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Home » Athens Greece

Athens in the News

August 2nd, 2010
Athens Greece
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Desiree Michael

Acropolis

People are always asking me, “What’s going on in Athens?” Well, yes, there have been intentional fires to assist developers in building expensive mountainside homes (as building here is otherwise prohibited by forest growth and natural species). Yes, there have been postal strikes, taxi strikes, bus, rail, and the most recent 7-day truckers’ strike. Is Athens, Greece another Watts, California waiting to happen? It could be, but in the shadows of it all, technology and innovation prevail. In Athens—like Los Angeles—you just have to know where to go and when to go.

So, if you are planning on coming to Athens this fall, join GIT Athens in covering the following events: In September, the European Symposium on Research in Computer Security is holding its 15th symposium. The symposium is meant to inform the IT community and encourage research in the areas of malicious tech-based intrusions. The symposium will run from September 20th – 22nd.

In October, Athens will host one of the largest energy exhibitions in Greece, the 5th International Exhibition Energy Photovoltaic ’10. The exhibit boasts products from over 160 enterprises representing 15 countries.  It will run from October 21st – 24th alongside Envirotech, which highlights the use of water, environment and green building technologies.

Those exhibitions will follow the 2nd Sustainability Summit: The Green Agenda after Copenhagen, which will be held in Athens on October 20th. This summit will cover everything from who is driving the “green” industry to job growth in green technologies.

And finally—the best for last, from October 14th – 18th at the Technopolis, Athens Digital Week will take place. Last year over 35,000 people visited the event. This year, it will cover the latest in Gaming, Social Networking, Robotics and more! It is free to the public, making it one of the best events to attend in Athens this fall!

Mark your calendars…that’s Athens in the News.

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Tags: Athens, Digital Week, Energy, European Symposium, fires, girls in tech, GIT, Green technologies, Photovoltaic, strikes, technology, truckers
Posted in Athens Greece | 1 Comment »

The Potential for Social Networking & Mapping – Impressive!

February 15th, 2010
Athens Greece
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Desiree Michael


Dr. Regina Dugan, Director of DARPA

Dr. Regina Dugan, Director of DARPA

Just two months ago, DARPA, headed by Dr. Regina Dugan, conducted an interesting challenge to find ten red balloons strategically “hidden” throughout the United States. Seekers had a time frame of nine days to correctly map-out the whereabouts of those balloons. In nine hours, an MIT team had located all of the balloons—that was just with real-time social networking technologies—no augmented-reality mapping involved.

Microsoft's augmented-reality mapping at TED Talks 2010

Microsoft's augmented-reality mapping at TED Talks 2010

Two months later, social networking has new pal. At the annual TED Talks gathering, Microsoft unveiled its latest augmented-reality mapping. This technology will take social networking and seeking & find projects to a new level.

For education, all I can say is that if school districts don’t take this summer to get their teachers up to snuff with technology skills, there will be more of us teachers retiring as parents can create national and global networks of real-time information exchange (For educators: check out Natasha’s post below). Students no longer have to wait until gets dark to experience Orion or wait until their parents can take them to a famous landmark in a foreign country, with an iphone, internet, and augmented-reality mapping, they will be well on their way.

Though I have my hesitations about safety and privacy issues, the potential advantages to rescue missions, law enforcement, education and network publications could far outweigh the cons of such a technology. I just wonder if Dr. Dugan is willing to create another $40K DARPA Balloon challenge using augmented-reality mapping—maybe the nine hour search will become nine minutes!

Nevertheless, Microsoft has taken social networking to a new level, and it’s quite impressive!

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Tags: augmented-reality mapping, DARPA, Dr. Regina Dugan, education, GIT, IBM, microsoft, MIT, Orion, social networking, TED Talks
Posted in Athens Greece | 1 Comment »

Technology Trekking

February 4th, 2010
Athens Greece
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Desiree Michael

JB

J.B.

I’d like to introduce Jane, GIT Athens’ latest blogger. We are happy to have another brave soul come on board here in Athens.  One by one we are getting women into tech!

