3:55
Pranks - The Synonyms
SAT words presented in an entertaining comedy way!!!:D...
published: 21 Dec 2011
author: Tubybook
Pranks - The Synonyms
SAT words presented in an entertaining comedy way!!!:D
published: 21 Dec 2011
views: 408
9:59
Create A Drupal Page View From Taxonomy
This video screencast shows the user how to use the views module in Drupal to create a pag...
published: 29 Nov 2008
author: learnbythedrop
Create A Drupal Page View From Taxonomy
This video screencast shows the user how to use the views module in Drupal to create a page that lists nodes with a certain taxonomy term.
published: 29 Nov 2008
author: learnbythedrop
views: 64940
6:47
Drupal Taxonomy
In this video you will see learn how to enable vocabulary and tag an image content to be r...
published: 07 Sep 2007
author: seoecom
Drupal Taxonomy
In this video you will see learn how to enable vocabulary and tag an image content to be retrieved in different ways.
published: 07 Sep 2007
author: seoecom
views: 59112
14:45
Creating a taxonomy
Taxonomies are not fun, unless you have OCD. But they are far better than folders, and an ...
published: 28 Jun 2011
author: RileyCR
Creating a taxonomy
Taxonomies are not fun, unless you have OCD. But they are far better than folders, and an opportunity for organizations to unify the categorization of their content. In my last blog post "Folders are the new F word", I talked briefly about taxonomy and its value. I received several comments stating that Taxonomy is too complex for users. It's time consuming, but not complex. This blog post is a starting point for designing taxonomies in any ECM system. I demonstrate specifically using SharePoint, but the concepts are true anywhere. Some key points are: Best Practices: • Avoid transient terms • Avoid plural terms • Repeating child terms is ok • Use synonyms for flexibility • Let the users tell you what the language is • No deeper than 4 terms • Avoid "Other" buckets Common Mistakes • Trying to do a taxonomy retroactively is bad news • Asking IT to build your taxonomy • Trying to build an organization wide taxonomy • Don't like the word "Taxonomy"? Change it. Do you call dogs "Canis lupus familiaris"?
published: 28 Jun 2011
author: RileyCR
views: 277
2:18
Visual Art and Social Structure: The Social Semiotics of Relational Art
This article elaborates the dialectical relationship between art forms and the social stru...
published: 14 Jun 2011
author: CGPublishing
Visual Art and Social Structure: The Social Semiotics of Relational Art
This article elaborates the dialectical relationship between art forms and the social structures in which they are produced, by extending Robert Witkin's taxonomy first presented in his 1995 book Art and Social Structure. Witkin tracked the history of visual art from pre-modern times, for which he invented the label invocational art, to the advent of Modernism, described in terms of evocational and then provocational art. This paper extrapolates Witkin's model to include post-Modernism, for which the author's term revocational art is coined, and it concludes with a discussion of Nicolas Bourriaud's concept of Altermodernism, his term for describing the relationship between contemporary art practices and the social conditions of today, for which the author suggests the term convocational art, a synonym for Bourriaud's term relational art. The paper concludes with a demonstration that social semiotic theory can be a powerful tool for the analysis of relational art. (By: Prof Howard Riley, Head of School of Research, Dynevor Centre for the Arts, Swansea Metropolitan University )
published: 14 Jun 2011
author: CGPublishing
views: 412
11:13
Diorhabda Carinulata - Wiki Article
Northern Tamarisk Beetle Diorhabda koltzei ab. basicornis Laboissière, 1935 Diorhabda elon...
