Tech News is a blog created by Wasim Akhtar to deliver Technical news with the latest and greatest in the world of technology. We provide content in the form of articles, videos, and product reviews.
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Join Google.org to help make education more inclusive for students with special needs
In two years of teaching students with special needs, I’ve learned how music can give students the opportunity to discover themselves. In our music inclusion choir, band and orchestra classes, students with disabilities make music with general education students, each at their own level of ability. I’ve seen music help even the most shy and reticent students socialize, smile and come out of their shells.
Unfortunately, we don’t always have the right kinds of musical instruments to meet the diverse needs of every kid in my class. For classrooms like mine in Chicago, specialized equipment can truly open up the learning environment. From floor keyboards to rhythm instrument sets, I’m able to ensure that every student, no matter their mobility style, has a meaningful experience in my class.
Me and my students performing at a school assembly on November 10, 2015
That’s why I was so thrilled to learn that Google.org was funding my request on DonorsChoose.org to bring my music inclusion project to more students. For the past month, Google.org has hosted schoolwide celebrations to honor teachers of students with special needs, and funded hundreds of DonorsChoose.org special needs projects like mine. Starting today for #GivingTuesday, Google is making it easier for everyone to support teachers by matching up to a million dollars in donations to increase inclusion, equity and opportunity for students with diverse learning styles. In addition, last week Android Pay committed to donating up to another $1 million to special needs projects on DonorsChoose.org.
There are currently 6.4 million students with special needs in the U.S.—13 percent of the total student population. Yet, a $17 billion federal deficit in special education funding leaves far too many gaps across classrooms. In fact, on average, all teachers spend $485 of their own money each year on their classrooms.
Teachers like me are working to make sure all students can have an equal and inclusive education. And you can help provide some of the materials they need most—take a look! Together, we can help make education more inclusive #ForEveryKid.
Posted by Javier Payano
http://ift.tt/1QaVEQT Javier Payano Music Teacher
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[Windows 10 Tip] Remove Cortana, Microsoft Edge, Contact Support and Feedback Apps
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Step on stage with the Google Cultural Institute
And now you can join them. In a new virtual exhibition from the Google Cultural Institute and more than 60 performing arts organizations, you can experience dance, drama, music and opera alongside some of the world’s leading performers—onstage, backstage and with a 360 degree-view of the action.
The new Performing Arts exhibition gives you a view that’s even closer than the best seat in the house. With 360-degree performance recordings, you you can choose a dancer’s-eye view of the crowd, or look down from the stage into the orchestra pit. At the Paris Opera, you can stand in the middle of the largest stage in Europe, surrounded by dancers performing choreographer Benjamin Millepied’s moves. Sit between the woodwinds and strings at Carnegie Hall with a full view of Maestro Nézet-Séguin. Don’t worry if you’re underdressed as you tour the Berliner Philharmoniker’s rehearsal performance of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with conductor Sir Simon Rattle—you’ll see the orchestra is not in black tie either.
Beyond the performance itself, new indoor Street View imagery gives you an all-access backstage pass to each venue. Wander through the wig workshop at Brussels’ opera house, look beneath the stage at the historic underground arches of the Fundação Teatro Municipal in São Paulo, or zoom in on ultra-high resolution Gigapixel costume images at France’s National Centre for Stage Costume, before browsing more than a hundred interactive stories about the shows, the stars and the world behind the scenes. If you’re lucky enough to be planning an in-person visit to one of these venues, you can be tour them in Street View first to see where you’ll be sitting, or how the view is from the balcony.
The Google Cultural Institute was founded in 2011 to bring the world’s treasures to anyone with an Internet connection. Starting in partnership with a handful of renowned museums, we’ve since joined forces with 900+ institutions to include historic archives, street art, and 200 wonders of the world. Now you can also visit dozens of the world’s stages together in one place—across mobile, tablet and desktop at g.co/performingarts and on the Google Cultural Institute website.
Curtain-up, and let Performing Arts take the stage!
Posted by Amit Sood, Director of the Google Cultural Institute
IMAGE URL Amit Sood Director Google Cultural Institute
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Apple Looks To “The Force” For Innovation
If you’re looking forward to the newest Star Wars movie as much as the rest of the intelligent life forms of the world, there’s a feature in this one that you especially want to watch for. No, it’s not the new villains or the old favorites (lookin’ at you, Leia and Han) that will make Episode VII: The Force Awakens so cool, it’s the ahead of its time special effects that the original films were known for oh so long ago.
One of the effects in particular may not seem on par with lightsabers or x-wing fighter battle scenes, but it’s what makes some of the characters come to life by giving them facial movements and expressions. Swiss startup Faceshift was the source of the software that mimics the human actors’ features and movements to avoid that eye-movement-only experience we’ve seen from 3D animation in the past.
Again, we agree…not exactly the whomping drone of a light saber slicing through the air. But it was high-tech enough to attract the attention of Apple, who just bought the company for an undisclosed amount.
Now the real fun begins: the speculation on why the Cupertino tech giant would want the rights to a piece of software that creates more life-like facial movements from animated characters.
Some industry watchers say the smart money is one Apple’s ventures into virtual reality, and they backup this claim by citing other high-dollar corporate purchases like an engineering team that had developed several VR patents and the group who developed the motion sensors for the XBox Kinect; those two purchases alone represented a nearly $400 million investment.
While other experts have stated this has less to do with virtual reality and more to do with Apple’s AI and machine learning focus, the company itself had a typical non-response: Apple buys up little guys all the time.
The post Apple Looks To “The Force” For Innovation appeared first on TechBeat.
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