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Good Day for It - Deputy Doug Brady (Joe Flanigan)
Bonus: Robert Patrick
#good day for it#deputy doug brady#joe flanigan#robert patrick#luke cain#stargate actors#sga#the film is meh at the best
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In small-town Texas, affable and popular mortician Bernie Tiede strikes up a friendship with Marjorie Nugent, a wealthy widow well known for her sour attitude. When she becomes controlling and abusive, Bernie goes to great lengths to remove himself from her grasp. Credits: TheMovieDb. Film Cast: Bernie Tiede: Jack Black Marjorie Nugent: Shirley MacLaine Danny Buck Davidson: Matthew McConaughey Scrappy Holmes: Brady Coleman Lloyd Hornbuckle: Richard Robichaux Don Leggett: Rick Dial Sheriff Huckabee: Brandon Smith Rev. Woodard: Larry Jack Dotson Molly: Merrilee McCommas Carl: Mathew Greer Townsperson: Marjorie Dome Townsperson: Tim Cariker Townsperson: Fern Luker Townsperson: Jack Payne Townsperson: Sonny Carl Davis Townsperson: Chris Humphrey Mourner: Jesse Lucio Townsperson: Ann Reeves Townsperson: Kay Epperson Townsperson: Ira Bounds Townsperson: James Baker Townsperson: Kay McConaughey Townsperson: Kristi Youngblood Townsperson: Kenny Brevard Townsperson: Margaret Bowman Townsperson: Mollie Fuller Townsperson: Tanja Givens Townsperson: Glenda Jones Townsperson: Travis Blevins Townsperson: Sylvia Froman Townsperson: Martha Long Townsperson: Jo Perkins Townsperson: Reba Tarjick Townsperson: Dale Dudley Townsperson: James Wilson Townsperson: Teresa Edwards Townsperson: Billy Vaticalos Townsperson: Rob Anthony Larry Brumley: Tommy G. Kendrick Townsperson: Pam McDonald Townsperson: Kathy Gollmitzer Townsperson: Cozette McNeely Professor Fleming: Richard Andrew Jones Friend of Deceased: Charles Bailey Mrs. Pebworth: Suzi McLaughlin Mr. Estes: Grant James Mrs. Estes: Juli Erickson Dwayne Nugent: J.D. Young Dwayne Jr.: Charlie m Stewart Lewie: Joe Stevens Esmerelda: Raquel Gavia Church Goer: Amparo García Oil Worker: Toby Metcalf Chainsaw Artist: Doug Moreland Pianist: Edward Ji Guys & Dolls Performer: Jill Blackwood Mel: David Blackwell Kevin: Gabriel Luna Photographer: Deana Newcomb Assistant Director: David Steakley Bank Manager: Peter Harrell Jr. Deputy Sheriff: Joe Leroy Reynolds Truck Driver: Christian Stokes Generator Operator: John Hornbuckle Sheriff’s Deputy #2: Wray Crawford Café Waitress: Margaret Hoard IRS Agent: Charles Allen Eskew TV Reporter: Quita Culpepper Cashier: Mona Lee Fultz Judge: Jerry Biggs Lead Juror: Robert Works Community Theater Group: Chris Barfield Community Theater Group: Taylor Bryant Community Theater Group: Colin Bevis Community Theater Group: Jacqui Bloom Community Theater Group: Joshua Denning Community Theater Group: Ellie Edwards Community Theater Group: Alaina Flores Community Theater Group: Jennifer Foster Community Theater Group: Leslie Hethcox Community Theater Group: Jordan Hill Community Theater Group: Berkley Jones Community Theater Group: Trevor McGinnis Community Theater Group: Mika Odom Community Theater Group: Chell Parkins Community Theater Group: David Ponton Community Theater Group: Gray Randolph Community Theater Group: Rachel Hull-Ryde Community Theater Group: Ian Saunders Community Theater Group: Madelyn Shaffer Community Theater Group: Larissa Slota Community Theater Group: Daniel Rae Srivastava Community Theater Group: Ellen Stader Community Theater Group: Lara Wright Mrs. Senior Carthage Pageant Contestant: Betty Andrews Mrs. Senior Carthage Pageant Contestant: Marcia Bailey Mrs. Senior Carthage Pageant Contestant: Umpy Bechtol Mrs. Senior Carthage Pageant Contestant: Nita Bouldin Mrs. Senior Carthage Pageant Contestant: Nellie Hickerson Mrs. Senior Carthage Pageant Contestant: Jeanette Kloppe Mrs. Senior Carthage Pageant Contestant: Geraldine Miller Mrs. Senior Carthage Pageant Contestant: Sharon Rigsbee Mrs. Senior Carthage Pageant Contestant: Debbie Shaw Mrs. Senior Carthage Pageant Contestant: Flo Weiershausen Mrs. Senior Carthage Pageant Contestant: Gina Wooten Juror: Gary Askins Juror: Ben Bachelder Juror: Meredith Beal Juror: Stacey Bruck Juror: Michelle Briscoe Juror: Lesa Brooks Juror: Gayla Bruce Juror: Brenda Bunton Juror: Kristi Copeland Juror: Jeff Davis Juror: Orion Gallagher Juror: Kenneth C. Liverman Juror: Linda Rudwick Juror: Mary Stifflemir...
