#iotraining
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IoT is one of the advanced and emerging technology nowadays. Get IoT training from Global Tech Council and become an IoT expert. Visit our website and get the best deal.
Visit- https://www.globaltechcouncil.org/internet-of-things/certified-iot-expert
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Introduction to #IO #Stream Session 1 | #CoreJava #Tutorial | Mr. HariKrishna - #Nareshit
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. #خبر 🔷️ مدیر دفتر همکاری های علمی و بین الملل دانشگاه شهید چمران اهواز گفت: پروژهی IoTrain (کارشناسی ارشد مهندسی IoT) با مشارکت دانشگاه شهید چمران اهواز و سایر دانشگاههای شرکت کننده، موفق به دریافت بودجه از اتحادیه اروپا شد. . 🔰 دکتر کریم لویمی مطلق در گفت و گو با خبرنگار روابط عمومی دانشگاه شهید چمران اهواز در این باره، بیان کرد: پیشنهاده این پروژه با دریافت امتیاز خوب از میان ۱��۰۵ پیشنهاده ثبت شده در فراخوان ۲۰۲۰ برنامهی اراسموس پلاس، موفق به دریافت اعتبار مالی شد. وی اظهار کرد: برای تهیهی پیشنهاده پروژهی IoTrain دفتر همکاریهای علمی-بینالمللی و دکتر رشتی مدیر فناوری اطلاعات و ارتباطات دانشگاه شهید چمران اهواز به صورت مشترک همکاری داشتند. مدیر دفتر همکاری های علمی و بین الملل دانشگاه شهید چمران اهواز، عنوان کرد: شرکای اروپایی شرکت کننده در این پروژه دانشگاه Siegen (آلمان)، مؤسسهی Petanux GmbH (کشور آلمان)، دانشگاه Politehnica of Bucharest (کشور رومانی)، و دانشگاه Manchester (کشور انگلیس)، شرکای ایرانی دانشگاههای علوم و تحقیقات تهران، سیستان و بلوچستان، تحصیلات تکمیلی علوم پایه زنجان و شرکای عراقی شرکت کننده دانشگاه Sumer و دانشگاه Wasit هستند. لویمی مطلق درباره پروژهی IoTrain، اظهار کرد: طبق ارزیابی مجمع جهانی اقتصاد، IoT قصد دارد که یکی از برترین مشوقان فناوری در عرصهی تحول برای آینده اشتغال، مهارت و استراتژی نیروی کار را در چهارمین انقلاب صنعتی آموزش دهد. وی، افزود: مجله فوربس دادههای بزرگ، آنالیز دادهها، سنسورهای هوشمند کارگذاری شده، سیستمهای کنترل از راه دور و یادگیری ماشین را به عنوان پنج مهارت برتر مهندسی در سال ۲۰۲۰ میداند؛ از این رو به منظور آمادهسازی جامعه برای چنین دگرگونی بزرگی، مدرنسازی آموزش عالی با تکمیل کردن مهارتهای IoT برای مهندسین یک نیاز محسوب میشود و ارائه یک سری آموزشها که باعث بهبود رقابت و اشتغالیابی مهندسین تا سال ۲۰۲۵ میگردد، ضروری است. (ادامه دارد) . 🔻 متن کامل خبر در وبسایت دانشگاه قابل مشاهده میباشد. 🌐 http://scu.ac.ir/article/4987807 . #دانشگاه_شهید_چمران_اهواز #روابط_عمومی (at دانشگاه شهید چمران اهواز) https://www.instagram.com/p/CETik2kj2v8/?igshid=3wf687n6fivb
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Let’s do some math. There are 5 weeks in the summer intensive and you get one teacher per week. Which means you get to learn from and pick the brain of 5 different veteran improvisers. There are 9 sections in the intensive, so, there are 9 teachers working simultaneously with each section. This also means that you miss out on a lot of really good improvisers while you’re there. Luckily, there’s a way to kind of surpass that and get involved with other teachers than those that were assigned to your section: workshops.
And I know what you’re thinking: aren’t 4 days of improv per week from 11am to 5pm and 2 to 6 shows every single night enough improv? Do you really need more training and take on additional workshops?! Nope, it’s not enough and yes, you do!
I was able to register for 3 workshops (actually there were four, but I’ll explain that in another occasion). Finding and Playing the Game with Bill Arnett (I actually had Bill on week 4, but I’d already registered for this workshop before flying to Chicago); Scenework with Craig Uhlir; and Short Form in Long Form with Tara DeFrancisco.
