ݺߣshows by User: walterfarah / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif ݺߣshows by User: walterfarah / Wed, 20 Mar 2013 09:47:02 GMT ݺߣShare feed for ݺߣshows by User: walterfarah Ciencia y sociedad los problemas de la comunicación https://es.slideshare.net/slideshow/ciencia-y-sociedad-los-problemas-de-la-comunicacin/17412445 cienciaysociedadlosproblemasdelacomunicacin-130320094702-phpapp01
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Wed, 20 Mar 2013 09:47:02 GMT https://es.slideshare.net/slideshow/ciencia-y-sociedad-los-problemas-de-la-comunicacin/17412445 walterfarah@slideshare.net(walterfarah) Ciencia y sociedad los problemas de la comunicación walterfarah <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/cienciaysociedadlosproblemasdelacomunicacin-130320094702-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br>
from walterfarah
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Introduciéndose en el sector del Big Data https://es.slideshare.net/slideshow/introducindose-en-el-sector-del/17232525 introducindoseenelsectordel-130315103840-phpapp02
El artículo introduce conceptos introductorios para comprender el fenómeno del Big Data]]>

El artículo introduce conceptos introductorios para comprender el fenómeno del Big Data]]>
Fri, 15 Mar 2013 10:38:40 GMT https://es.slideshare.net/slideshow/introducindose-en-el-sector-del/17232525 walterfarah@slideshare.net(walterfarah) Introduciéndose en el sector del Big Data walterfarah El artículo introduce conceptos introductorios para comprender el fenómeno del Big Data <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/introducindoseenelsectordel-130315103840-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> El artículo introduce conceptos introductorios para comprender el fenómeno del Big Data
from walterfarah
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Masstlc robotics final_web (1) /slideshow/masstlc-robotics-finalweb-1/17037662 masstlcroboticsfinalweb1-130308091432-phpapp02
The MassTLC Robotics Cluster has grown dramatically in recent years, covering a broad spectrum of robotics companies, from large leaders that are selling successfully to consumer, industrial, and government markets to start-ups and early-stage companies that are launching exciting next-generation robotics products and systems. Advanced robotics research and development (R&D) at ten leading Massachusetts research institutions is fueling the industry’s rapid growth. A phenomenal talent pool of highly skilled engineers graduating from the Commonwealth’s many world-class electrical, mechanical, and software engineering degree programs, including the country’s first-of-its-kind fully integrated undergraduate degree program in robotics engineering at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI), keeps the talent pipeline flowing. Innovations in electronics, hardware, and components (such as sensors, motion controls, and vision systems) have enabled the development of entirely new kinds of specialized, smart automated products with military, commercial, medical, marine and consumer applications. Today, robots perform hazardous military missions and automate manufacturing and warehouse logistics; robotic-assisted devices perform noninvasive surgery and assist in physical rehabilitation; unmanned underwater vehicles are used for oceanographic survey and defense applications; and personal service robots make everyday life easier by mowing lawns and vacuum cleaning. Robots are intelligent tools for increasing productivity, creating high-value jobs for new applications, and enabling workers to make industries more globally competitive. Nextgeneration robotics will be cheaper and easier to implement and operate, and they will work with people rather than substituting for people. As new robotics applications emerge, new market opportunities will have an impact in industries that are strategic to the long-term competitiveness of the Massachusetts and U.S. economy, such as healthcare and life sciences, advanced manufacturing, defense and public safety, distribution and logistics, and marine surveillance. Massachusetts has the unique intellectual infrastructure, talent pool, entrepreneurial environment, and track record of success to claim its rightful place as the “Robotics Capital of the World.” ]]>

The MassTLC Robotics Cluster has grown dramatically in recent years, covering a broad spectrum of robotics companies, from large leaders that are selling successfully to consumer, industrial, and government markets to start-ups and early-stage companies that are launching exciting next-generation robotics products and systems. Advanced robotics research and development (R&D) at ten leading Massachusetts research institutions is fueling the industry’s rapid growth. A phenomenal talent pool of highly skilled engineers graduating from the Commonwealth’s many world-class electrical, mechanical, and software engineering degree programs, including the country’s first-of-its-kind fully integrated undergraduate degree program in robotics engineering at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI), keeps the talent pipeline flowing. Innovations in electronics, hardware, and components (such as sensors, motion controls, and vision systems) have enabled the development of entirely new kinds of specialized, smart automated products with military, commercial, medical, marine and consumer applications. Today, robots perform hazardous military missions and automate manufacturing and warehouse logistics; robotic-assisted devices perform noninvasive surgery and assist in physical rehabilitation; unmanned underwater vehicles are used for oceanographic survey and defense applications; and personal service robots make everyday life easier by mowing lawns and vacuum cleaning. Robots are intelligent tools for increasing productivity, creating high-value jobs for new applications, and enabling workers to make industries more globally competitive. Nextgeneration robotics will be cheaper and easier to implement and operate, and they will work with people rather than substituting for people. As new robotics applications emerge, new market opportunities will have an impact in industries that are strategic to the long-term competitiveness of the Massachusetts and U.S. economy, such as healthcare and life sciences, advanced manufacturing, defense and public safety, distribution and logistics, and marine surveillance. Massachusetts has the unique intellectual infrastructure, talent pool, entrepreneurial environment, and track record of success to claim its rightful place as the “Robotics Capital of the World.” ]]>