Technology Trekking by J. Briganti

It doesn’t require special clothing or special shoes but if you’re 40 something and haven’t been doing much technology trekking then it can be a bit perplexing.  I recently was invited to preview Google Wave.  Interesting I thought, so I clicked whereas instructed and hoped for the best.

Not having a Google account I was prompted to create one.  I paused for a few seconds and then thought to myself, why not.  I proceeded to follow the step by step instructions, clicking away here and there and before I knew it, I had myself a Google account.  Hurray, so far so good, I thought.   Feeling inspired, I then decided to download something called Google Chrome, which I would later learn is a web browser aiming to improve security, speed and stability.  What a great tool to have, I thought.

The idea of having real-time communication and collaboration is very exciting and I was eager to send a wave.  So, without further hesitation I clicked on contacts, choosing the only name which was in my box, proceeded to write a brief message in the window provided and then finally clicked on done, located at the bottom of the text window.  I was pretty sure that my wave went but was not totally convinced.  The absence of a confirmation in the form of sent left me with a little uncertainty.

Randomly clicking away at the various options available in the navigation, inbox and text windows, I soon realized how important it is to be able to utilize all of these different tools in order to endure all that Google WaveGooglewave-pic has to offer.  So, I decided to browse through the Google Wave Help and am I glad I did.  It was very user friendly and I found a “how to” explanation for every transaction that I would soon be interested in using.  Needless to say, I am ardently waiting to fill my contact box with fellow wavers.

My accomplishments may seem trivial to some, I’m sure, but for me it was exhilarating.  Technology and I are still a union in the making and I am excited about venturing into new territories.  I personally plan to hike over one small hill at a time, enjoying the scenery as I go.  Many thanks to Google Wave Help for supplying the answers to questions that I hadn’t yet thought to ask.

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Tags: Athens, GIT, Google, Wave, women in technology
Posted in Athens Greece | No Comments »

Looking for ways to save a buck on everyday small business expenses?

January 8th, 2010
Athens Greece
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Desiree Michael

-magicjack-With $110 million in revenue last year and selling for only $40, the YMax Corporation’s Gen2 MagicJack allows cell phone users to bypass their carriers’ charges for long-distant calls. The product plugs into a computer which then communicates with recognizable cell phones in range (even locked phones); enter a code and then your long-distance calls are ready for routing over the internet!

In running a startup, every penny counts and since most of us have been ripped off by huge cell phone charges at some time or another, MagicJack sounds cool and like a new paradigm that companies will begin following. Though femtocells preceded this Gen2 MagicJack, the cell phone companies were still charging big bucks for this technology as much as $250 per unit. By allowing callers to circumvent big company charges, the YMax product is more like the Napster of the cell phone industry.

Let’s just hope that its engineer, Dan Borislow, won’t face the same fate that programmers Shawn Fanning and Sean Parker had to face after being featured on the cover of Wired ten years ago.  For the time being, Borislow’s forty-dollar-a-unit technology is legal. So, enjoy free long distance calls as long as you can—move over Skpye!

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Posted in Athens Greece | 2 Comments »

Degree in the Virtual World of Game Science

December 1st, 2009
Athens Greece
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Desiree Michael

Associate Dean Magda El Zarki of UC Irvine's Donald Bren School of Information & Computer Sciences is now the Executive Director of the newly established Center for Computer Games & Virtual Worlds.

Associate Dean Magda El Zarki of UC Irvine's Donald Bren School of Information & Computer Sciences is now the Executive Director of the newly established Center for Computer Games & Virtual Worlds.

It’s a Far Cry (pun intended) from digital circuitry design and electromagnetics, but Dr. Magda El Zarki, professor of Information and Computer Science and Electrical Engineering, will head up UC Irvine’s Center for Computer Games & Virtual Worlds.

