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20:05:21 12/16/11
How Much Can Trees and Forests Slow the Global Warming Increase? | Challenges and Choices
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:05:21 12/16/11
How Much Can Trees and Forests Slow the Global Warming Increase? | Challenges and Choices
Harvard Museum of Natural History Much research and debate in the scientific community is devoted to question the impact forests have on the capture or sequestration of carbon dioxide, the primary gas that causes the climate-warming "greenhouse effect." Hear two of Harvard's most active climate researchers tackle the different perspectives on global warming, atmospheric chemist Steven Wofsy and forest ecologist Andrew Richardson. November 9, 2011 From: Harvard Views: 243 10 ratings Time: 01:04:39 More in Education
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20:05:21 12/16/11
How Much Can Trees and Forests Slow the Global Warming Increase? | Challenges and Choices
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 20:05:21 12/16/11
How Much Can Trees and Forests Slow the Global Warming Increase? | Challenges and Choices
Harvard Museum of Natural History Much research and debate in the scientific community is devoted to question the impact forests have on the capture or sequestration of carbon dioxide, the primary gas that causes the climate-warming "greenhouse effect." Hear two of Harvard's most active climate researchers tackle the different perspectives on global warming, atmospheric chemist Steven Wofsy and forest ecologist Andrew Richardson. November 9, 2011 From: Harvard Views: 243 10 ratings Time: 01:04:39 More in Education
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17:33:42 11/17/11
Welcoming Remarks | Radcliffe Institute
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 17:33:42 11/17/11
Welcoming Remarks | Radcliffe Institute
Reimagining the City-University Connection: Integrating Research, Policy, and Practice Welcoming remarks by Lizabeth Cohen (Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Harvard University), David T. Ellwood (Harvard Kennedy School), Peter Meade (Boston Redevelopment Authority), and Robert J. Sampson (Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Harvard University) "Reimagining the City-University Connection," sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Rappaport Institute, and the City of Boston, seeks to promote a new kind of partnership by stimulating mutually beneficial research and policy relationships involving Harvard and other universities with Boston and other cities and towns in greater Boston. Scholars and practitioners from a variety of fields and communities will explore accomplishments of%mdashand lessons from%mdashseveral notable university/city initiatives. Panels of leading academics and senior practitioners will focus on four areas: preventing and responding to violence; governance and new technologies; improving urban education; and the lessons and challenges of city-university collaborations. The symposium will create novel opportunities to strengthen existing collaborations and to begin to develop new ones%mdashparticularly those that cross academic disciplines and bureaucratic boundaries. October 23, 2011 From: Harvard Views: 254 2 ratings Time: 30:44 More in Education
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17:33:42 11/17/11
Welcoming Remarks | Radcliffe Institute
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 17:33:42 11/17/11
Welcoming Remarks | Radcliffe Institute
Reimagining the City-University Connection: Integrating Research, Policy, and Practice Welcoming remarks by Lizabeth Cohen (Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Harvard University), David T. Ellwood (Harvard Kennedy School), Peter Meade (Boston Redevelopment Authority), and Robert J. Sampson (Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Harvard University) "Reimagining the City-University Connection," sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Rappaport Institute, and the City of Boston, seeks to promote a new kind of partnership by stimulating mutually beneficial research and policy relationships involving Harvard and other universities with Boston and other cities and towns in greater Boston. Scholars and practitioners from a variety of fields and communities will explore accomplishments of%mdashand lessons from%mdashseveral notable university/city initiatives. Panels of leading academics and senior practitioners will focus on four areas: preventing and responding to violence; governance and new technologies; improving urban education; and the lessons and challenges of city-university collaborations. The symposium will create novel opportunities to strengthen existing collaborations and to begin to develop new ones%mdashparticularly those that cross academic disciplines and bureaucratic boundaries. October 23, 2011 From: Harvard Views: 252 2 ratings Time: 30:44 More in Education
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17:00:05 11/17/11
Panel 4: "Lessons and Challenges of City-University Connections" | Radcliffe Institute