#1990s#based on magazine#based on true story#carthage#confession of crime#dark comedy#duringcreditsstinger#embezzlement#estranged family member#funeral director#funeral home#hick#hidden corpse#jury trial#missing person#newspaper or article#prison visit#stockbroker#texas#Top Rated Movies
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Last night’s election result is a nightmare for most of us and I’m sure nobody is interested in dwelling on that, but there are a few specific things I wanted to talk about, both good and bad.
Turnout
As it stands, Elections Ontario has the turnout count pegged at 43%. The ridings with the highest turnout are Huron—Bruce with 54%, and then both Niagara West and Parry Sound—Muskoka with 53%. The ridings with the lowest turnout were Kiiwetinoong with 28% (only 92% of results are in), Humber River—Black Creek with 32%, and Windsor West with 33%.
It’s impossible to gauge how many voters were discouraged from voting by polls that consistently showed the PCs with a strong advantage. We also don’t know how many people didn’t vote due to Covid-19 infection or a lack of easy access to a nearby polling station. All parties were handed a major setback yesterday when a tech issue prevented them from downloading lists of which voters had already cast a ballot and which hadn’t yet, so their ability to work strategically yesterday was limited. Regardless, 43% is a pathetic turnout rate.
It’s worth noting that the Green Party campaigned relentlessly in Parry Sound—Muskoka because, with no Liberal candidate running, they had a good chance of winning that seat. A lot of effort was made to engage with voters and win their support, both from the Greens and the incumbent PCs. Niagara West is Sam Oosterhoff’s riding, where he can mobilize a large group of supporters from his church to canvass and help people vote. Running an energetic campaign is a candidate’s job, but for the rest of us, volunteering and helping to get people to a polling station really does help. Persuading friends and family to vote helps. We’re at a disadvantage in a first past the post electoral system, so there’s zero room for apathy.
Andrea Horwath and the NDP
After four elections as leader, Andrea Horwath read the room and stepped down after running a low-energy and uninspiring campaign. In Brampton, deputy party leader Sara Singh lost her seat, as did Gurratan Singh. The PCs secured several union endorsements over the traditionally more labour-friendly NDP. The Liberals will get more attention for their trainwreck of an election, but yesterday was awful for the NDP.
With Horwath quitting, the NDP’s other deputy leader, John Vanthof, may be interested in running for the party leadership. Joel Harden and Marit Stiles are other potential contenders.
Notable losers
New Blue MPP Belinda Karahalios and New Blue leader Jim Karahalios both lost badly in Cambridge and Kitchener—Conestoga respectively. Derek Sloan also lost by a huge margin. The former Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders lost in Kathleen Wynne’s old riding.
The Liberals took the riding of Kingston and the Islands from the NDP, beating Mary Rita Holland, the former president of Ontario’s NDP. Sandeep Singh, who was controversially chosen as the NDP candidate in Brampton North over the incumbent, Kevin Yarde, also lost.
Steven Del Duca has stepped down after failing to secure party status for the Liberals or win in Vaughan—Woodbridge. After flipping from the PCs to the Liberals in 2020, MPP Amanda Simard lost her seat and two of the most well-known Liberal newbie candidates, nurse Tyler Watt and vaccination advocate Jill Promoli, also lost.
