these technologies facilitate access to information, improve communication, support collaboration, and enable personalized learning experiences.
𝐃𝐢𝐬𝐜𝐮𝐬𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐫𝐞𝐥𝐢𝐚𝐛𝐥𝐞 𝐬𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐜𝐞𝐬 𝐨𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐢𝐧𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐧𝐞𝐭:
-Students will be able to discuss what constitutes reliable sources on the internet. They will learn to identify key characteristics of trustworthy information, such as credibility, accuracy, and authority. By examining different types of online sources, students will develop skills to evaluate the reliability of websites and content, ensuring they can distinguish between reputable information and misinformation.
How to Create User Notification in Odoo 17Celine George
This slide will represent how to create user notification in Odoo 17. Odoo allows us to create and send custom notifications on some events or actions. We have different types of notification such as sticky notification, rainbow man effect, alert and raise exception warning or validation.
How to Download & Install Module From the Odoo App Store in Odoo 17Celine George
Custom modules offer the flexibility to extend Odoo's capabilities, address unique requirements, and optimize workflows to align seamlessly with your organization's processes. By leveraging custom modules, businesses can unlock greater efficiency, productivity, and innovation, empowering them to stay competitive in today's dynamic market landscape. In this tutorial, we'll guide you step by step on how to easily download and install modules from the Odoo App Store.
CapTechTalks Webinar Slides June 2024 Donovan Wright.pptxCapitolTechU
Slides from a Capitol Technology University webinar held June 20, 2024. The webinar featured Dr. Donovan Wright, presenting on the Department of Defense Digital Transformation.
A Free 200-Page eBook ~ Brain and Mind Exercise.pptxOH TEIK BIN
(A Free eBook comprising 3 Sets of Presentation of a selection of Puzzles, Brain Teasers and Thinking Problems to exercise both the mind and the Right and Left Brain. To help keep the mind and brain fit and healthy. Good for both the young and old alike.
Answers are given for all the puzzles and problems.)
With Metta,
Bro. Oh Teik Bin 🙏🤓🤔🥰
A Free 200-Page eBook ~ Brain and Mind Exercise.pptx
Mf
1. 2008 The Mattress Factory Service Redesign Project
Carnegir Mellon School of Design | Advisor: Professor Shelley Evenson
Miso Kim, Natalie Ebenreuter, Carrie Chan, Leanne Libert, Renna Alyassini, Zhen Zheng, Li Yen Huang
2. MF vision The Mattress Factory is a museum of contemporary
art that presents art you can get into — room-sized
environments, created by in-residence artists. Located
in the historic Mexican War Streets of Pittsburgh’s
North Side since 1977, the Mattress Factory is one of
few museums of its kind anywhere.
Our goal Increasing new and returning visitos by enhancing
the perception of the Mattress Factory (MF) and
communicating the diverse experiences it provides,
through the voices of visitors and artists.
MF vision
4. Art you can • Encourage visitors to return & spread words
get into
redesign from
• Create flow, visual cues, and wayfinding
visitors’ perspective
• Match core competency with perception
Artists’ • Strengthen core identity
playground
redesign for artists’ voice
• Create consistent voice
• Support communication channel
suggestions & hypothesis
5. Observations We conducted three observations, one time experiencing
the MF by ourselves as visitors, and another time watching
the visitors’ behaviors in the first floor area MF as well as a
shadowing observation of how they interact with artworks.
Interviews We interviewed with three MF employeers in their work
setting, and fifteen visitors in the lobby area.
exploratory research
6. Observations • People returning to the first floor in 15 minutes average
• Wayfinding problem
• Some people not noticing the Pleiades room
• Darkness encourages conversation but some awkwardness as well
• People are eager to talk about their experience
• Cafe, lobby, and other public areas not much utilized
• The darkness of the 2nd floor intimidating
• Forgetting some of the instructions from the reception
• Lack of understanding about the whole system
exploratory research
7. Interviews • Gap between MF mission and public perception
• Lack of expectation or mismatching between expectation and experience
• Negative perception about artworks in installation
• Wayfinding problem and different responses about the darkness of 2nd floor
• People don’t read instruction on the 2nd floor map.
• Scale and direction problems with map
• The moment of dissapointment “Is this all?”
