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Triston Daley's List: DGL Vocabulary

  • Multimodal Society

    a form of human-machine interaction using multiple modes of input/output. A multimodal society is human machines extended group of people that share and keep in contact.

  • Popular Networks

    An extended group of people with similar interests or concerns who interact and remain in informal contact .

  • Meme

    meme is a vision or idea spread the media new and the digital underworld .

  • Wiki

    a wiki allows anyone to edit, delete or modify content that has been placed on the Web site using a browser interface, including the work of previous authors.

  • Viral Videos

    A viral video is a video which is spread through online sharing, such as blogs, forums, email, and sharing sites. A viral Video is a free Digital tool used in many professional Markets.

  • Social Networking

    A Social Network is a simulation revolutionized Realm in the Digital World. This Social Networking is a City of Digital Humans.

  • Networked Life

    Networked Life is about is a cycle of a digital community world wide

  • Blogging

    A website , A online Journal that represent the digital community World Wide. Blogs Talk about different subjects and projects. Collaborating Different ideas and techniques.

  • Academic Integrity

    Academic Integrity Means to be Professional and True to your passion and also being fair to your community, career,Job , friends, teachers, Family .

  • Ethics

    Ethics describe how we behave and organize our self as a character in life , programs, games, music, movies, Sports, Hobbies Etc. Ethic exist in everything.

  • Independent Learning

    Independent learning is Self directed organized way of learning. Encourage yourself to make a new idea and also learn new things.

  • Disinformation

    False information misled planted into the news are media Etc.

  • Moral / Social Society

    Moral / Social Society It involves the ability to recognize a problem as a moral one and also use your skills that you learned from very young age and could adapt to change.

  • Privacy

    To do something alone are in private.

  • Collaborative media

    Means to collaborative media network in a large range.

  • Digital Rights and Responsibilities

    Digital rights and Responsibilities means you have the freedom to produce your work in a professional manner.

  • Plagiarism

    Plagiarism means to steal and and claim as your own work are ideas .

  • Copyright

    Copyright means to have exclusive rights & license to your media,art or music . Copyrighting allow you to protect your music,Video,Song,Lyrics Etc.

  • Digital Native

    Digital Natives are the people who grow up around digital media and is the revolution in the digital world.

  • Digital Citizenship

    Digital citizenship means to use Digital media in a professional way and use responsible techniques and plans.

  • Digital Security

    Digital security mean guarding your digital media and ideas and plans threw the digital world

  • Digital Immigrants

    Digital Immigrants are the ones that adapted to history in the pre digital world.

  • Digital Identity

    A digital identity is a visual concept adopted by unique characteristics , Ideas , Networking & Collaboration.

    • Definition - What does   Digital Identity mean?

       

      A digital identity is an online or networked identity adopted or claimed in cyberspace by an individual, organization or electronic device. These users may also project more than one digital identity through multiple communities. In terms of digital identity management, key areas of concern are security and privacy.

    • Digital Natives are those who grew up with digital technology from birth, whereas Digital Immigrants are those who were already socialized in predigital ways when digital technology arrived on the scene. For more information, see Prensky (2001).
  • Feb 06, 13

    Digital citizenship can be defined as the norms of appropriate, responsible behavior with regard to technology use.

    • Digital citizenship can be defined as the norms of appropriate, respon
    • Digital Security (self-protection):   electronic precautions to guarantee safety.
       In any society, there are individuals who steal, deface, or disrupt other people. The same is true for the digital community. It is not enough to trust other members in the community for our own safety. In our own homes, we put locks on our doors and fire alarms in our houses to provide some level of protection. The same must be true for the digital security. We need to have virus protection, backups of data, and surge control of our equipment. As responsible citizens, we must protect our information from outside forces that might cause disruption or harm.
  • Feb 06, 13

    cop·y·right [kop-ee-rahyt] Show IPA
    noun
    1.
    the exclusive right to make copies, license, and otherwise exploit a literary, musical, or artistic work, whether printed, audio, video, etc.: works granted such right by law on or after January 1, 1978, are protected for the lifetime of the author or creator and for a period of 50 years after his or her death.

