electronic revolution
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

64
(FIVE YEARS 6)

H-INDEX

7
(FIVE YEARS 0)

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (23) ◽  
pp. 187-201
Author(s):  
Umut Yıldız

The new media, which is under the traditional media, is rapidly becoming an extremely important channel for political communication. In our digital age, which refers to the electronic revolution shaped by means of communication, before the electronic revolution, which is accepted as a leap in the developmental line of the history of civilization as synonymous with the information and knowledge community, political communication also changes like every other issue. Radio and television have risen to a central position in the political relations of people in the electronic world; In this process, channels, radio and television, which are among the 3 issues in the classification between receivers, transmitters and channels, have made the way of using and benefiting from both transmitters and receivers into a habit, in accordance with their own characteristics. In this process, which took place within the boundaries drawn by television-mediated political communication, each of the parties had to construct roles, wishes, expectations, identity, constitutionalism, reconciliation, activities according to the instrumentality of television. By internalizing the drawn framework and borders more and more every day, it has indexed all kinds of political activities that can be realized through the media in daily life to radio and television, and then to new media tools. Key Words: Technology, Political Communication, New Media.


Author(s):  
Volodymyr Varenko

The goal of the work. The scientific problem is covered in order to systematize, generalize new knowledge about modern analytical technologies in terms of the present and prospects for their development. The research scientific novelty of the work lies in the generalization and systematization of new knowledge about operational analytics in terms of the present and prospects for its development within one study. Conclusions. The article highlights the current views of researchers on operational analytics and its information technology - Big Data technology. The works of famous experts - Bill Franks, Tom Davenport and Joanna Harris, Victor Mayer-Schoenberger and Kenneth Cookier, Karl Anderson, Brian Clifton, Sergei Kovalev, Oleg Veres - are analyzed.Their modern views on operational analytics formed the basis of the presentation of the main material. It is emphasized that we have an objective process of society development. And it depends on our choice whether we will have a competitive advantage at the start. The essence of operational analytics, its advantages and possibilities of application in the Ukrainian realities are described. In addition, the American electronic corporation IBM («Blue Giant»), which in the «Analytics» section offers seven categories of analytical products that will satisfy the most demanding consumers because they meet the world’s standards. The paper focuses on the fact that in modern management, operational analytics is carrying out an «electronic revolution». Ittakes analytics beyond the traditional limits of application. It takes analytics beyond the traditional limits of application. It turned out that we have a qualitatively new tool, a new level of evolution of analytical technologies. At the same time, it is emphasized that traditional analytical methods and technologies should not be thoughtlessly rejected, as they are basic, ie the foundation on which operational analytics is built and maintained. Emphasis is placed on the fact that operational analytics opens wide possibilities for integration with various sources of information (for example, the Internet of Things) through appropriate applications, communications and electronics, while providing a single, joint provision and presentation of informationbased on Big Data.Keywords: operational analytics, technology, management decision.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 1609-1625
Author(s):  
Alladein Mohammad Ahamad Adawi ◽  

This research deals with the most important values ​​mentioned in the Prophet’s Sunnah. The values in question are presented and linked to the virtual communities; such values should be applied in the era of the electronic revolution, and the era after the information openness that the world is witnessing. This is done with a focus on stating their role in the development of the individual and society. This research comes to study the system of Islamic values ​​that should govern what is called cyberspace, and electronic societies that are called virtual, fictitious or digital societies as opposed to real societies. The study is divided into an introduction, and three sections. The first section: Cyberspace and virtual societies, definition, reality. The second section: Hadith values ​​that govern cyberspace and virtual societies. The third section: the means of making use of cyberspace and virtual societies in promoting values, and finally come the conclusion and results.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 1247
Author(s):  
Marko Ranković ◽  
Velimir Dedić ◽  
Mateja Jovanović ◽  
Dragana Petrović ◽  
Milena P. Ilić

The world has changed with the help of the Internet; simultaneously, the manner of our business doing has also changed. It has opened a door to new possibilities, business models, and innovative ideas. This electronic revolution has really facilitated communication and trade. The duty on the part of users and followers of technology is to keep advancing and use these means to their own benefit. This paper is aimed at presenting the advantages of using modern technologies, such as virtual reality, in the very business doing of traditional escape rooms.


