This portfolio project document contains links to various images assessing design principles for posters and advertisements. The images are grouped under headings evaluating elements such as effort/reward, effectiveness for audience, use of proximity, contrast, color, style and type. Some examples show poor implementation of principles while others demonstrate good use of emphasis, alignment and repetition. The document appears to be analyzing design techniques for informational graphics.
The document discusses the skills and experience of a graphic designer. It outlines their abilities such as creativity, organization, project management skills and education. The graphic designer values clients' opinions and creating simple yet creative designs. Their goal is to become a successful freelance entrepreneur by solving clients' problems, striving for quality work and building a large client base through professionalism, communication and reliability.
Enhancing Social Media Profiles – Here are some promotion tips and strategies for your business profiles on social media channels.
This document contains links to various images without any connecting text or context. The links appear to reference images related to music, file sharing, online shopping, financial trading floors, question marks, audio editing, music industry organizations, Bluetooth, and generic images of people thinking or with question marks. There is no other information provided.
This document provides a list of over 100 online tools and resources for real estate professionals. It includes categories for marketing tools, client management, photos and graphics, research, video tools, communication tools, and tools from organizations like NAR and REALTOR.org. Many of the tools listed are free or low-cost options.
This document provides an overview of adaptive enterprise practices and examples of companies that exemplify these practices. It lists examples like Apple's product development process, Xiaomi's speed of iteration, and Vizio's supply chain management. It also outlines tools and techniques for adapting best practices across different industry verticals, including business model canvases, lean startup methodologies, and innovation processes. Blockchain technology is highlighted as potentially transformative. The document advocates applying principles of agility, customer focus, and virtual collaboration across organizations.
Presentation for a professional development workshop for teachers. The goal is to get the teachers excited about integrating technology into their curriculum and classroom operations.
This document discusses how corporations can leverage digital technologies to enhance their intelligence. It suggests that a corporation's intelligence (IQcorp) depends on factors like fluid intelligence (Gf), crystallized intelligence (Gc), quantitative reasoning (Gq), memory (Gsm/Glr), processing speed (Gs), and decision speed (Gt). While humans currently excel in areas like fluid intelligence, digital technologies can augment corporations in other factors like crystallized intelligence, memory, and processing speed through techniques such as analytics, machine learning, and collaborative workflows. The document argues that through a symbiotic human-machine relationship, corporations can develop super-human levels of intelligence.
Presentation by Clarissa Peterson for LVL Studio's UX Soiree, November 21, 2012, in Montreal, Quebec. Overview of responsive design with focus on user experience.
The document provides examples of logos for various energy companies and organizations. Logos help identify the company or organization and can convey aspects of their brand. The document shares 12 different logos from green energy, renewable energy, and utility companies through embedded links to the logo images on the web.
Tim Hartung gives a presentation on common mistakes in SEO and how to avoid them. Some of the key points he discusses are: - Using Google Webmaster Tools to find 404 errors on your site and submit your XML sitemap. - Ensuring your XML sitemap is up-to-date and checking it for broken links to improve your crawl rate. - Being careful with your robots.txt file as incorrectly blocking bots can prevent them from crawling your site. - Optimizing for site speed as it is one of Google's ranking factors and users prefer faster sites. - Implementing Schema.org structured data and Rel=Author to increase click through rates on search results.
I wanted to shed some light on SEO so Jamstackers can understand the often-overlooked importance of it and the best practices they can utilize for them and their clients. You can check the recorded video of the talk here: https://youtu.be/EgxWItfMqsc?t=1970
This document provides an introduction to infographics. It defines infographics as visual representations of information, data, or knowledge that integrate words and graphics. Infographics make complex data easier to understand than text alone. The document discusses the history of infographics and their increasing popularity. It outlines best practices for creating infographics, such as being concise, visual, transparent, and accurate. The document also provides tips on the infographic creation process and lists tools and data sources that can be used. Finally, it discusses how infographics can be used in an educational setting.
Slides 18-66 used in prior presentations, slides 77-160 largely from other presentations, but a few new examples.
These are the slides for my User stories presentation. This particular version was given as part of my "I'm telling you for the last time"-series (see http://www.marcusoft.net/2013/11/ImTellingYou.html). The presentation was recorded and can be found here: http://www.youtube.com/aptitudsthlm
Growth hacking - how to start in e-Commerce. Engine of growth. The Lean Startup method and A/B testing. Case studies and practical guide.
This document is a resume for Mehar Nazeer, seeking a position in creative design where her skills in web design, development, and graphics can be utilized. She has over 10 years of experience in web design, HTML, CSS, graphics and animation tools. Her expertise includes web design, front-end development, Flash animation, Photoshop, and Illustrator. She has experience working as a web designer for two companies and has completed many projects including responsive websites and custom software products. She is proficient in various web technologies, design tools, and animation software.
Human factors, also known as ergonomics, is the study of designing equipment and devices that fit the human body and its cognitive abilities. The field considers human limitations and preferences in order to improve safety and performance. It involves measuring human characteristics, understanding how products are used, and designing systems with enhanced usability.