There’s not much for the PCs to be disappointed about, but their candidate in Haldimand—Norfolk lost to an independent. Former seven-term PC MPP Toby Barrett chose not to run in this election, but he endorsed his assistant Bobbi Ann Brady who was running as an independent.
Notable winners
After narrowly losing in 2018, Chandra Pasma unexpectedly flipped Ottawa West—Nepean to the NDP. With the NDP’s only other flip, Lise Vaugeois won in Thunder Bay—Superior North.
The biggest winners are obviously the PCs. It’s rare to win a comfortable majority and then increase that majority in the next election. Opposition to Doug Ford and the PCs over the last four years has been ineffective, and we need a hard reset in terms of organization. Signing petitions, marching to Queen’s Park, and literally begging Lisa MacLeod for help has made no material difference on PC policy. I hope that the NDP will fix their deep-seated problems and set the party on a better path, but mostly I hope that people who are upset today will feel motivated to help their neighbours who will be hit hardest by four more years of PC cuts and also to join a group organizing for material and achievable wins.
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CAAA SAN DIEGO
The California Applicants Attorneys Association winter convention is always one of the largest gatherings in the California workers’ comp industry.
The convention brings together a large number of the prominent applicant attorney firms as well as key stakeholders and policymakers. This year’s conference, held in San Diego, was no exception.
The January 2019 conference came at a time of some uncertainty regarding the direction of California workers’ comp. Governor Newsom has yet to announce his full policy-making team. If Newsom has any workers’ comp reforms or priority issues in mind, it is known only to him and his closest confidants.
One of the things that CAAA does exceedingly well is sponsoring excellent educational panels. I’ve been to scores of CAAA conventions and have to say that the level of preparation and analysis has never been better than this year’s conference.
That’s important, because CAAA’s educational efforts lift the level of lawyering that disabled workers depend on.
Attendees hear from some of the best and brightest attorneys in the field. Recent cases and theories are discussed. Attorneys often leave inspired by what they have heard, and empowered to take approaches that will benefit their worker clients.
Future blog posts will explore many of the primary topics explored during the CAAA panel sessions. But here is a quick snapshot of some of the “hot” topics that were considered:
• “Kite”, which deals with the aftermath of the Kite case handled by my law partner at Boxer & Gerson, Michael Gerson. The issue in Kite and its progeny is whether impairments must be combined under the CVC chart, or whether and when that can be rebutted and the impairments added;
• “Benson”, which deals with the aftermath of the Benson case. The issue is whether and when an apportionment determination must allocate to separate injuries, and what happens when the disability is caused by “inextricably intertwined” injuries;
• QME panel/QME process problems and strategies to rebut QMEs
• The recent Dynamex case (with its ABC test for employment in a wage and hour context) and the multi-factorial Borello employment test that has been used in workers’ comp for years. Speakers noted that there have been dueling bills introduced in the California legislature that would either expand or extinguish the application of the Dynamex ABC test;
• The likely items that will be the focus of the DWC in 2019. This was presented by current AD George Parisotto and by Chief Judge Paige Levy. Doctor access to the ACOEM guides, a revised system for compensating QMEs, revised UR regulations, DWC access to UR data, further focus on enforcing anti-fraud measures, revision of the RFA form format, walk-thru procedures, district office security concerns, a backup court recording system and developing an EAMS replacement or upgrade were noted as some of the items that are currently being reviewed or may be considered;
• A discussion presented by many of the current WCAB Commissioners (Zalewski, Lowe, Sweeney, Snellings and Deputy Anne Schmitz). This included discussion of reasons for delays at the WCAB (where reconsideration granted for study can lead to lengthy waiting) and analysis of cases involving panel QME disputes;
• Discussion of “The Most Important Cases”, a perennial convention must-see; these cases included a number of cases where CAAA was on the losing end, including Fitzpatrick, Lindh, and King V. Comp Partners;
• A round-table on the current system, the impact of the 2018 election and a new administration featuring CHSWC commissioners Martin Brady (employer-side member) and Doug Bloch (labor-side member) as well as Assembly consultant Mark Rakich, a key figure in legislative matters.
