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April 12, 2011 / philominaiyasele

COMPARE AND CONTRAST LINKEDIN, DELICIOUS AND STUMBLEUPON

 COMPARE AND CONTRAST LINKEDIN,   DELICIOUS AND STUMBLEUPON

 DIFFERENCES BETWEEN LINKEDIN , DELICIOUS  AND STUMBLEUPON

 

    

  •          It is a redirecting site that directs you to face, that you must be a face booker to operate stumbleupon.

  •        It heips helps you search for related subject through stream lining it for you

  •      It is a good websurfer thats give you direct  information on the subject you want

  •      It is an effective discovery search engine 

  • it is a very complex and you need to take your time to operate it. 

 http://www.stumbleupon.com/home/

 having had my experience with both social network, this are my findings diferences:

  • It is journalistic social network that helps follow stories.

  • share your information or thought with fellow users that are your friends, just like in face book.

  •  Also helps proffesionals in their various field.

  • LinkedIn is designed for business conections and looking for jobs

  • Looking for an old school friend.

  • LinkedIn has the option for paid membership.

  •     It is a social network and a bookmarking site, that helps you bookmark.

  • users can share and manage web from a source.

  • Delicious is  a redirecting site which redirect you to your yahoomail. you need to have a yahoo mail to operate Delicious.

  • It is complex to operate

 

                                                                                                SIMILARITIES BETWEEN LINKEDIN, DELICIOUS AND STUMBLEUPON

  1. They are both social networks

  2. They are journalistic tools 

  3. Delicious and Stumbleupon are redirecting social network (delicious direct you to yahoomail while stumbleupon direct you to face book)

 

 

April 12, 2011 / philominaiyasele

COMPARE AND CONTRAST LINKEDIN AND DELICIOUS

                                                              COMPARE AND CONTRAST LINKEDIN AND DELICIOU

 DIFFERENCES BETWEEN LINKEDIN AND DELICIOUS 

 having had my experience with both social network, this are my findings diferences:

  • It is journalistic social network that helps follow stories.

  • share your information or thought with fellow users that are your friends, just like in face book.

  •  Also helps proffesionals in their various field.

  • LinkedIn is designed for business conections and looking for jobs

  • Looking for an old school friend.
  • LinkedIn has the option for paid membership.

  •     It is a social network and a bookmarking site, that helps you bookmark.

  • users can share and manage web from a source.

    Delicious is  a redirecting site which redirect you to your yahoomail. you need to have a yahoo mail to operate Delicious.

 

                                                                                                SIMILARITIES BETWEEN LINKEDIN AND DELICIOUS

  1. They are both social networks

  2. They are journalistic tools 

 

 

April 11, 2011 / philominaiyasele

MY EXPERIENCE WITH DELICIOUS AND LINKEDIN

                                                             MY EXPERIENCE WITH DELICIOUS AND LINKEDIN

  my experience is when joining the social network, it takes you to yahoo mail because that is the way it has been design, from your yahoo mail, you automatically enter the network. this means that you canot join the network without having a yahoo mail. It is also complex to operate, you have to take your time and operate the social network in order to function very well with it. 

http://www.linkedin.com/profile/edit?trk=hb_tab_pro_top

 

Delicious is easy to access and operate but it more or less a social network that connects you to family, friends, thats is, it is a people aggregator, helps you record a site or user by bookmarking, for quick and easy access. though i try openning it (signing in after poening it for the first time, it is proving difficult.

http://www.delicious.com/philominaiyasele

https://edit.yahoo.com/config/eval_profile?_done=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.delicious.com%2Fphilominaiyasele&.scrumb=WKDNQWj/dSq

 

 

March 1, 2011 / philominaiyasele

FRAME SIZES AND VIDEO RESOLUTION

    https://philominaiyasele.wordpress.com/2011/03/01/frame-sizes-an…deo-resolution/

    Small

  1. For smaller pictures, several options are available. Specific frames sizes in this range include 3-by-3 inches, 3-by-5 inches and 3.5-by-5 inches.
  2. Medium

  3. Medium sized frames fit most standard sized photographs. These frame sizes include 4-by-6 inches, 5-by-7 inches and 6-by-8 inches.
  4. Large

  5. Large frames are usually used for things like portraits. These frames come in 8-by-10 inches, 8-by-12 inches, 8.5-by-11 inches and 9-by-12 inches.
  6. Extra Large

  7. Extra large frames can be used to frame things like diplomas or specially printed pictures. These frames can be 10-by-13 inches, 11-by-14 inches, 11-by-17 inches, 12-by-16 inches and 12-by-18 inches.
  8. Poster

  9. Poster sized frames are available to frame posters and paintings. These frames can be 16-by-20 inches, 22-by-28 inches, or can be custom made to fit the poster or painting.