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 17:00:05 11/17/11
Panel 4: "Lessons and Challenges of City-University Connections" | Radcliffe Institute
Reimagining the City-University Connection: Integrating Research, Policy, and Practice Panel 4: "Lessons and Challenges of City-University Connections" with John Fantuzzo (University of Pennsylvania), Henry Webber (Washington University in St. Louis), Margaret Weir (University of California at Berkeley and Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study), and Mitchell Weiss (City of Boston), moderated by Edward L. Glaeser (Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston and Taubman Center for State and Local Government, Harvard University) Closing Remarks and Next Steps by Christopher Winship (Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Harvard University) and Robert J. Sampson (Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Harvard University) "Reimagining the City-University Connection," sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Rappaport Institute, and the City of Boston, seeks to promote a new kind of partnership by stimulating mutually beneficial research and policy relationships involving Harvard and other universities with Boston and other cities and towns in greater Boston. Scholars and practitioners from a variety of fields and communities will explore accomplishments of%mdashand lessons from%mdashseveral notable university/city initiatives. Panels of leading academics and senior practitioners will focus on four areas: preventing and responding to violence; governance and new technologies; improving urban education; and the lessons and challenges of city-university ... From: Harvard Views: 276 1 ratings Time: 01:23:30 More in Education
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17:00:05 11/17/11
Panel 4: "Lessons and Challenges of City-University Connections" | Radcliffe Institute
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 17:00:05 11/17/11
Panel 4: "Lessons and Challenges of City-University Connections" | Radcliffe Institute
Reimagining the City-University Connection: Integrating Research, Policy, and Practice Panel 4: "Lessons and Challenges of City-University Connections" with John Fantuzzo (University of Pennsylvania), Henry Webber (Washington University in St. Louis), Margaret Weir (University of California at Berkeley and Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study), and Mitchell Weiss (City of Boston), moderated by Edward L. Glaeser (Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston and Taubman Center for State and Local Government, Harvard University) Closing Remarks and Next Steps by Christopher Winship (Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Harvard University) and Robert J. Sampson (Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Harvard University) "Reimagining the City-University Connection," sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Rappaport Institute, and the City of Boston, seeks to promote a new kind of partnership by stimulating mutually beneficial research and policy relationships involving Harvard and other universities with Boston and other cities and towns in greater Boston. Scholars and practitioners from a variety of fields and communities will explore accomplishments of%mdashand lessons from%mdashseveral notable university/city initiatives. Panels of leading academics and senior practitioners will focus on four areas: preventing and responding to violence; governance and new technologies; improving urban education; and the lessons and challenges of city-university ... From: Harvard Views: 276 1 ratings Time: 01:23:30 More in Education
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16:21:36 11/17/11
Panel 2: "Governance and New Technologies" | Radcliffe Institute
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 16:21:36 11/17/11
Panel 2: "Governance and New Technologies" | Radcliffe Institute
Reimagining the City-University Connection: Integrating Research, Policy, and Practice Panel 2: "Governance and New Technologies" with Jennifer Tour Chayes (Microsoft Research New England), Nigel Jacob (City of Boston), and Alex "Sandy" Pentland (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), moderated by David Lazer (Harvard University and Northeastern University) "Reimagining the City-University Connection," sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Rappaport Institute, and the City of Boston, seeks to promote a new kind of partnership by stimulating mutually beneficial research and policy relationships involving Harvard and other universities with Boston and other cities and towns in greater Boston. Scholars and practitioners from a variety of fields and communities will explore accomplishments of%mdashand lessons from%mdashseveral notable university/city initiatives. Panels of leading academics and senior practitioners will focus on four areas: preventing and responding to violence; governance and new technologies; improving urban education; and the lessons and challenges of city-university collaborations. The symposium will create novel opportunities to strengthen existing collaborations and to begin to develop new ones%mdashparticularly those that cross academic disciplines and bureaucratic boundaries. October 21, 2011 From: Harvard Views: 133 3 ratings Time: 01:17:07 More in Education