• Word-of-mouth being critical
exploratory research
10. Participatory • Entrance: Problem guiding the visitors from parking place
experience
mapping • 2nd floor: controversial response about the darkness, flow problem
• Flow problem in the 2nd floor
• Basement and public areas not being utilized
• Not knowing they can touch the artworks
Surveys • Little connection between expectations and satisfaction. Tend to be no expectation
• Wayfinding problem in the 2nd floor
• Negative perception about artworks in installation
• Word-of-mouth being critical
exploratory research
11. Visitors User Discovery Traveling to MF Arrving the building Entering the building Entering the exhibition Experiencing the exhibition
journey Actions recognizing
MF
finding
MF location
& travel info
wayfinding parking finding
entrance
being
informed
making
payment
waiting for
elevator
taking
elevator
being
informed
in elevator
deciding
which floor
entering
2nd floor
reading
the map
instruction
exploring exploring visiting entering seeing
the neighbor garden Tom’s 3rd floor installation
in progress
entering locating
L floor restroom
Physical magazine information street signs outside signs, visitor’s sticker exhibit info map on
the wall
Interface
from other maps signs statement, guide, in floors
museum cafe menu map & buildings
word-of- website web-search phamplets, lobby on lounge,
mouth printed construction table
materials
stairway informaion
in elevator
Front stage personnel front desk
personnel’s
Communication guidance,
greeting
synthesis
12. Visitors Experiencing the exhibition leave-taking exiting making connection
being
informed
in elevator
journey
deciding
which floor
entering
2nd floor
reading
the map
instruction
wayfinding interacting
with
waiting discussion experiecing
darkness
entering
1st floor
entering
museum
shop
eye-
shopping,
purchasing
askiing
question
watching
video
entering
cafe
moving to
next
building
spreading
the word
the ehibit
entering seeing being putting interacting discussion seeing entering eating, asking discussion, reading revisit
3rd floor installation informed shoe cover with the museum drinking, questions socializing books
in progress about shoe the ehibit scenery cafe resting
entering locating using looking discussion finding front desk
seeing picking up asking
L floor restroom restroom around stairway
installation materials questions
in progress
exhibit info map on touch, running door signs MF logo, monitor
in floors the wall sound to exit products
& buildings
map & sign shoe cover, cards window door signs tables, chairs sofa, books map phamplets,
on the wall chair with info coffee, meal, big table printed
on exhibits menu on wall materials
informaion sign map
in elevator on door
cafe, shop, front desk
front desk personnel’s
personnels explanation
synthesis
13. Core • How to communicate MF vision so that people will have positive expectation and
problems richier subjective experience
• How to design wayfinding system without interrupting the exploratory nature of
MF experience
• How can we change the negative perception about ongoing artwork so that visitors
will not see it as “under-construction,” “empty,” or “out-of-order,” but see it as
another piece of art that their presence participate in its growth?
• How to make connection afterward so that the visitors will participate in spreading
word-of-mouth and come back again?
synthesis
14. 2 solutions • Particiption: ongoing conversation
• Communication : delivering the MF vision
our concepts
15. Concept 1: • MF vision: collective conversation through tags and frames
participation
• Wayfinding: visitors’ self-discovery with portable maps and brochures
• Changing perception about ongoing artwork: interactive map of artists’ work process
• Making connection afterward: coupons and discounts to encourage revisit
Concept 2: • MF vision: mission statement on the stairway and reception
communication
• Wayfinding: direct guidance with maps and signs in each floor and elevator
• Changing perception about ongoing artwork: entrance sticker of support
• Making connection afterward: postcards about update on artists’ work process
our concepts
16. Concept 1: • MF vision: collective conversation through tags and frames
participation
• Wayfinding: visitors’ self-discovery with portable maps and brochures
• Changing perception about ongoing artwork: interactive map of artists’ work process
• Making connection afterward: coupons and discounts to encourage revisit
Concept 2: • MF vision: mission statement on the stairway and reception
communication
• Wayfinding: direct guidance with maps and signs in each floor and elevator
• Changing perception about ongoing artwork: entrance sticker of support
• Making connection afterward: postcards about update on artists’ work process
our concepts
18. Front Back: instruction
1 a
Participatory MEMBER?
tags & frames
a
Place this sticker on you so that our
staff knows that you have paid for
MEMBER? admissions.
2
Tell us where you are from by putting
the dot on the world map located on
the first floor.
3
My favorite was ...
My favorite was ...
