Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education. Show all posts

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Dart Flight School : Phnom Penh CodeLab










About Dart Flight School : Phnom Penh ColdeLab

Dart helps you build modern web apps with a new language, core libraries, and tools such as a package manager, editor, and a compiler to JavaScript. Use Angular with Dart for extra jet fuel.

This event will be focusing on enabling Cambodia developers to start off with Dart. Developers will be required to be actively participate in coding, hand-ons activities, presentation of their first flight of dart app.

More information about dart:https://www.dartlang.org/events/2014/flight-school/

When & Where this event will pre organized?

   When: 22 Feb, 2014 from 1.00 PM - 5.00 PM

   Where: To be Confirmed

How to register to join this event?

This event is Free. You'll just need to click Yes in this Google+ Event.


Embed Google Docs Viewer in Joomla Site






























Embed Google Docs Viewer is a plugin for embedding one or more Google Docs Viewers (http://docs.google.com/viewer) to Joomla articles. By using Google Docs Viewer it's possible to quickly view documents online without leaving browser. Adding the viewer to an article is very simple, just add the url of the document that you want to embed, and that's it! It's also possible to define the size of the document, mode of the reader (preview/edit), border layout and link to the full size document.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Workshop on The use of Information Management System in Business


Workshop on
The use of Information Management System in Business

PN Cambodia Alumni Association strives to establish lifelong, meaningful and valued relationships, as well as strong solidarity in order to archive sustainable development for alumni and their community. In order to achieve this we had engaged all PN Cambodia’s former students and current students; to foster a lifelong intellectual and emotional connection between the PN Cambodia and its graduates; and to provide the alumni with goodwill and support. To improve alumni relation, gether new members, and also sharing knowledge, alumni members have organized different projects. Especially this time we have organized workshop “The use of Information Management System in Business” on 16th Feb 2014 from 8:00-11:00 am.

After the workshop you will be able to:
-  understand about the Information Management System
-  know some business applications in both of commercial and open source, which have been used as serving-systems in the company such as HR Management System, ERP, CRMS, etc.
This workshop is really important for IT and business students and employee.

Presented by:
Sopheakmonkol Sok
Co-Founder & CEO at Codingate
Leverage Information Technology Through Collective Genius

Tel: +855 89 75 44 49 | +855 98 699 881
Website  : codingate.com
Personal : monkol.com
Social work: khmertalks.com | pepy.org  | smallworldcambodia.com

About Presenter:
Sok Sopheakmonkol is a new generation Cambodian entrepreneur with a passion for social enterprise and creating educational opportunities for progressive Cambodian youth. He is a 2012 graduate from the University of Hradec Králové in the Czech Republic where he majored in Information Management. Upon completing his Bachelor’s of Science degree, he returned to Cambodia to pursue his career while at the same time providing motivation and direction for other students who are determined to learn and improve their country. Read press online about Sopheakmonkol:http://goo.gl/dbmL5S & http://goo.gl/p1k1VR

Where: St. 371 Phum Tropeang Chhuk (Borey Sorla) Sangtak Tek Thla, Khan Russey Keo, Phnom Penh ,Cambodia
When: 8:00 AM - 11:00 AM, 16 February, 2014
Fee: $1 for Alumni (drink,snack) & Free for current students
Close: 14 Frebruary, 2014

Contact: 097 792 47 21 | sophenpho846@gmail.com

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Aged 10 and 12, they are India's youngest CEOs


Shravan (10) and Sanjay Kumaran (12), two brothers from Chennai have created mobile phone applications that have witnessed over 10,000 downloads across the world already.

Two tech savvy brothers Shravan and Sanjay Kumaran from Chennai have not yet completed school butare already co-founders and President (Shravan)/CEO (Sanjay) of GoDimensions, a mobile applications firm.

Studying in sixth and eighth grades, the Kumaran brothers have created mobile phone applications that have witnessed over 10,000 downloads across the world already. The duo has already designed four applications for the Apple store that have been downloaded in over 20 countries.


Wednesday, January 22, 2014

FOSSASIA 2014 is an exciting Open Technology event in Phnom Penh


FOSSASIA 2014 is an exciting Open Technology event for developers, students, and start ups using open source to build up their businesses. It is a unique opportunity to share the latest innovations in open source technologies and meet contributors and potential partners. FOSSASIA 2014 will take place for the first time in Cambodia. It will be held at Norton University in Phnom Penh from February 28 - March 2. FOSSASIA 2014 will focus on the use of open technologies in sustainable development in order to improve the lives and conditions of those living in poverty.


















Schedule FOSSASIA 2014

The main topics of FOSSASIA 2014 are all related to Free and Open Source Software with talks and workshops about Mobile Solutions, Web Technologies, Linux Operating Systems, Open Education and Open Map solutions.