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16:21:36 11/17/11
Panel 2: "Governance and New Technologies" | Radcliffe Institute
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 16:21:36 11/17/11
Panel 2: "Governance and New Technologies" | Radcliffe Institute
Reimagining the City-University Connection: Integrating Research, Policy, and Practice Panel 2: "Governance and New Technologies" with Jennifer Tour Chayes (Microsoft Research New England), Nigel Jacob (City of Boston), and Alex "Sandy" Pentland (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), moderated by David Lazer (Harvard University and Northeastern University) "Reimagining the City-University Connection," sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Rappaport Institute, and the City of Boston, seeks to promote a new kind of partnership by stimulating mutually beneficial research and policy relationships involving Harvard and other universities with Boston and other cities and towns in greater Boston. Scholars and practitioners from a variety of fields and communities will explore accomplishments of%mdashand lessons from%mdashseveral notable university/city initiatives. Panels of leading academics and senior practitioners will focus on four areas: preventing and responding to violence; governance and new technologies; improving urban education; and the lessons and challenges of city-university collaborations. The symposium will create novel opportunities to strengthen existing collaborations and to begin to develop new ones%mdashparticularly those that cross academic disciplines and bureaucratic boundaries. October 21, 2011 From: Harvard Views: 133 3 ratings Time: 01:17:07 More in Education
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15:41:18 11/17/11
Panel 1: "Preventing and Responding to Violence" | Radcliffe Institute
[LESS INFO] 1 VIEWS | ADDED 15:41:18 11/17/11
Panel 1: "Preventing and Responding to Violence" | Radcliffe Institute
Reimagining the City-University Connection: Integrating Research, Policy, and Practice Panel 1: "Preventing and Responding to Violence" with Anthony A. Braga (Rutgers University), Daniel Linskey (Boston Police Department), Felton Earls (Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Public Health), and Deborah Allen (Boston Public Health Commission), moderated by Paula A. Johnson (Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Boston Public Health Commission) "Reimagining the City-University Connection," sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Rappaport Institute, and the City of Boston, seeks to promote a new kind of partnership by stimulating mutually beneficial research and policy relationships involving Harvard and other universities with Boston and other cities and towns in greater Boston. Scholars and practitioners from a variety of fields and communities will explore accomplishments of%mdashand lessons from%mdashseveral notable university/city initiatives. Panels of leading academics and senior practitioners will focus on four areas: preventing and responding to violence; governance and new technologies; improving urban education; and the lessons and challenges of city-university collaborations. The symposium will create novel opportunities to strengthen existing collaborations and to begin to develop new ones%mdashparticularly those that cross academic disciplines and bureaucratic boundaries. October 21, 2011 From: Harvard Views: 182 1 ratings Time: 01:21:16 More in Education
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15:41:18 11/17/11
Panel 1: "Preventing and Responding to Violence" | Radcliffe Institute
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 15:41:18 11/17/11
Panel 1: "Preventing and Responding to Violence" | Radcliffe Institute
Reimagining the City-University Connection: Integrating Research, Policy, and Practice Panel 1: "Preventing and Responding to Violence" with Anthony A. Braga (Rutgers University), Daniel Linskey (Boston Police Department), Felton Earls (Harvard Medical School and Harvard School of Public Health), and Deborah Allen (Boston Public Health Commission), moderated by Paula A. Johnson (Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Boston Public Health Commission) "Reimagining the City-University Connection," sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Rappaport Institute, and the City of Boston, seeks to promote a new kind of partnership by stimulating mutually beneficial research and policy relationships involving Harvard and other universities with Boston and other cities and towns in greater Boston. Scholars and practitioners from a variety of fields and communities will explore accomplishments of%mdashand lessons from%mdashseveral notable university/city initiatives. Panels of leading academics and senior practitioners will focus on four areas: preventing and responding to violence; governance and new technologies; improving urban education; and the lessons and challenges of city-university collaborations. The symposium will create novel opportunities to strengthen existing collaborations and to begin to develop new ones%mdashparticularly those that cross academic disciplines and bureaucratic boundaries. October 21, 2011 From: Harvard Views: 184 1 ratings Time: 01:21:16 More in Education