VIDEO RESOLUTION:

This is a list of traditional, analog horizontal resolutions for various media. The list only includes popular formats, not rare formats, and all values are approximate (rounded to the nearest 10), since the actual quality can vary machine-to-machine or tape-to-tape. For ease-of-comparison, all values are for the NTSC system. (For PAL systems, replace 480 with 576.)

  • Analog and early digital
    • 350×240 : Video CD
    • 300×480 : Umatic, Betamax, VHS, Video8
    • 350×480 : Super Betamax, Betacam (pro)
    • 420×480 : LaserDisc, Super VHS, Hi8
    • 500×480 : Analog broadcast
    • 670×480 : Enhanced Definition Betamax
  • Digital
    • 720×480  : D-VHS, DVD, miniDV, Digital8, Digital Betacam (pro)
    • 720×480  : Widescreen DVD (anamorphic)
    • 1280×720  : D-VHS, HD DVD, Blu-ray, HDV (miniDV)
    • 1440×1080 : HDV (miniDV)
    • 1920×1080 : HDV (miniDV), AVCHD, HD DVD, Blu-ray, HDCAM SR (pro)
    • 2048×1080 : 2K Digital Cinema
    • 4096×2160 : 4K Digital Cinema
    • 7680×4320 : UHDTV
    • Sequences from newer films are scanned at 2,000, 4,000, or even 8,000 columns, called 2K, 4K, and 8K, for quality visual-effects editing on computers.
  • Film
    • 35 mm film is scanned for release on DVD at 1080 or 2000 lines as of 2005.
    • 35 mm original camera negative motion picture film can resolve up to 6,000 lines.
    • 35 mm projection positive motion picture film has about 2,000 lines which results from the analog printing from the camera negative of an interpositive, and possibly an internegative, then a projection positive.
    • IMAX, including IMAX HD and OMNIMAX: approximately 10,000×7000 (7000 lines) resolution.
February 21, 2011 / philominaiyasele

MOTION SLIDE ON MR STEVEN ANU ADESEMOYE OF LASPOTECT

SOUND SLIDE ON MR STEVEN ANU ADESEMOYE OF LASPOTECH

This sound is on a lecturer on hw he carries out a daily activities as well as student, in their leisure time what they do. Went further to talk on HND 2 Mass communication department and thier activies.

 

 http://dl.dropbox.com/u/20912507/phill%20work/index.html

 

February 16, 2011 / philominaiyasele

TOPIC ON FAMILY PLANNING

                            TOPIC ON FAMILY PLANNING

This topic is done by Iyasele Philomina obehi, a student of mass communication department HND 2, this topic tend to elaborate on the issue affecting the nation which is child bearing and how couples can endurge in family planning in order for the betterment of the nation. It expanciate on family planning, the types, function and the one that best fit an individual. Stating the effect of over population and the neglegence of parent to give birth to children they can convinently cater for.

my interview with Akpan Joy Johnson

 

 

 

 

February 3, 2011 / philominaiyasele

A DAY IN LASPOTECT

  

      A DAY IN LASPOTECH

My unforgettable day in Laspotech, was during my National Diploma when I came in contact with the then HOD of Mass Communication Department Mr Ifeadayo Daramola in 2004 in an account of cultist harassment at the Isolo Campus. He wanted to know me telling me that his boss want to meet me, in an attempt to ignore him; my friend was rude to him. He went, in coming back, came with three more guys, somebody told us to run, we ran to Mr Daramola’s office, and he save the day.

January 27, 2011 / philominaiyasele

Hello world!