published: 01 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
Diorhabda Carinulata - Wiki Article
Northern Tamarisk Beetle Diorhabda koltzei ab. basicornis Laboissière, 1935 Diorhabda elongata deserticola Chen, 1961 Diorhabda deserticola Chen, 1961 Taxonomy The NTB was first described from southe... Diorhabda Carinulata - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived from Wikipedia using Creative Commons License: en.wikipedia.org Author: JamesLTracy Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:This image is ineligible for copyright and therefore is in the public domain, because it consists entirely of information that is common property and contains no original authorship., This work is in the Public Domain., This work is in the public domain in the United States. Author: JamesLTracy Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:This image is ineligible for copyright and therefore is in the public domain, because it consists entirely of information that is common property and contains no original authorship., This work is in the Public Domain., This work is in the public domain in the United States.
published: 01 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
views: 1
1:12
On Location: The Plateosaurus
Plateosaurus (probably meaning "broad lizard", often mistranslated as "flat lizard") is a ...
published: 07 Oct 2012
author: DeadMonkey8984
On Location: The Plateosaurus
Plateosaurus (probably meaning "broad lizard", often mistranslated as "flat lizard") is a genus of plateosaurid dinosaur that lived during the Late Triassic period, around 214 to 204 million years ago, in what is now Central and Northern Europe. Plateosaurus is a basal (early) sauropodomorph dinosaur, a so-called "prosauropod". As of 2011, two species are recognized: the type species P. engelhardti from the late Norian and Rhaetian, and the slightly earlier P. gracilis from the lower Norian. However, others have been assigned in the past, and there is no broad consensus on the species taxonomy of plateosaurid dinosaurs. Similarly, there are a plethora of synonyms (invalid duplicate names) at the genus level. Discovered in 1834 by Johann Friedrich Engelhardt and described three years later by Hermann von Meyer, Plateosaurus was the fifth named dinosaur genus that is still considered valid. Although it had been described before Richard Owen formally named Dinosauria in 1842, it was not one of the three genera used by Owen to define the group, because at the time, it was poorly known and difficult to identify as a dinosaur. It is now among the dinosaurs best known to science: over 100 skeletons have been found, some of them nearly complete. The abundance of its fossils in Swabia, Germany, has led to the nickname Schwäbischer Lindwurm (Swabian dragon). Plateosaurus was a bipedal herbivore with a small skull on a long, mobile neck, sharp but plump plant-crushing teeth ...
published: 07 Oct 2012
author: DeadMonkey8984
views: 10
1:45
Anthicidae - Wiki Article
The Anthicidae are a family of beetles that resemble ants. They are sometimes called ant-l...
published: 01 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
Anthicidae - Wiki Article
The Anthicidae are a family of beetles that resemble ants. They are sometimes called ant-like flower beetles or ant-like beetles. The family comprises over 3000 species in about 100 genera. Descr... Anthicidae - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived from Wikipedia using Creative Commons License: en.wikipedia.org Author: Unknown Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:This image is ineligible for copyright and therefore is in the public domain, because it consists entirely of information that is common property and contains no original authorship., This work is in the Public Domain., This work is in the public domain in the United States. Author: JonRichfield Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:Creative Commons ASA 3.0, Creative Commons License Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported This work is in the public domain in the United States.
published: 01 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
8:24
Cassia Fistula - Wiki Article
"Canafistula" redirects here. This can also refer to Albizia inundata (Maloxo). Cassia fis...
published: 04 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
Cassia Fistula - Wiki Article
"Canafistula" redirects here. This can also refer to Albizia inundata (Maloxo). Cassia fistula, known as the golden shower tree and other names, is a flowering plant in the family Fabaceae, nativ... Cassia Fistula - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived...
published: 04 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
views: 7
13:12
Quercus Robur - Wiki Article
Quercus robur (synonym Q. pedunculata) is commonly known as the English oak or pedunculate...
published: 05 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
Quercus Robur - Wiki Article
Quercus robur (synonym Q. pedunculata) is commonly known as the English oak or pedunculate oak or French oak. It is native to most of Europe, and to Anatolia to the Caucasus, and also to parts of ... Quercus Robur - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived from...