Fri, 08 Mar 2013 09:14:32 GMT /slideshow/masstlc-robotics-finalweb-1/17037662 walterfarah@slideshare.net(walterfarah) Masstlc robotics final_web (1) walterfarah The MassTLC Robotics Cluster has grown dramatically in recent years, covering a broad spectrum of robotics companies, from large leaders that are selling successfully to consumer, industrial, and government markets to start-ups and early-stage companies that are launching exciting next-generation robotics products and systems. Advanced robotics research and development (R&D) at ten leading Massachusetts research institutions is fueling the industry’s rapid growth. A phenomenal talent pool of highly skilled engineers graduating from the Commonwealth’s many world-class electrical, mechanical, and software engineering degree programs, including the country’s first-of-its-kind fully integrated undergraduate degree program in robotics engineering at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI), keeps the talent pipeline flowing. Innovations in electronics, hardware, and components (such as sensors, motion controls, and vision systems) have enabled the development of entirely new kinds of specialized, smart automated products with military, commercial, medical, marine and consumer applications. Today, robots perform hazardous military missions and automate manufacturing and warehouse logistics; robotic-assisted devices perform noninvasive surgery and assist in physical rehabilitation; unmanned underwater vehicles are used for oceanographic survey and defense applications; and personal service robots make everyday life easier by mowing lawns and vacuum cleaning. Robots are intelligent tools for increasing productivity, creating high-value jobs for new applications, and enabling workers to make industries more globally competitive. Nextgeneration robotics will be cheaper and easier to implement and operate, and they will work with people rather than substituting for people. As new robotics applications emerge, new market opportunities will have an impact in industries that are strategic to the long-term competitiveness of the Massachusetts and U.S. economy, such as healthcare and life sciences, advanced manufacturing, defense and public safety, distribution and logistics, and marine surveillance. Massachusetts has the unique intellectual infrastructure, talent pool, entrepreneurial environment, and track record of success to claim its rightful place as the “Robotics Capital of the World.” <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/masstlcroboticsfinalweb1-130308091432-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The MassTLC Robotics Cluster has grown dramatically in recent years, covering a broad spectrum of robotics companies, from large leaders that are selling successfully to consumer, industrial, and government markets to start-ups and early-stage companies that are launching exciting next-generation robotics products and systems. Advanced robotics research and development (R&amp;D) at ten leading Massachusetts research institutions is fueling the industry’s rapid growth. A phenomenal talent pool of highly skilled engineers graduating from the Commonwealth’s many world-class electrical, mechanical, and software engineering degree programs, including the country’s first-of-its-kind fully integrated undergraduate degree program in robotics engineering at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI), keeps the talent pipeline flowing. Innovations in electronics, hardware, and components (such as sensors, motion controls, and vision systems) have enabled the development of entirely new kinds of specialized, smart automated products with military, commercial, medical, marine and consumer applications. Today, robots perform hazardous military missions and automate manufacturing and warehouse logistics; robotic-assisted devices perform noninvasive surgery and assist in physical rehabilitation; unmanned underwater vehicles are used for oceanographic survey and defense applications; and personal service robots make everyday life easier by mowing lawns and vacuum cleaning. Robots are intelligent tools for increasing productivity, creating high-value jobs for new applications, and enabling workers to make industries more globally competitive. Nextgeneration robotics will be cheaper and easier to implement and operate, and they will work with people rather than substituting for people. As new robotics applications emerge, new market opportunities will have an impact in industries that are strategic to the long-term competitiveness of the Massachusetts and U.S. economy, such as healthcare and life sciences, advanced manufacturing, defense and public safety, distribution and logistics, and marine surveillance. Massachusetts has the unique intellectual infrastructure, talent pool, entrepreneurial environment, and track record of success to claim its rightful place as the “Robotics Capital of the World.”