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14:44:42 11/17/11
Panel 3: "Improving Urban Education" | Radcliffe Institute
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 14:44:42 11/17/11
Panel 3: "Improving Urban Education" | Radcliffe Institute
Reimagining the City-University Connection: Integrating Research, Policy, and Practice Panel 2: "Improving Urban Education" with Sarah Glover (Harvard Graduate School of Education), Carol R. Johnson (Boston Public Schools), Stephen Raudenbush (University of Chicago), and Catherine Snow (Harvard Graduate School of Education), moderated by Nancy E. Hill (Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Harvard Graduate School of Education) "Reimagining the City-University Connection," sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Rappaport Institute, and the City of Boston, seeks to promote a new kind of partnership by stimulating mutually beneficial research and policy relationships involving Harvard and other universities with Boston and other cities and towns in greater Boston. Scholars and practitioners from a variety of fields and communities will explore accomplishments of%mdashand lessons from%mdashseveral notable university/city initiatives. Panels of leading academics and senior practitioners will focus on four areas: preventing and responding to violence; governance and new technologies; improving urban education; and the lessons and challenges of city-university collaborations. The symposium will create novel opportunities to strengthen existing collaborations and to begin to develop new ones%mdashparticularly those that cross academic disciplines and bureaucratic boundaries. October 21, 2011 From: Harvard Views: 141 0 ratings Time: 01:43:50 More in Education
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14:44:42 11/17/11
Panel 3: "Improving Urban Education" | Radcliffe Institute
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 14:44:42 11/17/11
Panel 3: "Improving Urban Education" | Radcliffe Institute
Reimagining the City-University Connection: Integrating Research, Policy, and Practice Panel 2: "Improving Urban Education" with Sarah Glover (Harvard Graduate School of Education), Carol R. Johnson (Boston Public Schools), Stephen Raudenbush (University of Chicago), and Catherine Snow (Harvard Graduate School of Education), moderated by Nancy E. Hill (Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Harvard Graduate School of Education) "Reimagining the City-University Connection," sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Rappaport Institute, and the City of Boston, seeks to promote a new kind of partnership by stimulating mutually beneficial research and policy relationships involving Harvard and other universities with Boston and other cities and towns in greater Boston. Scholars and practitioners from a variety of fields and communities will explore accomplishments of%mdashand lessons from%mdashseveral notable university/city initiatives. Panels of leading academics and senior practitioners will focus on four areas: preventing and responding to violence; governance and new technologies; improving urban education; and the lessons and challenges of city-university collaborations. The symposium will create novel opportunities to strengthen existing collaborations and to begin to develop new ones%mdashparticularly those that cross academic disciplines and bureaucratic boundaries. October 21, 2011 From: Harvard Views: 140 0 ratings Time: 01:43:50 More in Education
2 Views
23:00:00 10/30/11
The Challenge of Change
[LESS INFO] 2 VIEWS | ADDED 23:00:00 10/30/11
TEDxWaterloo - Roberta Bondar - The Challenge of Change As the world's first neurologist in space, Dr. Roberta Bondar is globally recognized for her pioneering contribution to space medicine research. For more than a decade at NASA Dr. Bondar headed an international research team, continuing to find new connections between astronauts recovering from the microgravity of space and neurological illnesses here on Earth such as stroke and Parkinson's disease. As an author, environmental educator and celebrated landscape photographer, Dr. Bondar has also earned a reputation as a leading speaker and consultant within the medical and scientific communities, and in the field of corporate social responsibility and care for the Earth's environment. Through 2010 Roberta Bondar was the Honorary Patron for Canada of UNESCO's International Year of Planet Earth. Recently created, The Roberta Bondar Foundation has been formed to improve knowledge of the environment in a way that stimulates interest, excitement, creativity, responsibility, and for some, the desire for focused study in this area of science. It aims to help people to see their environment in a positive light, to become more attuned to its characteristics and factors that influence change. A true renaissance woman, Dr. Bondar is an acclaimed photographer of the natural wonders of our planet. She is the author of four best-selling photo essay books featuring her stunning photography of the Earth. Her photographic works may be found in private, corporate and institutional