    • Plagiarize \'pla-je-,riz also j - -\ vb -rized; -riz·ing vt [plagiary] : to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one's own : use (a created production) without crediting the source vi: to commit literary theft: present as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source - pla·gia·riz·er n
    • The definition of digital rights and responsibilities is having the right and freedom to use all types of digital technology while using the technology in an acceptable and appropriate manner. As a user of digital technology, you also have the right to privacy and the freedom of personal expression.
    • Definition: “Collaborative media” is the term we use to refer to digital media that enables broad-range participation where the distinctions between production, consumption and design are dissolving. Read the open-access article Designing Collaborative Media: A Challenge for CHI? as an introduction to the concept.
    • Moral literacy is defined as the ability to contend with complex moral problems. It involves the ability to recognize a problem as a moral one. The morally literate individual must acknowledge the multiple perspectives of individuals involved in the problems. The ability to assess both disagreements on and proposed responses to the problems is another skill of the morally literate individual.
    • Social literacy starts at a very young age when children begin to communicate. “Communication and the sharing of information, experience, and expertise is literally at students’ fingertips —and they know it! As they integrate [technologies] into their lives, new kinds of communities are emerging, new cultural norms and boundaries are solidifying, and new kinds of crime, poverty, and warfare are developing”
    • Independent Learning is learning that is self-directed. The learning is defined, organised and completed by the learner. Educators (experts) may act as facilitators or guides. However, the learner is encouraged to plot their own path and to value their own research as well as input from peers on the same level as information and guidance that they may gain from teachers (experts).”

       

    • “Ethics” can be defined as the critical, structured examination of how we should behave — in particular, how we should constrain the pursuit of self-interest when our actions affect others.
    • The definition of academic integrity is fulfilling your academic requirements with trust and being honest about your responsibilities. It is being fair throughout the academic community.
  • Feb 06, 13

    A website, similar to an online journal, that includes chronological entries made by individuals. The word blog was derived from the combination of the word web and log. Blogs typically focus on a specific subject (Economy, entertainment news, etc.) and provide users with forums (or a comment area) to talk about each posting. Many people use blogs as they would a personal journal or diary.

  • Feb 06, 13

    Multimodal may refer to:
    Multimodal distribution, a statistical distribution of values with multiple peaks
    Multimodal interaction, a form of human-machine interaction using multiple modes of input/output.
    Multimodal transport, a journey involving the use of multiple modes of transport, for example rail and bus.
    Evolutionary multimodal optimization

      • a statistical distribution of values with multiple peaks
      •  
      • Multimodal interaction, a form of human-machine interaction using multiple modes of input/output.
      •  
      • Multimodal transport, a journey involving the use of multiple mode
    • A collaborative Web site comprises the perpetual collective work of many authors. Similar to a blog in structure and logic, a wiki allows anyone to edit, delete or modify content that has been placed on the Web site using a browser interface, including the work of previous authors. In contrast, a blog, typically authored by an individual, does not allow visitors to change the original posted material, only add comments to the original content.
    • Definition of VIRAL

      1
      : of, relating to, or caused by a virus <a viral infection>
      2
      : quickly and widely spread or popularized especially by person-to-person electronic communication
    • A viral video is a video clip that achieves widespread distribution through online sharing. The term viral is usually associated with a negative meaning. However, when it comes to marketing, viral means distribution through sharing, and that is positive. Unlike tradition marketing, viral marketing is mostly free. People take an advertisement and distribute it amongst themselves. A viral video is a video which is spread through online sharing, such as blogs, forums, email, and sharing sites. To be "viral", the video needs to be appealing to the audience, and it usually achieves this by being different, funny, and witty.
  • Feb 06, 13

    social network
    noun
    1.
    a network of friends, colleagues, and other personal contacts: Strong social networks can encourage healthy behaviors.
    2.
    Computers.
    a.
    an online community of people with a common interest who use a Web site or other technologies to communicate with each other and share information, resources, etc.: a business-oriented social network.
    b.
    a Web site or online service that facilitates this communication.

      • An openwork fabric or structure in which cords, threads, or wires cross at regular intervals.
      • Something resembling an openwork fabric or structure in form or concept, especially:
        1. A system of lines or channels that cross or interconnect: a network of railroads.
        2. A complex, interconnected group or system: an espionage network.
        3. An extended group of people with similar interests or concerns who interact and remain in informal contact for mutual assistance or support.
  • Feb 06, 13

    dis·in·for·ma·tion [dis-in-fer-mey-shuhn, dis-in-] Show IPA
    noun
    false information, as about a country's military strength or plans, publicly announced or planted in the news media, especially of other countries.

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