Fingerprints are formed between the third and fourth month of fetal development when sweat glands in the skin link together to form unique ridge patterns. The basal layer of skin grows at a different rate than the layers above and below it, causing it to fold into intricate ridge shapes. Materials secreted from sweat pores, like oils and water, are left behind on surfaces when fingerprints are transferred. There are three types of fingerprints found at crime scenes: latent prints that require processing to see, patent prints that are visible, and plastic prints that make three-dimensional impressions. Fingerprints are analyzed by their ridge characteristics like endings, forks, islands, dots and used by AFIS to identify matches on file.
DNA contains genetic information that can be used to identify individuals. DNA profiling isolates variable regions of DNA to create unique fingerprints. Samples are collected, amplified through PCR, separated via electrophoresis, and compared to reference profiles to identify matches or eliminate suspects. DNA analysis is a highly accurate forensic technique used to solve crimes and identify remains.
This document discusses the scientific method as applied to forensics. It notes that forensics involves both crime scene investigators who collect evidence and laboratory technicians who analyze it. The scientific method involves making observations, forming a hypothesis, performing experiments, developing a theory or law, and presenting conclusions. In forensics, this process includes collecting evidence at a crime scene, forming a hypothesis about what occurred, conducting analyses in the lab, revising the hypothesis based on results, and presenting the case in court. Eyewitness accounts are often unreliable due to human perception and biases. Lab write-ups for this class should include title, background, purpose, hypothesis, procedure, data collection, data presentation, and conclusion.
This document outlines the steps of the scientific method, including developing a hypothesis, identifying variables, designing a controlled experiment with procedures, collecting and analyzing quantitative data, and drawing conclusions. It provides examples of key components like the background, variables, experimental design, data collection, and conclusion. The scientific method guides experiments to test hypotheses and further scientific understanding.
There are three main fingerprint patterns: loops, whorls, and arches. Loops make up 60-65% of patterns and contain one delta. Whorls consist of 30-35% of patterns and contain two or more deltas. Arches are the rarest at up to 5% and contain no deltas. Within these categories there are also sub-patterns like double loops, central loops, tented arches, and accidental patterns. The document instructs to label fingerprints from hands based on their pattern type and identify three points within right hand prints.
Organisms in an ecosystem are interconnected through feeding relationships. Producers, such as plants and algae, can create their own food through photosynthesis, obtaining energy from the sun and nutrients from their environment. Consumers, or heterotrophs, obtain food by eating other organisms and pass sunlight energy through the food chain. There are different levels of consumers, including primary, secondary, and tertiary. Decomposers help release nutrients by breaking down waste and dead organisms, recycling carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus back into the ecosystem.
1. Homeostasis is the maintenance and regulation of the internal environment within the body through feedback mechanisms that keep conditions within a narrow range. 2. Feedback mechanisms can be negative, which counteracts changes away from normal conditions, or positive, which increases the rate of change away from normal. Negative feedback is more common in the body. 3. When homeostasis is disrupted in the short term by things like exercise or illness, the body uses feedback mechanisms to return conditions to normal; however, long term disruptions like diabetes can cause lasting damage throughout the body if not regulated.
This document discusses blood typing and composition. It explains that blood is made up of plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. The two major blood type systems are A, B, AB, and O, and Rh+ and Rh-. Blood types vary in distribution between populations, with O+ being the most common in the USA at 36.55% of the population. Blood typing is determined by antigens on red blood cells and the presence or absence of agglutination reactions between blood cells and specific anti-A and anti-B antibodies.
The document discusses several types of speciation including genetic isolation, reproductive isolation, behavioral isolation, geographic isolation, temporal isolation, convergent evolution, divergent evolution, and coevolution. Genetic isolation occurs when genetic transfer ceases between populations. Reproductive isolation is caused when members of different populations can no longer produce offspring. Behavioral isolation is caused by differences in courtship behaviors preventing reproduction. Geographic isolation is due to physical barriers separating populations. Temporal isolation is due to differences in reproductive/courtship timing between populations. Convergent and divergent evolution describe how closely and distantly related species respectively evolve over time in response to their environments. Coevolution describes how two species evolve in response to each other.
This document discusses microevolution and the processes that cause evolution at the population level, including mutation, gene flow, genetic drift, non-random mating, and natural selection. It provides examples of each, such as Darwin's finches to illustrate natural selection and cheetahs to demonstrate the bottleneck effect of genetic drift. The document seeks to explain how populations evolve over time through changes in allele frequencies from these various evolutionary forces.
Impression evidence refers to objects or materials that retain characteristics of other objects through direct contact. Examples include shoeprints, tire tracks, tool marks, and bite marks. Investigators analyze unique characteristics in impressions to link evidence found at crime scenes to objects associated with suspects. Impression evidence can be collected using various methods like photography, casting, electrostatic dusting, and gel lifting to preserve dimensional characteristics for analysis.
Crime scene processing involves three key steps: (1) collecting physical evidence by experts to aid the investigation, (2) securing the crime scene by the first responding officer who isolates the area and excludes unauthorized access, (3) evaluating the crime scene by the lead investigator who develops an examination strategy.
Fingerprint patterns can be categorized into three main types: loops, whorls, and arches. Loops comprise 60-65% of patterns and contain a single delta, whorls make up 30-35% and contain two or more deltas, and arches are the rarest at 5% as they contain no deltas. Within each category are subtypes determined by specific characteristics like direction of the loop, number and placement of deltas, or a mix of pattern features. The number and location of deltas is key to determining which main category a given fingerprint pattern falls under.