• Medicare set asides and the complexities of how they are shaped by carriers and vendors, and what applicant attorneys should do to protect their clients and themselves;
• The concepts of “direct cause” and “cause”, the difference between medical and vocational apportionment, apportionment to lack of education and language skills, and the ramifications of these issues in cases where permanent total disability is alleged;
• Current ethical issues that arise in handling cases;
• Understanding how burdens of proof affect apportionment and other comp issues
Whatever your stakeholder perspective, the sessions were a worthwhile exploration of issues that will be critical to the California system in the coming months and years.
Stay tuned.
Julius Young
https://www.boxerlaw.com/attorney/julius-o-young/
The post CAAA SAN DIEGO appeared first on Law Offices of Ainbinder & Pratt.
CAAA SAN DIEGO
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CAAA SAN DIEGO
The California Applicants Attorneys Association winter convention is always one of the largest gatherings in the California workers’ comp industry.
The convention brings together a large number of the prominent applicant attorney firms as well as key stakeholders and policymakers. This year’s conference, held in San Diego, was no exception.
The January 2019 conference came at a time of some uncertainty regarding the direction of California workers’ comp. Governor Newsom has yet to announce his full policy-making team. If Newsom has any workers’ comp reforms or priority issues in mind, it is known only to him and his closest confidants.
One of the things that CAAA does exceedingly well is sponsoring excellent educational panels. I’ve been to scores of CAAA conventions and have to say that the level of preparation and analysis has never been better than this year’s conference.
That’s important, because CAAA’s educational efforts lift the level of lawyering that disabled workers depend on.
Attendees hear from some of the best and brightest attorneys in the field. Recent cases and theories are discussed. Attorneys often leave inspired by what they have heard, and empowered to take approaches that will benefit their worker clients.
Future blog posts will explore many of the primary topics explored during the CAAA panel sessions. But here is a quick snapshot of some of the “hot” topics that were considered:
• “Kite”, which deals with the aftermath of the Kite case handled by my law partner at Boxer & Gerson, Michael Gerson. The issue in Kite and its progeny is whether impairments must be combined under the CVC chart, or whether and when that can be rebutted and the impairments added;
• “Benson”, which deals with the aftermath of the Benson case. The issue is whether and when an apportionment determination must allocate to separate injuries, and what happens when the disability is caused by “inextricably intertwined” injuries;
• QME panel/QME process problems and strategies to rebut QMEs
• The recent Dynamex case (with its ABC test for employment in a wage and hour context) and the multi-factorial Borello employment test that has been used in workers’ comp for years. Speakers noted that there have been dueling bills introduced in the California legislature that would either expand or extinguish the application of the Dynamex ABC test;
• The likely items that will be the focus of the DWC in 2019. This was presented by current AD George Parisotto and by Chief Judge Paige Levy. Doctor access to the ACOEM guides, a revised system for compensating QMEs, revised UR regulations, DWC access to UR data, further focus on enforcing anti-fraud measures, revision of the RFA form format, walk-thru procedures, district office security concerns, a backup court recording system and developing an EAMS replacement or upgrade were noted as some of the items that are currently being reviewed or may be considered;
• A discussion presented by many of the current WCAB Commissioners (Zalewski, Lowe, Sweeney, Snellings and Deputy Anne Schmitz). This included discussion of reasons for delays at the WCAB (where reconsideration granted for study can lead to lengthy waiting) and analysis of cases involving panel QME disputes;
• Discussion of “The Most Important Cases”, a perennial convention must-see; these cases included a number of cases where CAAA was on the losing end, including Fitzpatrick, Lindh, and King V. Comp Partners;
• A round-table on the current system, the impact of the 2018 election and a new administration featuring CHSWC commissioners Martin Brady (employer-side member) and Doug Bloch (labor-side member) as well as Assembly consultant Mark Rakich, a key figure in legislative matters.
• Medicare set asides and the complexities of how they are shaped by carriers and vendors, and what applicant attorneys should do to protect their clients and themselves;
• The concepts of “direct cause” and “cause”, the difference between medical and vocational apportionment, apportionment to lack of education and language skills, and the ramifications of these issues in cases where permanent total disability is alleged;
• Current ethical issues that arise in handling cases;
• Understanding how burdens of proof affect apportionment and other comp issues
Whatever your stakeholder perspective, the sessions were a worthwhile exploration of issues that will be critical to the California system in the coming months and years.
Stay tuned.