Masstlc robotics final_web (1) from walterfarah
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The Telecommunications Explosion: Toward a Global Brain /slideshow/cordeiro-wfs2009book-1/16868980 cordeirowfs2009book1-130301164328-phpapp02
This article gives a global summary of the evolution of telecommunications around the world. It is a quick review of this vital industry from its past to its future.The invention of the telephone allowed the immediate and simultaneous interconnection of many people around the world for the first time in human history. This produced many major benefits, such as the unprecedented rates of economic growth experienced in the last century. Therefore, the twentieth century could be called the “Age of the Telephone.” Finally, some implications of an increasingly interconnected world are considered, such as even faster development and knowledge creation.New mobile forms of communication in the twenty-first century are substituting the old fixed landline telephones of the twentieth century, bringing cheaper, faster, better, and more-efficient ways to communicate in our rapidly connecting planetary civilization.]]>

This article gives a global summary of the evolution of telecommunications around the world. It is a quick review of this vital industry from its past to its future.The invention of the telephone allowed the immediate and simultaneous interconnection of many people around the world for the first time in human history. This produced many major benefits, such as the unprecedented rates of economic growth experienced in the last century. Therefore, the twentieth century could be called the “Age of the Telephone.” Finally, some implications of an increasingly interconnected world are considered, such as even faster development and knowledge creation.New mobile forms of communication in the twenty-first century are substituting the old fixed landline telephones of the twentieth century, bringing cheaper, faster, better, and more-efficient ways to communicate in our rapidly connecting planetary civilization.]]>
Fri, 01 Mar 2013 16:43:28 GMT /slideshow/cordeiro-wfs2009book-1/16868980 walterfarah@slideshare.net(walterfarah) The Telecommunications Explosion: Toward a Global Brain walterfarah This article gives a global summary of the evolution of telecommunications around the world. It is a quick review of this vital industry from its past to its future.The invention of the telephone allowed the immediate and simultaneous interconnection of many people around the world for the first time in human history. This produced many major benefits, such as the unprecedented rates of economic growth experienced in the last century. Therefore, the twentieth century could be called the “Age of the Telephone.” Finally, some implications of an increasingly interconnected world are considered, such as even faster development and knowledge creation.New mobile forms of communication in the twenty-first century are substituting the old fixed landline telephones of the twentieth century, bringing cheaper, faster, better, and more-efficient ways to communicate in our rapidly connecting planetary civilization. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/cordeirowfs2009book1-130301164328-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> This article gives a global summary of the evolution of telecommunications around the world. It is a quick review of this vital industry from its past to its future.The invention of the telephone allowed the immediate and simultaneous interconnection of many people around the world for the first time in human history. This produced many major benefits, such as the unprecedented rates of economic growth experienced in the last century. Therefore, the twentieth century could be called the “Age of the Telephone.” Finally, some implications of an increasingly interconnected world are considered, such as even faster development and knowledge creation.New mobile forms of communication in the twenty-first century are substituting the old fixed landline telephones of the twentieth century, bringing cheaper, faster, better, and more-efficient ways to communicate in our rapidly connecting planetary civilization.
The Telecommunications Explosion: Toward a Global Brain from walterfarah
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