published: 05 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
views: 5
5:15
Vermetidae - Wiki Article
Vermetidae, common name the worm snails or worm shells, is a taxonomic family of small to ...
published: 06 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
Vermetidae - Wiki Article
Vermetidae, common name the worm snails or worm shells, is a taxonomic family of small to medium-sized sea snails, marine gastropod molluscs in the clade Littorinimorpha. The shells of species in ... Vermetidae - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived from Wikipedia using Creative Commons License: en.wikipedia.org Author: Chad King (SIMoN / MBNMS) Image URL: en.wikipedia.org ( This work is in the Public Domain. )
published: 06 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
37:19
Yeast - Wiki Article
For the use of yeast as a baking ingredient, see baker's yeast. Yeasts are eukaryotic micr...
published: 02 Oct 2012
author: WikiPlays
Yeast - Wiki Article
For the use of yeast as a baking ingredient, see baker's yeast. Yeasts are eukaryotic microorganisms classified in the kingdom Fungi, with 1500 species currently described (estimated to be only 1... Yeast - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived from Wikipedia...
published: 02 Oct 2012
author: WikiPlays
views: 104
5:31
Amanita - Wiki Article
The genus Amanita contains about 600 species of agarics including some of the most toxic k...
published: 05 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
Amanita - Wiki Article
The genus Amanita contains about 600 species of agarics including some of the most toxic known mushrooms found worldwide, as well as some well regarded edible species. This genus is responsible fo... Amanita - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived from Wikipedia using Creative Commons License: en.wikipedia.org Author: Unknown Image URL: en.wikipedia.org ( This work is in the Public Domain. ) Author: Stanisław Skowron Image URL: en.wikipedia.org ( This work is in the Public Domain. ) Author: Tifred25 Image URL: en.wikipedia.org ( Creative Commons ASA 3.0 )
published: 05 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
views: 2
15:14
Lycoperdon Perlatum - Wiki Article
The puffball grows in fields, gardens, and along roadsides, as well as in grassy clearings...
published: 27 Oct 2012
author: WikiPlays
Lycoperdon Perlatum - Wiki Article
The puffball grows in fields, gardens, and along roadsides, as well as in grassy clearings in woods. It is edible when young and the internal flesh is completely white, although care must be taken to... Lycoperdon Perlatum - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived from Wikipedia using Creative Commons License: en.wikipedia.org Author: Threedots Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:Creative Commons ASA 3.0, Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License., GNU Free Documentation License, Creative Commons License Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported This work is in the public domain in the United States. Author: amadej trnkoczy (amadej) Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:Creative Commons ASA 3.0, Creative Commons License Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported This work is in the public domain in the United States. Author: Dan Molter Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:Creative Commons ASA 3.0, Creative Commons License Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported This work is in the public domain in the United States. Author: Handkea_excipuliformis_(Scop.)_Kreisel,_1989_(Pestle_Puffball)_(2).jpg Image URL: en.wikipedia.org
published: 27 Oct 2012
author: WikiPlays
views: 15
Vimeo results:
10:30
Oracle UCM:: Administration:: Taxonomy Synonym Categorise Content Component
Demo Showing ease of administration of taxonomies and synonyms setup within the Oracle UCM...
published: 17 Sep 2010
author: John Sim
Oracle UCM:: Administration:: Taxonomy Synonym Categorise Content Component
Demo Showing ease of administration of taxonomies and synonyms setup within the Oracle UCM.
http://www.bluestudios.co.uk/blog/?p=1222
1:20
Oracle UCM:: Advanced Search:: Taxonomy Synonym Categorise Content Component
Demo showing how filtering of Taxonomies works within the Advanced Search page.
All Taxo...
published: 17 Sep 2010
author: John Sim
Oracle UCM:: Advanced Search:: Taxonomy Synonym Categorise Content Component
Demo showing how filtering of Taxonomies works within the Advanced Search page.