Julius Young
https://www.boxerlaw.com/attorney/julius-o-young/
CAAA SAN DIEGO published first on http://lawpallp.blogspot.com
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How the news media portray gun owners
By Denise-Marie Ordway, Journalist’s Resource, Oct. 3, 2018
A common criticism aimed at journalists is their tendency to portray some groups in the United States as “the other”--framing stories as though certain groups aren’t part of the world where journalists themselves and the bulk of their audiences live. Think rural America.
Scholars have documented this approach and Journalist’s Resource has created tip sheets to help newsrooms become aware of this habit and its implications.
Here we’ve gathered research to help journalists consider how they cover another group with whom some appear to have trouble relating: people who own and use firearms. Americans use them for hunting, sport and personal protection or collect them as a hobby. Members of both the Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts of America--longstanding organizations that serve millions of children a year--learn to load and use guns.
Ben Hallman, a former deputy editor of The Trace, a nonprofit news organization that focuses on gun violence, has written about the news media’s shortcomings in this area. Reporters “frame stories in ways that make it clear they see gun-owning Americans … as distinctly other,” he explains in a piece he wrote for the Columbia Journalism Review.
According to survey data from the Pew Research Center, more than 4 in 10 U.S. adults live in a gun-owning household. In rural areas, the number is almost 6 in 10. In the Northeast, 27 percent of people live in a home with a gun, compared with 45 percent in the South.
Trent “Tate” Steidley, an assistant professor in the University of Denver’s Department of Sociology and Criminology, told Journalist’s Resource that news reports often don’t present a complete picture of gun owners.
For example, gun owners are “by and large, white, Protestant, middle-aged to older males with moderate to conservative leanings,” but news stories often fail to reflect that, said Steidley, who has studied media coverage of gun owners and teaches a course called “Guns and Society.” He said the media’s focus on gun violence in heavily populated areas makes it appear as though gun owners generally live in major cities and use their weapons to harm others.
“The types of things covered in news tend to focus on violence in big cities like Chicago and New York, but most gun owners live in rural areas,” he said in a telephone interview. “There’s a big disconnect between those two facts.”
A study published in the journal Written Communication spotlights other problems with the way gun owners are portrayed. Doug Downs, an associate professor in Montana State University’s Department of English, analyzed newspaper articles, editorials and letters to the editor from 31 major newspapers in the U.S. and Canada between October 1999 and April 2000. He found that newspapers rarely covered gun owners outside of courtrooms, morgues and protests and tended to represent them as a monolithic group. Gun owners often “are explicitly or implicitly characterized as selfish, incompetent, and irresponsible, caring more about guns than people,” Downs explains in the journal article, published in 2002.
Another key finding: Newsrooms appear to be “silencing perspectives on gun ownership that would show it more favorably than do the frames of a cosmopolitan worldview,” he writes.
A study that Steidley led looks specifically at how the news media cover the National Rifle Association (NRA). He and his co-author, Cynthia Colen, an associate professor at Ohio State University, examined how the New York Times responded to press releases from the NRA and the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence between January 2000 and June 2011. Their findings indicate that press release packages from the Brady Campaign resonate more with the Times, and that the newspaper is willing to share information to facilitate the efforts of the Brady Campaign but not the NRA.
When Steidley and Colen examined press releases from the Brady Campaign, they found that an increase of one press release per week containing a message emphasizing the tragic outcomes of gun violence improved the odds of Brady being included in the Times’ coverage by 52.2 percent. An increase of one Brady press release per week announcing administrative information--annual meetings and conventions, for instance--increased the odds the organization would be included in coverage by 56.1 percent, according to the study, published in Social Science Quarterly in 2017.
Meanwhile, “regardless of the type or frequency of packages used in weekly NRA press releases, press releases do not predict media coverage of the NRA,” the authors write.
[Editor: In sharing this research, the point is not to express support for gun ownership but for unbiased and impartial media coverage.]