Author(s):  
Mykhailo Zubar

The article considers the role, the function and the place of museums in the modern world in the conditions of the electronic revolution, change of generations, the beginning of the postmodernism era. Accordingly, to these statements, there are questions related to the revision of the museum communication system relatively modern forms, understandable to the new generation. Speaking of museum communication, first of all, we mean a change in approaches to the formation and creation of a museum exhibition, which is the main platform for interaction with the public, and therefore communication with the visitor. The author pays attention to the issue of separating the second main function of the museum, along with storage. In today's digital and post-industrial society, the availability of collections for visitors comes to the fore in museums, as well as the form of exhibitions and the way it constructed. The article analyzes the reasons for the change of museums forms and their activities, following the functioning of various models in society and their conflict. It argued that the situation in museums reflects a broader conflict between two models of democracy, which, although unevenly, but coexist today: pedagogical and performative model. The first, among other things, provides that a person, to be a citizen, must be prepared through education, to participate in high culture. The second considers each person as a consumer/customer who consciously has the right to accept or reject a product. Therefore, the author paid special attention to the narrative museum as one of the forms of the postmodern museum, which functionates within the framework of the performative model, the construction of its exposition and the perception of its visitors. Also, considers the range of ways of displaying objects as well as its expansion in comparison with the classical modernism museum. Additional modern presentation methods provided, including story virtualization and related educational activities that added to the classical exposition base. The author present signs characterize the narrative of the museum.


Author(s):  
Leslie Sklair

Never before in the history of human society has the capacity to produce and deliver goods and services been so efficient and so enormous, thanks to the electronic revolution that started in the 1960s and the global logistics revolution made possible by the advent of the shipping container. And, paradoxically, never before in the history of human society have so many people wanted goods and services that they cannot afford to buy, largely due to the absolute increases in human populations and the relative ease of communications brought about, again, by the electronic revolution. The results are class polarization and ecological unsustainability, fatal contradictions to the promises of the capitalist system. These contradictions play out in all spheres of economic, social, and cultural life and those who have a vested interest in maintaining the ruling system are constantly attempting to distract attention from its failings. These failings are disguised by the spectacular architecture that now spans most regions of the world, from the great cities of the Global North, to the expanding megacities of the Global South, and the artificial urbanism of the oil states of the Arabian Gulf. Shopping malls, modern art museums, ever-higher skyscrapers, and urban megaprojects constitute the triumphal ‘Icon Project’ of global capitalism. On a hot, sunny day in January 2014, I was standing in a long, bustling queue for the Peak tram in Hong Kong. I started chatting with two bright young women, sisters from Guangzhou—formerly Canton, now the third-largest city in China with a population approaching 15 million. It is a short train ride from Hong Kong and sends many tourists there. My new acquaintances told me that their father was an architect, and that this was their first visit to Hong Kong, they wanted to see what the rest of the world was really like. Clearly they were excited by the prospect of visiting the famous Peak—I am not sure they were entirely prepared for the ‘Peak experience’ that starts with a dramatic entrance and culminates when you get to the top of a spectacular building.


Author(s):  
Daniel Sander

This paper considers William S. Burroughs’s nonfictional long-form essay The Electronic Revolution (1970) and contemporaneous fictional novel The Wild Boys: A Book of the Dead (1971) alongside some moments from the early work of Patti Smith, including her time with the Patti Smith Group and their four albums together between 1975 and 1979. I align Burroughs’s concepts of the word virus and wild boy – concepts subsequently taken up by Smith – with the three luxuries of nature identified by intellectual Georges Bataille in his theorization of general, or solar, economy. The parasitic and proliferative appearance of Burroughs’s writing and Smith’s performances – artworks that resemble electronic spam and speaking in tongues – bear some resemblance to the alien duplicates in Invasion of the Body Snatchers insofar as these artists waste their textual and physical bodies from within, thereby working against the sociolinguistic logic of identity.


2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonal Gupta

Every year thousands of trees are ruthlessly felled all over the world just to satisfy man's never ending greed! In the present time environmental degradation has emerged as a major global concern for human survival. The situation is getting alarming day-by-day. Pulp and paper production, consumption and disposal have many negative environmental and social effects. Therefore, Going for Paperless Society is the need of today for conservation of natural environment. 21<sup>st</sup> Century is the Digital Age. The revolutionary potential of electronic revolution promises to transform economic and environmental gains. The present paper is an attempt to draw kind attention towards relevance of Paperless Society and highlights the potential of Computers, Information Technology&amp;Networking for resolving natural environment issues to some extent. Apart from various initiatives taken up at all levels, "The Green Movement" is still in its infant stage. By making responsible choices and by joining hands together we would certainly be able to fulfill our vision of "Paper less Society".


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document