Lagos (Nigeria)
I   INTRODUCTION

Lagos (Nigeria), city in southwestern Nigeria, in Lagos State, located on the Bight of Benin (an arm of the Atlantic Ocean). Lagos is Nigeria’s largest city, chief port, and principal economic and cultural center. It served as Nigeria’s capital until 1991, when the seat of federal government was moved to Abuja, in central Nigeria.

II   DESCRIPTION

The Lagos metropolitan area spreads over much of Lagos State (3345 sq km/1292 sq mi), which is located on four principal islands and adjacent parts of the Nigerian mainland. The islands are connected to each other and to the mainland by bridges and landfills. Major sections of the city include the old city, which now serves as the commercial district, on western Lagos Island; Ikoyi Island, situated just east of Lagos Island and joined to it by a landfill; Apapa, the chief port district, located on the mainland; residential Victoria Island; and industrialized Iddo Island. Important mainland suburbs, incorporated as part of the city in 1967, include Ebute-Metta, Yaba, Suru Lere, Ajegunle, Shomolu, Agege, Mushin, and Ikeja.

III   POPULATION AND CULTURE

Lagos has a very diverse and fast-growing population, resulting from heavy and ongoing migration to the city from all parts of Nigeria as well as neighboring countries. In 1992 Lagos had an estimated population of about 1,347,000. The population of its metropolitan area was about 10.1 million in 2003. The United Nations predicts that the city’s metropolitan area, which had only about 290,000 inhabitants in 1950, will exceed 20 million by 2010, making Lagos one of the world’s five largest cities.

The Yoruba, an African people inhabiting southwest Nigeria, constitute the city’s principal ethnic group. English is the most commonly used language, but Yoruba and other Nigerian languages are also spoken.

Lagos is an important center of Nigerian intellectual and cultural life. The University of Lagos (1962), Yaba College of Technology (1948), Lagos State University (1983), and Lagos State Polytechnic (1977) are located in the city, as are several major research institutes. Lagos is also the site of the National Library of Nigeria (1964) and the National Museum (1957), which has collections in archaeology, ethnography, and traditional art. The National Theater (1976) stages plays, dance performances, and music concerts, and also houses collections of contemporary Nigerian art.

IV   ECONOMY

Lagos is Nigeria’s leading port, particularly for imports of consumer goods, foodstuffs, motor vehicles, machinery, and industrial raw materials. Its export trade in timber and agricultural products such as cacao and groundnuts has declined since the early 1970s. More than half of Nigeria’s industrial capacity is located in Lagos’s mainland suburbs, particularly in the Ikeja industrial estate. A wide range of manufactures are produced in the city, including machinery, motor vehicles, electronic equipment, chemicals, beer, processed food, and textiles.

Lagos is the western terminus for the Nigerian railway system and is linked by rail and road to Ibadan, Kano, and other major Nigerian cities. Murtala Muhammad International Airport is located in the suburbs northwest of the city center. Lagos’s rapid, mostly unregulated growth, coupled with the challenges of its fragmented geography, have resulted in chronically congested traffic conditions on the city’s roads. Despite this, there is relatively little transportation by water between the islands and mainland sections of Lagos.

V   HISTORY

The site of an old Yoruba settlement named Eko, Lagos was visited by Portuguese traders in 1472 and named for a port in Portugal. The Portuguese developed Lagos as a major center for the trade of goods and slaves. The city served in this capacity until 1861, when it was annexed by the British, who by this time opposed slavery. The British governed Lagos as a crown colony. British rule was opposed by several local Yoruba states, and a series of conflicts in the 1870s and 1880s hampered British trade with the interior. The British conquered these states in the late 1880s and early 1890s, expanding the territory of the colony. In 1914 Lagos became the capital of the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria. In 1960 the city became the capital of independent Nigeria. As Nigeria’s oil industry boomed in the early 1970s, Lagos began developing rapidly. The population of Lagos ballooned as migrants from all over Nigeria and from neighboring countries flocked to the city. In accordance with a plan first announced in 1976 to combat Lagos’s explosive growth, the seat of the Nigerian federal government was moved from Lagos to Abuja in December 1991. However, much of the federal bureaucracy continued to operate out of Lagos.