By next fall, UC Irvine will open admission to 50-100 eager students who will be able to declare a four-year major in Game Science. With access to a 4,000 sq.ft. cyber-interaction observatory, students will study everything from anthropology in virtual worlds to brain-computer interface sciences. If you are not a student, don’t fret, the Center will open its doors to visiting scholars, offer workshops, and partner with other virtual world and computer game science centers worldwide.

Though the Center for Computer Games and Virtual Worlds will focus on research and development, companies like Irvine-based Blizzard and French-based Ubisoft, creators of the Far Cry series, will eventually have access to employees with degrees in game science giving the gaming world a bit of needed legitimacy.

Since the UC system just closed its application process for Fall 2010 on November 30th, be ready for the following year when the cyber observatory will open its doors!

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Tags: game science, gaming, GIT, Magda El Zarki, UC Irvine, Virtual Worlds
Posted in Athens Greece | No Comments »

Out with the Old and In with the New

October 29th, 2009
Athens Greece
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Desiree Michael

Berlin Iron CurtainWhat an irony: With the 20th year milestone celebration of the Berlin Wall’s fall, the building of virtual walls and putting employees behind an iron curtain appears to be gaining ground. The Iron Fist approach to monitoring and removing communication rights seems to be a bit ironic in pro-capitalistic settings.

A recent study by the Morse Consulting firm reveals that UK employees spend about 4O minutes a week Tweeting. The firm concluded that this lost time is the equivalent of $2.39-billion of lost productivity. Not only do reports like this support the idea of enterprises shutting down access to information, they can potentially kill creative marketing opportunities. I imagine that similar data was the catalyst behind McCain’s support of the Internet Freedom Preservation Act of 2009.

So how about using the free market and simply changing with the times? John Sviokla of Diamond Management Consultants pointed out at Net Week’s Fourth Annual IT Directors’ Forum that getting rid of social networking could be a huge mistake for companies. To use his words, “incredible opportunities” may be overlooked. Instead of building walls via proxy blockers, citing Metcalfe’s Law, enterprises can use social networking not only to build their value, but for learning and experimenting.

So, how can enterprises capitalize on their Tweeting twits?

• As the Brits once practiced “teatime,” maybe it is time to change that to a more relevant slogan: Twitter Time (TT). TT could replace the American lunchtime. There is profit to be made—not walls to be built.

• Businesses could revamp their cafeterias with netbook docks and give a new meaning to “Internet cafes”. Employees might opt to stay onsite—saving time lost travelling to various eateries. In the long run, this may save a company money.

• From the learning aspect, I know firsthand that I had the most successful interaction from my middle and high school IT students when I decided to meet them where they congregate—Facebook. Instead of choosing to reprimand them for being engaged in social networking, I chose to meet them in their territory and teach them there. In terms of engagement and learning, I had over an 80% performance towards product completion. Not surprisingly, my stats didn’t stop the proxy wall from going up!

• Give employees something to talk about—content, content, content.

  • Create a new IT position that specializes in providing interesting information that can draw the attention of your company employees and their followers—good test to see who is reading what.
  • Post new content at the time of day that coincides with lunch.

• Build that database!

  • Increase the company database by pulling in friends of employees to an informative company community that provides compelling content. Companies never know when a particular type of talent may be needed, so having a ready pool of individuals with similar interest can build brand awareness and improved image management for a company.

Hmmm. In the end, I have to wonder what former President Reagan would have said to businesses that seek to build walls to communication: Mrs. CIO, tear down this firewall!

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Tags: Berlin Wall, GIT, IT Directors' Forum, Netweek, Reagan, social networks, tear down this wall, Twits, twitter
Posted in Athens Greece | No Comments »

Cool School Tools

October 19th, 2009
Athens Greece
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Desiree Michael

Wolfram Alpha ScreenCastThose of you with young children, watch out! With computational information at their fingertips they will learn everything they need to know about the 3Rs (Reading, ‘Riting and ‘Rithmetic) within six years. No Joke. In six years or so, expect to see more 11-year-olds graduating with same knowledge it took us years to acquire. This is the power of rapid cognition. The current tool that could make such a phenomenon possible: The search engine, Wolfram Alpha. On October 21st 12PM-2AM Central Standard Time, it will make its grand debut. This 12-minute screen capture and voiceover link says it all.