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OTR Links 11/21/2017
The Best of Ontario-Educators Daily
The best of ontario-educators daily is out! https://t.co/It6yRMKYM6 Stories via @digitalnative @hillsjelkdsb @HeidiSiwak #edchat #onted
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 21, 2017 The best of ontario-educators daily is out! https://t.co/It6yRMKYM6 Stories via @TJGoertz @RitaGivlin @tlsaloranta #onted The best of ontario-educators daily is out! https://t.co/It6yRMKYM6 Stories via @TJGoertz @RitaGivlin @tlsaloranta #onted
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 21, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us edchat onted
The Best of Ontario-Educators Daily
The best of ontario-educators daily is out! https://t.co/BlCpVrUcvC Stories via @karynb5 @Alex__Johnstone @mrmuzzdog #edchat #edtech
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017 The best of ontario-educators daily is out! https://t.co/BlCpVrUcvC Stories via @Staudt1 @brmf_rm @omlandbl #edtech The best of ontario-educators daily is out! https://t.co/BlCpVrUcvC Stories via @Staudt1 @brmf_rm @omlandbl #edtech
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us edtech edchat
The Best of Ontario-Educators 4 Daily
The latest The Best of Ontario-Educators 4 Daily! https://t.co/5D5GSdsJBE Thanks to @Toadmummy @bogiemomof2 @jdbutler13 #edtech
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017 The latest The Best of Ontario-Educators 4 Daily! https://t.co/5D5GSdsJBE Thanks to @mrs_seilerHWDSB @vickiemorgado1 @scorvese The latest The Best of Ontario-Educators 4 Daily! https://t.co/5D5GSdsJBE Thanks to @mrs_seilerHWDSB @vickiemorgado1 @scorvese
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us edtech
The Best of Ontario-Educators 2 daily
The best of ontario-educators2 daily is out! is out! https://t.co/JTbyslyWgK Stories via @ateachertweet @Jason_To @Silvana_Hoxha #edchat
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017 The best of ontario-educators2 daily is out! is out! https://t.co/JTbyslyWgK Stories via @1DeLorenzi @DawnTelfer #makered The best of ontario-educators2 daily is out! is out! https://t.co/JTbyslyWgK Stories via @1DeLorenzi @DawnTelfer #makered
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: makered IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us edchat
When Students See Themselves As Digital First
When Students See Themselves As Digital First https://t.co/jaZD4UJSk8
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
The Best of Ontario-Educators 3 Daily
The latest Best of Ontario-Educators3 Daily! https://t.co/gjzYtSwakz Thanks to @akgtCanada @sarahsanders33 @jason_mcd_ #edtech #edchat
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017 The latest Best of Ontario-Educators3 Daily! https://t.co/gjzYtSwakz Thanks to @MrsGeekChic @Rylone3 @WhiteRoomRadio #edchat The latest Best of Ontario-Educators3 Daily! https://t.co/gjzYtSwakz Thanks to @MrsGeekChic @Rylone3 @WhiteRoomRadio #edchat
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us edchat edtech
Gary Brady on Flipboard
Reach Edtech Outlook 2017 https://t.co/UoNUTF6CIX via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
The Doug Peterson Community News
The latest The Doug Peterson Community News! https://t.co/fqX4ZA84Qw Thanks to @JacquotLeGrand @mrpotter @dan_bodkin #edtech #edchat
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017 The latest The Doug Peterson Community News! https://t.co/fqX4ZA84Qw #edchat The latest The Doug Peterson Community News! https://t.co/fqX4ZA84Qw #edchat
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us edchat edtech
www.google.com
Happy Children’s Day 2017! #GoogleDoodlehttps://t.co/y34zX88hQb
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
Children’s Day 2017 (Multiple Countries)
Happy Children’s Day 2017! #GoogleDoodle https://t.co/y34zX88hQb
tags: via:packrati.us GoogleDoodle
Flipboard on Flipboard
Classroom Rules Minions Video https://t.co/z3bP668Fhe via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
Methods of Professional Growth for Teachers
Professional Growth Methods for Teachers https://t.co/1tKAI9cig5 via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
Microsoft did a lot of bad things with Windows Phone, says app developer : News, News – India Today
Microsoft did a lot of bad things with Windows Phone, says app developer https://t.co/dHfgAwvuI6 via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
winch1974 on Flipboard
Microsoft Bing has the best Black Friday shopping site we’ve ever seen https://t.co/8FFIeofT7I via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
Mehran Azizi on Flipboard
Walmart Canada gives a sneak peek at its Black Friday tech deals https://t.co/0a09beOns3 via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
Flipboard on Flipboard
How to turn your website into a desktop app https://t.co/0EI6yAwHpp via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
Goodbye Apple, goodbye Microsoft… hello Linux
Goodbye Apple, goodbye Microsoft… hello Linux https://t.co/diAE4rsPei via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
Control Alt Achieve: How to Force a Docs Copy WITH Pre-Loaded Comments to Help your Students
How to Force a Docs Copy WITH Pre-Loaded Comments to Help your Students https://t.co/TQ0vHJ5owN via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
Cyber insecurity: The high stakes of data protection in an interconnected world – Article – BNN
Cyber insecurity: The high stakes of data protection in an interconnected world https://t.co/UlzhTaM9J2 via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
How to find out what Facebook knows about you https://t.co/tP6Prh18oe via @flipboard
How to find out what Facebook knows about you https://t.co/tP6Prh18oe via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
What Is a Director of Curriculum and Instruction Job Like?