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23:00:00 10/30/11
The Challenge of Change
[LESS INFO] 0 VIEWS | ADDED 23:00:00 10/30/11
TEDxWaterloo - Roberta Bondar - The Challenge of Change As the world's first neurologist in space, Dr. Roberta Bondar is globally recognized for her pioneering contribution to space medicine research. For more than a decade at NASA Dr. Bondar headed an international research team, continuing to find new connections between astronauts recovering from the microgravity of space and neurological illnesses here on Earth such as stroke and Parkinson's disease. As an author, environmental educator and celebrated landscape photographer, Dr. Bondar has also earned a reputation as a leading speaker and consultant within the medical and scientific communities, and in the field of corporate social responsibility and care for the Earth's environment. Through 2010 Roberta Bondar was the Honorary Patron for Canada of UNESCO's International Year of Planet Earth. Recently created, The Roberta Bondar Foundation has been formed to improve knowledge of the environment in a way that stimulates interest, excitement, creativity, responsibility, and for some, the desire for focused study in this area of science. It aims to help people to see their environment in a positive light, to become more attuned to its characteristics and factors that influence change. A true renaissance woman, Dr. Bondar is an acclaimed photographer of the natural wonders of our planet. She is the author of four best-selling photo essay books featuring her stunning photography of the Earth. Her photographic works may be found in private, corporate and institutional
4 Views
21:18:07 09/29/11
ISTC: Pervasive Computing
[LESS INFO] 4 VIEWS | ADDED 21:18:07 09/29/11
ISTC: Pervasive Computing
The Intel Science and Technology Center for Pervasive Computing, located at the University of Washington, will focus on developing applications that are organized into the following themes: low-power sensing and communication; understanding human state and activities; and personalization and adaptation. To ensure the trustworthiness and security of the systems involved and to safeguard privacy, researchers who focus on these challenges will be involved in all of the center's projects. The center will explore task spaces that interact seamlessly with users by combining multiple cues such as a person's context, gestures and voice, and that provide assistance through multiple output modes such as audio and projected imagery. Ultimately, future systems will support applications that have much deeper awareness of users and their activities, context and goals. They will be able to learn and adapt continuously to consumer habits, routines and preferences. From: channelintel Views: 480 12 ratings Time: 02:05 More in Science & Technology
4 Views
00:30:00 09/22/11
Joe Leonard, " Methods and Techniques for Protecting Data in Real Time on the Wire"
[LESS INFO] 4 VIEWS | ADDED 00:30:00 09/22/11
The ongoing explosion of data and information throughout the enterprise is undeniable. Sensitive data, whether structured or unstructured, finds itself replicated and dispersed. This creates a challenge for information security professionals to prevent the flow of this information to unauthorized or inappropriate destinations. The security community has made great progress in protecting this data and information while it is at rest or in use. But ... is there more that can be done? Companies are now asking, "Who moved my data and where did it go? Was it an appropriate flow from one internal department to another? Was the flow intended for a trusted business partner? Or ... was my data heading for an unknown destination, a competitor or a pool of cybercriminals?" End point controls, access controls, database monitoring and encryption are all important components of a solid layered security approach. However tools that provide visibility and control over "data in motion" deliver critical capabilities that none of these other components can adequately address. When prioritizing various components or layers of an information security implementation, it has been argued that a solid "data in motion" component can provide 80% of the bang for 20% of the buck (and effort!) This presentation focuses on methods and techniques in wire speed detection and control of data in motion. The presentation will include: approaches to detecting simple patterns emphasizing low false positives advances in wire speed pattern matching enabling protection of specific fields or combination of fields in a database policy designs that combine network application controls with content identification and control wire speed blocking that does not require a proxy