I know that I have blogged about the creative genius, Stephen Wolfram, but his invention accesses the ability of students to use their natural skills of rapid cognition. Combine this skill with a teacher’s knowledge and you will get students leaning collective concepts in two-days time that may have taken an entire semester to absorb. Wolfram Alpha is an educational tool worth using. (Yes, I am partial to this tool because it is the closest thing out there to what I pitched for funding a few years back—there were no business models at the time to make investors understand such a concept, but now there is, so have your children take advantage of it!)

Jing: Have you ever wished that your lessons could teach themselves. Well, Jing makes that possible. Create your introductory lesson plans with active screen capture and voiceovers and sit back. Let your computer do the talking and you and your students do the watching. And, Jing is free—within the budget of our teacher salaries!

Ning: I used to use Facebook as a teaching and homework support tool, but since our school—like many schools—blocked it, I had to find another social network. This past spring I introduced Ning to my staff. Ning is a great way to create a social network for your school community. It can be monitored by the community and have the same codes of conduct of your school: No cursing or writing foul remarks on the walls! Ning will also be featured in Wolfram Alpha’s debut on the 21st of October (see link for event listings).

W3Schools: Though this has been out for some time, it is a great way to offer your students a fun avenue to certification in HTML, JavaScript, XML and more. Forget the students, but an entire IT staff could become certified by learning simple coding at their own pace.

Until we teachers become obsolete, these are just a few tools that will keep your students loving your class and maybe even homework.

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Tags: GIT, HTML, JavaScript, Jing, Ning, Stephen Wolfram, students, teaching tools, W3Schools, Wolfram Alpha, XML
Posted in Athens Greece | 2 Comments »

Combating the Digital Divide Head-On: Tech Launches in Greece

October 11th, 2009
Athens Greece
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Desiree Michael

Athens' E-Learning Expo

Finally, something exciting to blog about: The months of September and October have been great months for the advancement of information technology in Greece. (If Athens residents read this before October 11th is over, they just may have time to attend Athens’ 1st Annual e-learning Expo behind Lallabai in the Aegli Zappio.)

According to Business Development Manager, Nikos Panagiotidis of Intel Hellas, the five pillars of creating a technologically literate society include the access to devices, training of the trainer, training of the users, broadband, and content. For starters, Greece is on the right foot.

Devices: In September, Greece initiated a grass-roots tech project for which all public school 7th grade students received laptops. The concept is very similar to the commencement of the 2003 Maine Learning Technology Initiative (MLTI) in which 17,000 seventh graders received laptops—unprecedented until that time.

Training: Greece’s national initiative is intended to facilitate the huge acquisition of tech skills needed to jumpstart the nation’s future economic mobility in the technology sector. Equipping and training the first cohort of 7th graders with computers necessitates the training of educators as well. Greek students, girls and boys alike, will now have an opportunity to compete in the innovative thinking that spurred the growth of places like the Silicon Valley and Pudong—and maybe make Athens interesting enough to draw the attention of Geeks-on-a-Plane ten years from now when they make their rounds to Europe’s emerging tech cities.

Broadband: With the aforementioned national initiative, the demand for broadband usage is bound to grow.

Content: C-Media (which has already staked a claim in the virtual world of learning via Second Life), Intel, Ote, and many other educational companies, sponsored Athen’s first ever e-learning expo this weekend. The event served as an opportunity for e-learning companies to connect and create on-going business partnerships that are productive for all parties as noted by presenter Dr. Mike Jackson.

As far as educational content is concerned, it was Intel’s freeware launch, Skoool™, that caught my attention. The academic content was first developed by innovators in Ireland. Initially, it focused only on the internationally understood subjects of math and science. It has since grown to incorporate many more learning modules. Greek children will now have over 200 learning modules from which to choose.