All Taxonomy values are shown until either Region or Functional area are selected.
http://www.bluestudios.co.uk/blog/?p=1222
2:27
Oracle UCM:: Checkin Document:: Taxonomy Synonym Categorise Content Component
Example of adding taxonomies against content via the content checkin page.
Taxonomies are...
published: 17 Sep 2010
author: John Sim
Oracle UCM:: Checkin Document:: Taxonomy Synonym Categorise Content Component
Example of adding taxonomies against content via the content checkin page.
Taxonomies are filtered based on chosen form values.
http://www.bluestudios.co.uk/blog/?p=1222
58:33
Racism A History 1
1. THE COLOUR OF MONEY
An examination of prevailing attitudes towards human difference in...
published: 17 Jul 2012
author: Phyo Win Latt
Racism A History 1
1. THE COLOUR OF MONEY
An examination of prevailing attitudes towards human difference in the writings of some of the major philosophers and historians of antiquity, including Herodotous, Aristotle, and Plutarch. The episode also assesses the implications of Old Testament dogmas concerning the pre-destined attributes of the different ‘races’ (specifically, the idea that the major racial groups were supposedly the descendants of Noah’s sons - Ham, Shem and Japheth – and that Black people were victims of ‘The Curse of Ham’). The development of the idea of ‘race’ is traced as a pseudo-biological category throughout the English Tudor period (particularly the literary application of the concept in Shakespeare). Significant changes in ideas about race are identified that coincided with the event that would shape racial ideas for centuries: the Columbian adventure in the ‘New World’ and the subsequent development and institutionalisation of the Transatlantic Slave Trade – an event that led to the dehumanisation, exploitation and inferiorisation of Africans - and the outright extermination of Native Americans.
Also shown is how the idea of ‘race’ was understood and expressed in the writings of some of the giants of the European Enlightenment, including the 17th Century British philosopher John Locke (who profited from slavery, and invested in the Royal Africa Company, which traded in slaves); and the 18th Century thinker David Hume, who wrote, “I am apt to suspect the negroes and in general all the other species of men [for there are four or five different kinds] to be naturally inferior to the whites. There never was a civilized nation of any other complexion than white, nor even any individual eminent either in action or speculation.” Meanwhile, in continental Europe, French philosopher Montesquieu penned a famous essay attacking slavery, and yet could still say of African slaves: “These creatures are all over black, and with such a flat nose that they can scarcely be pitied. It is hardly to be believed that God, who is a wise Being, should place a soul, especially a good soul, in such a black ugly body”.
There are many other examples and from some of the pre-eminent intellectual figures of the age. One of Montesquieu’s contemporaries and compatriots, the writer Georges-Louis Buffon, declared that “Donkeys are degenerate horses; apes degenerate men. The Negro is to man what the donkey is to the horse”, while the hugely influential German thinker Immanuel Kant offered the insight: “The Negroes of Africa have by nature no feeling that rises above the trifling”.
These ideas percolated into the work of those who considered themselves scientists. The Swedish biologist Carolus Linnaeus devised a fourfold categorisation of humanity, consisting of Americanus (who were “stubborn, warlike, and uncivilized”); Asiaticus (“melancholy, severe, conceited and stingy”); Africanus (“cunning, passive, inattentive, impulsive and shameless, too, because of the habit of their women to lactate profusely”); and Europaeus ( who is “changeable, clever, and inventive. He puts on tight clothing. He is governed by laws.”)
In the 1790s, the English surgeon Charles White published his Account of the Regular Gradation in Man, a book that attempted to reconcile this ‘natural’ racial hierarchy into the idea of ‘The Chain of Being’ – a notion that conceived of the universe as a divinely-ordered progression from lower life-forms to the creatures occupying the highest plateau of existence: European Man.