I think
I think
See the back of this
fold to find out how to Leave us a little comment using the
use these stickers. back of your admissions ticket. Then
tie the tag to a MF wireframe.
concept1/participation
19. Brochure set S M T W T F S S M T W T F S
1-5
HOURS 10-5 1-5 10-5
Tuesday - Saturday :10AM - 5PM
Sunday : 1PM - 5PM
Closed Mondays, New Year’s Day,
Easter, Memorial Day, Independence
1
Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas Place this sticker
ADMISSION on you so that our staff
ADULTS | $10.00 1414 GALLERY knows that you have
STUDENTS | $7.00
at 1414 Monterey Street paid for admissions.
Seniors | $8.00
Kids under 6 are FREE every day
Members FREE
Thursdays 1/ 2 off (with the Jacksonia Street
3
exception of group tours) Museum parking lot at
CMU students get in FREE all year 505 Jacksonia Street
PITT students get in FREE during MAIN BUILDING
500 Sampsonia Way
Fall/Spring semester Gallery at 500 Sampsonia Way,
Cafe, & Shop
2 The Tom Museum at 500 Sampsonia Way
Pittsburgh, PA 15212PARKING Tell us410 Sampsonia Way
where you are from Pittsburgh, PA 15212
(412) 231-3169 Parking for buses and cars is by putting the dot on the (412) 231-3169
2
Mattress.org free in our parking lot located at Mattress.org
4 world5map 6 located on the Poem
House
505 Jacksonia Street. first floor.
ACCESSIBILITY Sampsonia Way
The Mattress Factory’s
Monterey Street
facilities at 500 Sampsonia Gallery at 516 Sampsonia Way
WayThe Mattress Factory is
are wheelchair accessible. The Mattress Factory is
The a museum of contemporary art
wheelchair accessible
entrance exhibits room-sized works
3 a museum of contemporary art
that is located North Taylor Avenue that exhibits room-sized works
off of the parking lot at 505
called installations. Created Leave us a little called installations. Created
See the back of this Jacksonia Street. comment using the back
Resaca Place
on site by artists from across on site by artists from across
fold to find out how to use the country and around the of your admissions the country and around the
these stickers. world, our unique exhibitions ticket. Then tie the tag to world, our unique exhibitions
feature a variety of media a MF wireframe. feature a variety of media
that engage all of the senses. that engage all of the senses.
Mattress Factory Apartments
for In-Residence Artists a
MEMBER?
BIRTHDAY:
ZIPCODE:
NAME:
EMAIL:
concept1/participation
20. Brochure set
HOURS
Tuesday - Saturday :10AM - 5PM exit
1F 2F
Sunday : 1PM - 5PM
entrance
Closed Mondays, New Year’s Day,
Easter, Memorial Day, Independence
1
Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas Place this sticker
a ADMISSION on you so that our staff
ADULTS | $10.00 knows that you have
STUDENTS | $7.00 paid for admissions.
info desk MEMBER? Seniors | $8.00 elevator
Kids under 6 are FREE every day
Members FREE
Thursdays 1/ 2 off (with the
PERMANENT James Turrell
exception of group tours)
cafe shop
INSTALLATIONS Catso, Red
CMU students get in FREE all year
elevator Pleiades
PITT students get in FREE during
Danaë
Fall/Spring semester 2
MF SHOP Unique gifts, exhibition catalogues, books for PARKING Tell us where you are from
children and adults, and much more. Open the Parking for buses and cars is by putting the dot on the
same hours as the Museum. free in our parking lot located at world map located on the
House Poem
505 Jacksonia Street. first floor.
3F
MF CAFE The MF Café, located in the lobby of 500 Sampsonia ACCESSIBILITY
exit
Way, offers delicious soups, salads, specialty The Mattress Factory’s shoe changing area
entrees, pizzas and sandwiches from M Catering, facilities at 500 Sampsonia
along with unique desserts from Vanilla Pastry Studio. Way are wheelchair accessible.
The MF Café is smoke free and features an outdoor
dining patio and free wireless internet. The MF Café
The wheelchair accessible
entrance is located
3
is open Thursday and Friday, 11AM-3PM and Saturday, off of the parking lot at 505 Leave us a little
11AM-4PM. See the back of this Jacksonia Street. comment using the back
Museum admission is not required to dine fold to find out how to use of your admissions
these stickers. ticket. Then tie the tag to
elevator
a MF wireframe.
LL
restroom
exit PERMANENT Yayoi Kusama
INSTALLATIONS Infinity Dots Mirrored Room
Repetitive Vision
1 0 %
4F our next check
exit
restroom restroom restroom elevator
SA V E
on y
PERMANENT Rolf Julius
INSTALLATIONS RED
BIRTHDAY:
elevator
ZIPCODE:
NAME:
EMAIL:
concept1/participation
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