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- How to plan for AI-ML projects?
- How to setup AI-ML projects?
- How to do Risk management for AI-ML projects?
- How to ensure that AI-ML projects will be delivered successfully?
Sharing my practical and academic experience of leading large teams and organizational units, Best practices, Emerging Technology Trends
Category: Digital Transformation
Coming soon…
Coming soon…
(originally written on 17-May-2020)
Authors: Suresh Dhamapurkar, Shilpa Dhamapurkar
Keywords: Educational Technology, Online learning, eLearning, MOOC, Pandemic, COVID-19, Instructional Technology, Instructional Delivery
Due to many advancements in technology and innovations in the Educational Technology ecosystem; education for all, anytime, anywhere has the potential to be a new norm. Advancements in compute, storage and networking technologies now enable education to be imparted online, at scale and yet maintaining high-quality if done correctly.
There are many reputed global institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT, USA), who have been successfully conducting many high-quality online education programs since many years now, either through free Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) or Professional paid programs. Recently some of these institutions have even started professional Masters programs in online mode. Lot of R&D is going on globally, including in India in the emerging Educational Technology area.
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(image source: Photo by Julia M Cameron from Pexels)
Access by anyone to everyone from anywhere (using a mobile device) will radically change the user experience. “Building smarter systems to give a better experience to users” is the challenge. Atos sees mobile social networking as a fundamental application for social communication.
A mobile device increases the value of social networks as they also become mobile. Due to continuous connectivity, social networking with a mobile device is more symbiotic than with a desktop computer. Atos believes that mobility is already offering social networks new opportunities, like real-time communication on the move, location-based features, and the sharing of personal information (contact lists, calendars) via a mobile device anytime, anywhere if users wish to do so.
This introduces a host of new business possibilities, such as becoming a mobile social networking platform provider or an application provider. Business models (between application provider and end user or between application provider and platform provider) could include per transaction, sponsorship, advertisements, onetime payments, micropayments, payment per subscription or even per click, per visit or per-use.
Source:
Based on whitepaper from Atos’ Scientific Community describing how social networking using a mobile device is different from that using a non-mobile device; the benefits and use cases; the ability to share and collaborate in real time with the real world; and the challenges and business opportunities in this area for consumers, service/platform providers, and application providers.
Authors: Suresh Dhamapurkar (Chief editor), Santi Ristol, Mahesh Chandrasekar