|
Books > Business & Economics > Industry & industrial studies > Media, information & communication industries
In the digital era, emerging technologies such as artificial
intelligence, big data, and blockchain have revolutionized various
ways of people's daily lives and brought many opportunities and
challenges to the industries. With the increasing demand for
talents in the fintech realm, this book serves as a good guide for
practitioners who are seeking to understand the basics of fintech
and applications of different technologies. This book covers
important knowledge in statistics, quantitative methods, and
financial innovation to lay the foundation for fintech. It is
especially useful for people who are relatively new to this area
and would like to become professionals in fintech.Bundle set:
Global Fintech Institute-Chartered Fintech Professional Set I
In 1964, less than one year into his tenure as publisher of the
Bogalusa Daily News, New Orleans native Lou Major found himself
guiding the newspaper through a turbulent period in the history of
American civil rights. Bogalusa, Louisiana, became a flashpoint for
clashes between African Americans advocating for equal treatment
and white residents who resisted this change, a conflict that
generated an upsurge in activity by the Ku Klux Klan. Local members
of the KKK stepped up acts of terror and intimidation directed
against residents and institutions they perceived as sympathetic to
civil rights efforts. During this turmoil, the Daily News took a
public stand against the Klan and its platform of hatred and white
supremacy. Against the Klan, Major's memoir of those years,
recounts his attempts to balance the good of the community, the
health of the newspaper, and the safety of his family. He provides
an in-depth look at the stance the Daily News took in response to
the city's civil rights struggles, including the many fiery
editorials he penned condemning the KKK's actions and urging
peaceful relations in Bogalusa. Major's richly detailed personal
account offers a ground-level view of the challenges local
journalists faced when covering civil rights campaigns in the Deep
South and of the role played by the press in exposing the nefarious
activities of hate groups such as the Klan.
Rather than a media history of the region or a history of southern
media, Remediating Region: New Media and the U.S. South formulates
a critical methodology for studying the continuous reinventions of
regional space across media platforms. This innovative collection
demonstrates that structures of media undergird American
regionalism through the representation of a given geography's
peoples, places, and ideologies. It also outlines how the region
answers back to the national media by circulating ever-shifting
ideas of place via new platforms that allow for self-representation
outside previously sanctioned media forms. Remediating Region
recognizes that all media was once new media. In examining how
changes in information and media modify concepts of region, it both
articulates the virtual realities of the twenty-first-century U.S.
South and historicizes the impact of "new" media on a region that
has long been mediated. Eleven essays examine media moments ranging
from the nineteenth century to the present day, among them
Frederick Douglass's utilization of early photography, video game
representations of a late capitalist landscape, rural queer
communities' engagement with social media platforms, and
contemporary technologies focused on revitalizing Indigenous
cultural practices. Interdisciplinary in scope and execution,
Remediating Region argues that on an increasingly networked planet,
concerns over the mediated region continue to inform how audiences
and participants understand their entree into a global world
through local space.
Featuring a lineup of distinguished academics, this collection
remedies the absence of scholarly attention to French cinematic
legend Isabelle Huppert. This volume deconstructs Huppert’s star
persona and public profile through critical and theoretical
analysis of her various screen roles—from her very early
appearances alongside Romy Schneider in César et Rosalie (Sautet,
1972) and Gérard Depardieu in Les Valseuses (1974) to a number of
celebrated collaborations with high-profile European auteurs such
as Catherine Breillat, Claire Denis, Jean-Luc Godard, Michael
Haneke and Joseph Losey, and with more popular auteurs such as
Claude Chabrol and François Ozon. Known for a cerebral
internalization of characterization, a technical mastery of extreme
emotions, and a singular brand of icy intellectualism, Huppert’s
performances continue to impress, stun and surprise audiences. By
focusing on several theoretical questions that relate to image,
identity, sexuality and place, this volume situates Huppert’s
star persona in the more practical creative contexts of
performance, authorship, genre and collaboration. This volume
contrasts complementary critical accounts of her stardom by working
across the different periods and territories of her career.