What Does a Director of Curriculum and Instruction Do? https://t.co/mas0LazyZt via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
Ontario ends five-week college strike after passing back-to-work legislation | National Post
Ontario ends five-week college strike after passing back-to-work legislation | National Post https://t.co/fDyCSSEhGq
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
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Terrance Henry on Flipboard
Samsung is reportedly building a Chromebook with a detachable keyboard https://t.co/beRlgHXK2a via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
17 Household Objects You Thought Were Useless But Are Actually Genius
17 Household Objects You Thought Were Useless But Are Actually Genius https://t.co/WaoImumHfW
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
Your biggest threat is inside your organisation and probably didn’t mean it | ZDNet
Your biggest threat is inside your organisation and probably didn’t mean it https://t.co/pEzAI48Q8f via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
Deputy Dog on Flipboard
The future is digital, our children are analogue. We’re betraying a generation https://t.co/fe1vD0p4Kk via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
How to spot a bad deal during Black Friday | Metro News
How to spot a bad deal during Black Friday https://t.co/zu4ABHCoSV via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
The Unwritten Rules for Github by devdiscuss
The Unwritten Rules for Github by devdiscuss https://t.co/GQN3p3Aw0I via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
Learn to Spot the Sneaky Psychological Tricks Restaurants Use | Mental Floss
Learn to Spot the Sneaky Psychological Tricks Restaurants Use https://t.co/GAp6Au1Amz via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
Flipboard on Flipboard
The Incredible Ways Heineken Uses Big Data, The Internet of Things And Artificial Intelligence (AI) https://t.co/o1z2ZmUclA via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
17 STEM-focused gifts to inspire kids to learn coding and love robotics | TechCrunch
17 STEM-focused gifts to inspire kids to learn coding and love robotics https://t.co/9ciPx3DhR8 via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
What is Incognito Mode on Google Chrome Actually For? – Thrillist
What Chrome’s Incognito Mode Is Actually For, Explained By a Google Exec https://t.co/STDPsaGw0X via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
Flipboard on Flipboard
Can you solve it? This apple teaser is hard core! https://t.co/b3GBGOyD3y via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
Some ‘security people are f*cking morons’ says Linus Torvalds • The Register
Some ‘security people are f*cking morons’ says Linus Torvalds https://t.co/TIMgNB2Mj9 via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
Tesla CEO Elon Musk says he was ‘raised by books’
Billionaire Elon Musk says he was ‘raised by books’ and credits his success to these 8 https://t.co/7qdbJqYlqo via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
Ri Cra on Flipboard
Apple CEO Tim Cook gave a shout-out to a $100-per-year app for doctors — here’s what it does https://t.co/DmfYfHQXyx via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
A new map exhibit documents evolving views of Earth’s interior | Science News
A new map exhibit documents evolving views of Earth’s interior https://t.co/cGFaqhbKCr via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
Toronto book club helps teen girls find their voice – Toronto – CBC News
Toronto book club helps teen girls find their voice https://t.co/pSvDPSa159 via @flipboard
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
About software and branding – doug — off the record
About software and branding https://t.co/mRBjagjezk
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter
OTR Links 11/20/2017 – doug — off the record
OTR Links 11/20/2017 https://t.co/1ocBP2HfS2
— Doug Peterson (@dougpete) November 20, 2017
tags: IFTTT Twitter via:packrati.us
Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.
OTR Links 11/21/2017 published first on http://ift.tt/2gZRS4X
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