Towards the end of the 18th Century, the German physiologist Johann Friedrich Blumenbach produced a series of works that supported White’s view. Blumenbach developed the racial categories which came to dominate all discourse on race for almost 200 years. Based on his studies of skulls, he produced a five-sided system which defined white Europeans as ‘Caucasian’; black Africans as ‘Negroid’; East Asians as ‘Mongoloid; and those from the Pacific region ‘Malays’.
Blumenbach’s development of this racial taxonomy has encouraged some historians to describe him as ‘The Father of Scientific Racism’. But in this film, we reveal the little-known details of Blumenbach’s Pauline conversion – the major revision of his ideas that took place in later life. In the 1820s, his anatomical studies yielded new results, leading him to conclude that there was at least as much (and possibly even more) human diversity among Africans than between Europeans – and that Africans were not inferior to the rest of humanity after all.
Although it is only Blumenbach’s early work that is remembered today, there were a few sources of resistance to Europe’s explicitly racist intellectual consensus. Throughout the 17th and 18th Centuries (an age which we generally associate with the emergence of enlightened, humanistic and progressive thinking), there were very few voices that dis
Youtube results:
5:02
Passalidae - Wiki Article
Passalidae is a family of beetles known variously as "bessbugs", "bess beetles", "betsy be...
published: 01 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
Passalidae - Wiki Article
Passalidae is a family of beetles known variously as "bessbugs", "bess beetles", "betsy beetles" or "horned passalus beetles". Nearly all of the 500-odd species are tropical; species found in Nort... Passalidae - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived from Wikipedia using Creative Commons License: en.wikipedia.org Author: PiccoloNamek Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:Creative Commons ASA 3.0, Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License., GNU Free Documentation License, Creative Commons License Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported This work is in the public domain in the United States.
published: 01 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
22:31
Cabbage - Wiki Article
(Brassica oleracea or variants) is a leafy green biennial, grown as an annual vegetable fo...
published: 27 Oct 2012
author: WikiPlays
Cabbage - Wiki Article
(Brassica oleracea or variants) is a leafy green biennial, grown as an annual vegetable for its densely-leaved heads. Closely related to other cole crops such as broccoli, cauliflower and brussels sp... Cabbage - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived from Wikipedia using Creative Commons License: en.wikipedia.org Author: Unknown Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:Creative Commons ASA 3.0, Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License., GNU Free Documentation License, This work is in the public domain in the United States. Author: User:Ram-Man Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:Creative Commons ASA 3.0, Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License., GNU Free Documentation License, This work is in the public domain in the United States. Author: Ksenija Putilin Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:Creative Commons ASA 3.0, This work is in the public domain in the United States. Author: Bill Tarpenning Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:This image is ineligible for copyright and therefore is in the public domain, because it consists entirely of information that is common property and contains no original authorship., This work is in t...
published: 27 Oct 2012
author: WikiPlays
views: 17
8:09
Smart Lesson Planning (Laura Bazan)
...
published: 29 May 2012
author: cpccvideos
Smart Lesson Planning (Laura Bazan)
7:27
Epacris Impressa - Wiki Article
"Common Heath" redirects here. For the geometer moth, see Ematurga atomaria. Epacris impre...
published: 04 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays
Epacris Impressa - Wiki Article
"Common Heath" redirects here. For the geometer moth, see Ematurga atomaria. Epacris impressa, also known as Common Heath, is a shrub that is native to the south-east of Australia. The pink-flow... Epacris Impressa - Wiki Article - wikiplays.org Original @ http All Information Derived from Wikipedia using Creative Commons License: en.wikipedia.org Author: JJ Harrison Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:Creative Commons ASA 3.0, Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License., GNU Free Documentation License, Creative Commons License Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported This work is in the public domain in the United States. Author: JJ Harrison Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:Creative Commons ASA 3.0, Creative Commons License Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported This work is in the public domain in the United States. Author: Ways Image URL: en.wikipedia.org Licensed under:Creative Commons ASA 3.0, This work is in the public domain in the United States.
published: 04 Nov 2012
author: WikiPlays