Global Journalism: Understanding World Media Systems provides an
overview of the key issues in global journalism today and traces
how media systems have evolved over time in different world
regions. Taking into account local context as well as technological
change across media industries, the book lays down the foundation
for today's journalism students learning about the practice, growth
and impact of global media. It offers an up-to-date, thorough
overview of media developments in all world regions embedded in
their unique political, cultural and economic context. The book
explains the theoretical foundations of global journalism, from the
classic Four Theories of the Press to more nuanced media models,
and proposes a framework for studying world media systems. Readers
will gain knowledge about a wide range of topics, including media
freedom, global news cultures, professional ethics and
responsibilities, and education of global journalists. The book
underscores the essential role of technology and social media and
discusses issues such as "fake news" and disinformation, soft power
and public diplomacy, foreign news reporting and international news
flow. Case studies serve as an excellent supplement to the
conceptual content, exposing students to a number of hot
topics-from Russia's troll factories to the Facebook-Cambridge
Analytica data scandal.
A gripping look at the rise of the microchip and the British tech company caught in the middle of the global battle for dominance.
One tiny device lies at the heart of the world's relentless technological advance: the microchip. Today, these slivers of silicon are essential to running just about any machine, from household devices and factory production lines to smartphones and cutting-edge weaponry. At the centre of billions of these chips is a blueprint created and nurtured by a single company: Arm.
Founded in Cambridge in 1990, Arm's designs have been used an astonishing 250 billion times and counting. The UK's high-tech crown jewel is an indispensable part of a global supply chain driven by American brains and Asian manufacturing brawn that has become the source of rising geopolitical tension.
With exclusive interviews and exhaustive research, The Everything Blueprint tells the story of Arm, from humble beginnings to its pivotal role in the mobile phone revolution and now supplying data centres, cars and the supercomputers that harness artificial intelligence.
It explores the company's enduring relationship with Apple and numerous other tech titans, plus its multi-billion-pound sale to the one-time richest man in the world, Japan's Masayoshi Son.
The Everything Blueprint details the titanic power struggle for control of the microchip, through the eyes of a unique British enterprise that has found itself in the middle of that battle.
Global Journalism: Understanding World Media Systems provides an
overview of the key issues in global journalism today and traces
how media systems have evolved over time in different world
regions. Taking into account local context as well as technological
change across media industries, the book lays down the foundation
for today's journalism students learning about the practice, growth
and impact of global media. It offers an up-to-date, thorough
overview of media developments in all world regions embedded in
their unique political, cultural and economic context. The book
explains the theoretical foundations of global journalism, from the
classic Four Theories of the Press to more nuanced media models,
and proposes a framework for studying world media systems. Readers
will gain knowledge about a wide range of topics, including media
freedom, global news cultures, professional ethics and
responsibilities, and education of global journalists. The book
underscores the essential role of technology and social media and
discusses issues such as "fake news" and disinformation, soft power
and public diplomacy, foreign news reporting and international news
flow. Case studies serve as an excellent supplement to the
conceptual content, exposing students to a number of hot
topics-from Russia's troll factories to the Facebook-Cambridge
Analytica data scandal.
Grunwick was the strike that changed the rules of the game.It
changed the way the unions thought about race, about their own core
values, and about the best way to organise among the new immigrant
communities coming to Britain in the 1970s. Moreover, it changed
the way unions thought about the law, and raised big questions
about their will to win.In the beginning, Grunwick wasn't a strike
about wages - it was about something much more important than that.
It was about dignity at work. And, for the small band of Asian
women strikers, who braved sun, rain and snow month-in and
month-out on the picket-lines, from August 1976 to July 1978,
rights in the workplace and pride at work, were far more important
than any amount of money.At the time, this book was the seminal
account of the dispute, providing the workers' own story in their
own words and told by two of the leading participants in the
strike. Now, forty years later, its themes still resonate, making
this book vital reading for all of those who seek to organise
within their own communities and workplaces.
|
|