So, with all the right things in place: computers, training, broadband and a flurry of new content, this 7th grade national initiative is on its way to closing the digital divide that exists between Greece and its northern EU partners. Furthermore, GIT will be on the scene to cheer on Greece!

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Tags: 7th graders, C-Media, free computers, GIT, Greece, Hellas, Intel, Second Life, Skoool
Posted in Athens Greece | 1 Comment »

Who Said It Would Be Easy?

September 27th, 2009
Athens Greece
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Desiree Michael

aSc Award-winning Timetabling software

aSc Award-winning Timetabling software

How do you convince a population that is comfortable with tools that still exist to put them down and instead use something that is totally foreign to them—a new software product? It is nearly impossible.

Here at GIT we often talk about the Gender Divide, which is very prevalent in a male dominated country such as Greece; but, the biggest surprise to me has been my experience with an entire staff who was accustomed to doing time schedules by hand—paper and pencil. I had the unfortunate experience of introducing aScTime Tables (a scheduling software) to my school’s staff this year.

So, if you find yourself in a similar situation of trying to convert pencil and paper lovers to software usage, below are some tips for making the impossible possible or just a bit smoother:

  1. First, make sure all human processes are in line and as accurate as can be. If not, despite the reality of pre-existing poor enterprise communication and poor practices of streamlining and creating a reusable content…the software will be seen as the culprit of enterprise malfunction.
  2. Paper products: Sorry trees, unfortunately, seeing is believing. As with marketing, simply having a product that the older population can see can make all the difference.
  3. Color laser printer: Producing a colorful output with familiar logos and/or designs instantly helps with appeal of product.
  4. Accuracy in product: Make sure your output products are accurate and presentable. As programs only do what they are programmed to do, there are often inaccuracies in hidden data or human err that will standout when a printed document is produced.
  5. No viewers: Learn your product well and magically produce outcomes.
    1. Showing a reluctant population the fallacies of a software and the procedure of entry may give your observers other reasons to avoid using advancing technologies:
      1. i.      Software glitches and that is why there are new versions, next gens, improvements, etc., but that is not always understood by those who do not use new software products regularly.
      2. ii.      Data entry can be confusing and what looks normal and “clear” to us, may appear incomprehensible and confusing to new viewers.

Though these steps could apply to any computer reluctant population, the goal in the end is to have your target population understand the mission. The end goal is to create consolidated systems, easily accessible information, reusable content and an easier mission of delivery the next time around—and eventually, less paper usage! Good luck, because creating change is not easy.

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Tags: aSc, generational divide, GIT, timetabling
Posted in Athens Greece | No Comments »

Oyez, Oyez, Oyez!: There’s a new town crier—Guy Kawasaki

August 22nd, 2009
Athens Greece
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Desiree Michael

Move over Ted Turner and Rupert Murdoch. Kawasaki is in the square!GuyKawasaki

It may have taken a year and half to build momentum, but in the world of major media players a year is not a long time. After a week of reviewing Alltop, I have to say Guy Kawasaki has hit on something quite useful.

Ted Turner was laughed at for thinking that a news channel with just news would be successful and look where he is now. Rupert Murdoch continuously rounded up small and large newspapers alike in order to be the one owner having control of the most popularly read newspapers, while his naysayers waited for his falter. However, despite the initial heckling Kawasaki seems well on his way to surpass them all. He has become the new town crier just by neatly posting the headings of the most popularly read articles from every subject and practically every news source.

Unlike Twitter, there is no personal commentary to sift through, just clear titles. This makes searching for information very easy and straight forward. And yes, there are those of us who are still slow and search for information or have a need for static headlines—particularly when teaching in the classroom—at least current classrooms.

Like the news moguls of the past, Kawasaki just may have created something that will be around for a while. I just hope that Kawasaki continues to cry loud enough to keep people coming…Oyez, Oyez, Oyez!

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Tags: Alltop, GIT, Guy Kawasaki, newspapers, oyez, Rupert Murdoch, Ted Turner, town crier
Posted in Athens Greece | No Comments »

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