On all of these the focus was put on specific tools and principles, setting aside the bigger picture of the Harold or the teamwork we were developing within our sections, which was a good thing. This was also an opportunity to get to know and improvise with other students from different sections and expand our collective bonding. But make no mistake, this is also iO’s way to cash in a few extra dollars. But who’s really thinking about money when you’re investing on expanding your “improviser’s toolkit” and having so much fun doing it? Just eat $1 tacos for a few days and everything will be fine.
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Todays schedule: 11am - 5pm: classes 8pm - 12pm: shows I'll rest when I'm... tired. :)
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The audience is there to see you, so the most important people on your show are your team partners.
Matt Higbee
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Week 4, the Harold. Time flies when you're having fun, right? It really does, and my fourth week at the summer intensive just came and went like speeding car. Luckily, I was able to really enjoy the ride. This week we focused on the harold, the all mighty form from iO. I was a bit anxious about it because a whole week dedicated to this structure (although it's much more than that) seamed too much, but Bill Arnett took us where we needed to go and we focused on perfecting our scene work. The audience does not care about form, it only cares about the scenes, how they are played and the emotional and intelectual connections we are able to create on stage with it. With that in mind, we took on the harold throughout the week with a new perspective and worked on improving our openings, game scenes and different beat scenes.
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Last wednesday, our week 1 teacher, Matt Higbee, dared all his students to go out on an adventure after classes: a treasure hunt. But instead of searching for some sort of golden item, we were set out to find our own personal treasure.
Interested? Here’s how it works. Make a group of people. Each one will have a period of 20 minutes where they will be the leader, which means they will be in charge of the destination and activities of the group. During that time the other team members have to support and follow the leader. Everyone will have its turn as the leader and in the end, I promise you, everyone will unearth some shape or form of treasure. Be spontaneous, courageous and empathetic and it will be incredible. In my case, I found beauty. Sad, conflicted, strange, endearing, sweet and exciting beauty. Thanks to the great Matt Higbee, and thanks to Henrique, Georgie and Kristen for this journey within a journey.
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End of week 3 with Todd Edwards as our teacher. This was a tough one. A lot of strong emotions running within the group and inside each one of us. We were pushed and we saw ourselves as people, performers and artists in every scene that got created on stage. I do feel that week after week we are growing as improvisers by tackling individual challenges and acquiring new tools. This week I saw my new friends doing stand up, play as guests on improv groups at iO and I'm amazed at how talented they are and how they stand out from other performers. We have so many different personalities and skills between us that I truly feel lucky I ended up in with this group of beautiful people. Teachers, shows and classmates: these have been equally responsible for my personal growth as an improviser.
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About support: “I’ve got your back” is an improv mantra we’ve all heard and felt. Trust one another. So much of improv is about being vulnerable and giving yourself to your scene partners and making yourself available to them. The willingness to trust strangers on stage, in front of more strangers, is a magical thing. And we see it everyday at iO, at any improv class or show. In only two and a half weeks, dozens of strangers became groups, bonded with each other with ease and care, broke personal and cultural barriers, became friends. And it only took trust and support. Improv people are some of the most loving and caring people you can meet. So do yourself a favor and buy them a drink when you see them. I’m sure they’ll be interested in your stories too.
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Failling
It’s a bitter taste when you end a bad scene or your partners get edited out of one. And it doesn’t even matter if the audience, your coach or your partners enjoyed it. The taste lingers on as long as you feel/think the scene went wrong because of you, that you were disrespectful to your character, made stupid mistakes, or committed to the wrong thing. There is no failure in improv, I’ve been told. But this is one of the most difficult things to truly internalize as an improviser. Yesterday I tasted failure. It made me scowl. But today I feel like I’ve learned something from it because I can go back to that moment and, hopefully, I’ll guide myself in a better direction. There is no failure so we can fail more, and as Beckett said, fail better. Tomorrow I will try again.
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Adal Rifai (caressing a tequila bottle) and Matt Higbee (dreaming away to Australia) were our teachers for the first two weeks and I got to see them both play in the same night. Matt is a member of Beans and Adal of Revolver, two great Harold teams. I can say without a shadow of doubt that I couldn't wish for a better introduction to this intensive training. They were both so smart, considerate and willing to pass on to us what they have experienced and learned so far in this neverending road of improv (of life?). So, thank you, Matt and Adal. Your teachings will surely resound long after this experience is over.
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This is the stage at the Jason Chin Harold Cabaret. Group dynamics, character work and stage pictures were some of the main tools we worked on in week 2. In those chairs and through those doors we saw dragons, sharks, witches and tanks emerge. We heard endearing life stories never to be told again. We met a boombox pervert. And on the final day, we suffered a snack attack. Popcorn was the weapon, Charna the aggressor.
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You can create anything you want, so create the world you want and play in it.
Matt Higbee
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