Monday, April 26, 2010
Vote for Uviwe Mangweni!
Uviwe has been selected as one of the finalist in the Selected Creatives which is a one small seed network initiative.
The magazine showcases the work of one member from www.onesmallseed.net and brings them a step closer to being in one small seed magazine. .
The I love Soweto campaign is one of her first major independent projects as a photographer. She is inspired by people and diversity, her experiences are captured through a lance and a pen.
Let your fingers do the talking by voting for Uviwe Mangweni at:
http://www.onesmallseed.net/page/selected-creatives
You can only vote once.
You go girl!!
I LOVE Avant-garde SOWETO
A continued love for this wonderful place. Soweto is our home; it’s a place where we grew up thinking that; 1 day we want to move out here. We never realised how incredible it’s going to be in the next coming years. We love the art, culture, lifestyle & its people. We are here now & we want to part of the greatness. This campaign has taught us a lot of new things about this place; so we are here to teach you.
The collaborations with other creatives has been a journey of many roads that lead us to one thing the LOVE. In eyesight we see extraordinary things. As simple as it is to open your eyes; the amazing thing is when your really open your mind and look..
Pics by Uviwe in Avant-garde...
I Love Soweto Posters
TSJS X Smak
TSJS X Keabetswe
TSJS X Justice
TSJS X Toxicherb
So we commissioned some designers to do some posters for the I Love Soweto Campaign. These will be on Sale at Thesis Concept Store going for R100 a pop. Their limited to 5 per design and are a good investment in the arts. Show love...
Soweto Kasi lama kasi utshele abangazi..... Translation (Soweto ultimate hood, spread the word)
This Sunday....
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Preservation for Repository Practitioners
Aston Business School Birmingham, Thursday 27th May 2010.
In conjunction with the Repositories Support Project (RSP) and the Enhancing Repository Infrastructure in Scotland project (ERIS), we here at WRN are organising a free, one- day workshop at the Aston Business School Conference Centre Birmingham on Thursday 27th May, looking at preservation issues and repositories.
We have created a hands-on, practical programme with preservation tool presentations from the Digital Curation Centre (DCC) and the PLANETS project as well as facilitated discussion sessions looking in to preservation issues and your repository, and how to construct an action plan and preservation policy to use in your institution.
For a draft programme and booking please see the RSP event page.
In conjunction with the Repositories Support Project (RSP) and the Enhancing Repository Infrastructure in Scotland project (ERIS), we here at WRN are organising a free, one- day workshop at the Aston Business School Conference Centre Birmingham on Thursday 27th May, looking at preservation issues and repositories.
We have created a hands-on, practical programme with preservation tool presentations from the Digital Curation Centre (DCC) and the PLANETS project as well as facilitated discussion sessions looking in to preservation issues and your repository, and how to construct an action plan and preservation policy to use in your institution.
For a draft programme and booking please see the RSP event page.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Glyndŵr score a century!
GURO- Glyndŵr University's research repository can now boast over 100 items!
GURO's content has increased by 1350% over the last 6 months bringing GURO's grand total of items to 116. Over half of these items are also full text.
Keep up the good work Glyndŵr!
If you would like to find out more about GURO please contact Misha Jepson, Repository Administrator at repository@glyndwr.ac.uk.
GURO's content has increased by 1350% over the last 6 months bringing GURO's grand total of items to 116. Over half of these items are also full text.
Keep up the good work Glyndŵr!
If you would like to find out more about GURO please contact Misha Jepson, Repository Administrator at repository@glyndwr.ac.uk.
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
I LOVE SOWETO
Ek se! Wat se daar? Mjojo! This might sound impolite, but that greeting is filled with lots of what we call “Ubuntu”. The spirit of Soweto. In all its glory: Soweto is the place to be now; the epitome township of South Africa. Slowly shifting into the city zone; it’s the fastest growing township in the world. From any corner around the world: if you come to South Africa: besides Cape Town; you need to pass by Soweto.
Originally: South Western Townships; the original idea about it was to seclude black people from Joburg( possibly from the world) & therefore segregating the people further according to clans. Sotho’s were placed in a specific place, so was the Tswana’s, Zulu’s, Shangaan’s , etc. Therefore came around places like Klipspruit, Orlando, Diepkloof, Dube, White City(mzimhlophe), Mzimhlophe( White City), Mofolo, Zola, Emdeni, Mapetla & Dobsonville to name a few. With the different cultures & languages: this township was to become, known by many, for its multi greatness. All this came about during the apartheid regime, white supremacy that suppressed the black Africans in their own native land. This all was the peak of history in the making after the World wars.
Unknowingly it brought about change of mind sets of our people & the world at large. Voices were heard & the eyes of many saw. The voices that cried for freedom & the eyes that cried for the suffering of its own people. Greatness was yet to come from this special place. The greatness of Richard Maponya, Nelson Mandela, Oliver Tambo & the late Dr Motlana; in business & freedom fighting. On the other side of this beautiful nation there was music; which was a great reliever by Brenda Fassie, Yvonne Chaka Chaka, Sipho “Hotsix” Mabuse. These people were the savours of this place & they set the platforms/foundations for many of us to build upon for the future. Many followed them & followed in more admirations to build this town further than anticipated by the apartheid regime. More than 30 years later into recognition; this place has grown & surpassed every expectation had upon it. The future was born. From spinning cars of road rage art, fashionable pantsulas in dance mode that freed Sowetans from the american social stigma. Its a place that welcomed the world’s influence, it embraced everything that the world had to give & it gave what the world try so much to take from it.
Now we eating our hearts out in restaurants like Nambitha, Sakhumzi & Wandi’s set right in the centre of this ever rising location. A still to be contested clothing store called THESIS Concept Store; which has been shifting boundaries of fashion & youth culture to a maximum stretch. As done in Europe: youth & art development is very conceptual & building its own stage in the world. Township terror of skaters, designers(fashion & graphics respectively), graffiti artists, djs, music producers, film makers, dancers, singers, hip-hop artists, make- up artists, fine artists, pottery artists, entrepreneurs & writers. Urban evolution at its best from all creative art forms greatness is being bred.
Black or white we are now united & welcoming, today we holding no grudges; we just holding ideas & in need to work together to produce. This is why I love Soweto, for its history, culture & change. Its the world in a township....
Mendeley - Organize research, collaborate, and discover new knowledge
I recently attended Dev8D, an event funded by JISC with the aim of bringing together developers from higher education and other sectors in order to learn from one another and ultimately create better, smarter technology for research.
Part of the event included Expert Sessions where latest developments and solutions were presented. Amongst these was an overview of Mendeley - a free research management tool for desktop and web that has been described as a fusion of last.fm and iTunes for research papers!
Mendeley allows researchers to manage their libraries by automatically extracting metadata from researcher papers (in PDF format) which can then be used to create citations and bibliographies. Full-text searches are also supported and users can 'mark up' documents with comments on specific sections. But the real power of Mendeley lies in the social networking features and collective data gathered from users. Groups of like minded researchers can be created for sharing and collaboratively tagging and annotating research papers. The service also provides statistics about research papers, authors and topics allowing users to get recommendations and explore research trends.
The growth in users has been staggering since its release in 2008 - currently there are approximately 8000 institutions using Mendeley with 22,000 research groups collaborating and over 18,000,000 documents in people's libraries! It is quickly becoming one of the largest academic databases around and with funding recently secured from JISC and Europe, Mendeley propose to allow institutions to harvest documents deposited by their academics.
If you'd like to take a closer look, you can sign up and download Mendeley for free.
Part of the event included Expert Sessions where latest developments and solutions were presented. Amongst these was an overview of Mendeley - a free research management tool for desktop and web that has been described as a fusion of last.fm and iTunes for research papers!
Mendeley allows researchers to manage their libraries by automatically extracting metadata from researcher papers (in PDF format) which can then be used to create citations and bibliographies. Full-text searches are also supported and users can 'mark up' documents with comments on specific sections. But the real power of Mendeley lies in the social networking features and collective data gathered from users. Groups of like minded researchers can be created for sharing and collaboratively tagging and annotating research papers. The service also provides statistics about research papers, authors and topics allowing users to get recommendations and explore research trends.
The growth in users has been staggering since its release in 2008 - currently there are approximately 8000 institutions using Mendeley with 22,000 research groups collaborating and over 18,000,000 documents in people's libraries! It is quickly becoming one of the largest academic databases around and with funding recently secured from JISC and Europe, Mendeley propose to allow institutions to harvest documents deposited by their academics.
If you'd like to take a closer look, you can sign up and download Mendeley for free.
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