DayTimeEventLocation
Thursday, Feb.2719.00Pre-MeetingIT Cafe Phnom Penh, Social Meet up
Friday, Feb.289.00-12.00Intro Day (15-20 min presentations about projects and set up of info tables)Norton University Amphitheatre

12.00-17.30Talks and Workshop SessionsNorton University Class Rooms and Lecture Hall
Saturday, Mar.19.00-17.30Community Day (keynotes, talks, workshops)Norton University Class Rooms and Lecture Hall

EveningSocial EventLocation in the city to be announced
Sunday, Mar. 29.00-15.30Phnom Penh Hack DayDifferent Locations in Phnom Penh, IT Cafe, Small World Space, Hackerspace, Open Institute, Web Essentials

Read more details: http://fossasia.org/

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Applying Scholarship in Mastering Social Media at RNTC

Mastering Social Media Course at RNTC
Good morning,


I am Sophen PHO, from Cambodia. I got the information about scholarship of RNTC on social network. It makes me interested in applying the scholarship here.


Let's me introduce myself. I am a poor student who lives in rural area in Kampong Chhnang Province of Cambodia. I passed the two year scholarship full time training in IT Web Programming at PASSERELLES NUMÉRIQUES CAMBODIA. After I finished my association degree at PNC in 2010, I got a job as Web Developer in private company located in Phnom Penh. Then I continued my study in IT at Norton University at the same time I work. I just finished my Bachelor Degree in this year. That is it for my introduce myself.


What I am interested the most in my life is IT Communication in Social Media. There are many ways in social media currently modern technology in the world.


I want to learn Mastering Social Media has some reasons such as:
- It is the major for human development
- It leads the economic growth
- It is best thing for communication nowadays
- It has become a revolution of our century
- It is a way to connect with many people at one time, has very little cost associated with it.
- It brings your attention to real issues that are happening everywhere, it keeps you updated on what’s happening around the world.

It has more reasons than I list above. You can drop the comment for the advantages of Social Media. I look forward to hear and learn from you more.

According to the advantages and the reason what I am interested in Mastering Social Media. I don't hesitate to apply the scholarship here. I strongly believe that I will pass for this course. I can learn the new things in my life which I can bring this skill to develop my country and my people. If not pass what will I do for the next plan. Let's see the next article.

Finally, it is very important skill for me in Mastering Social Media to develop better communication and spread the real information to my people and the world.

Friday, November 1, 2013

Getting started using Google Drive on iPad

I always use Google Drive on PC now I just start using it on iPad. Let's see together how it looks with iPad.

Welcome to Google Drive


Login using your gmail account


Thank for using Google Drive


Have you go!

Saturday, October 26, 2013

The Most Powerful Habit You Can Imagine

Be generous and expert, trustworthy and clear, open-minded and adaptable, persistent and present.

Friday, October 18, 2013

Startup Weekend Phnom Penh in 2013


Startup Weekend is a global event run in many countries and cities around the world. This is the 3rd year for Startup Weekend in Cambodia. 

Startup Weekend is a 54-hours work week where designers, developers, and any startup enthusiasts come together to pitch their business idea, form a team and build startup in that weekend. 

Do not miss the opportunity ! the winner from Cambodia Startup Weekend this year will join Global Startup Battlehttp://globalstartupbattle.co/  to compete with the rest other winners from around the world. That's cool, right ?   

The seat is limited, go and register now atcambodia.startupweekend.org

Some photos from last year Cambodia Startup Weekend https://www.facebook.com/startupweekendcambodia/photos_albums

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

The Work-Life Strategies that Really Matter


Every year for the last decade, I’ve spoken to MBA graduates returning for their one-year reunions. As predictable as the annual return of swallows to San Juan Capistrano, graduates who flock back to campus bring with them real-world anxiety over three things:
1) Work – doing meaningful work;
2) Companionship – finding a life partner, or figuring out life with their partner; and
3) Balance – dividing time and energy between work and family
This weekend, my own business school class marks its 40-year reunion, and the issues won’t have changed much. While for many of us, life’s ups and downs may have rounded off the sharp edges on those same apprehensions, they remain the struggles of our lives.
If any of us in the class of ‘73 has had success in four decades of dealing with these existential concerns, it’s because we recognized the truth of the following:
You can’t do it all yourself. Those who’ve done well will likely have one significant quality in common: They’ll have joined (or formed) the right teams. After picking the best players, they’ll have shared their own successes, and celebrated the successes of others. As Chicago Bulls coach Phil Jackson advised a young and wildly-talented Michael Jordan, “Let the game come to you." After Jordan committed to being a team player (though not always as the nice-guy), the Bulls won six NBA World Championships. In the same way, realizing that both business and family life are “team sports” will help with finding a team-centered life.
Life is a marathon. A meteoric rise right after grad school is impressive, but long-term success is far more satisfying. Life is a marathon, not a sprint. Quick success sometimes goes to people’s heads – and makes them forget everyone who helped them get where they are. In the 1980s, after good fortune and good times made many folks wealthy, real estate markets collapsed. Some panicked; others dug in -- and dug out. It turned out that no one was as smart as they thought on the way up (or quite as dumb as others thought on the way down). But steadfast efforts when the chips were down revealed character not apparent when things were going well.
Bouncing back is key. Scanning reunions for grads once deemed “most likely to succeed” may not reveal the ones who did. Brains and ambition help, but it’s a never-say-die resiliency that allows people to move forward through life’s inevitable setbacks. “Most Likely To Bounce Back After A Fall” might have been a better yearbook category.
Give before you get. Real friends give without calculating a return on their friendship. So do spouses. Even salespeople first give information and authentic assurances in order to make sales. And while children require that you give, give, and give some more, they can return something far more valuable than you ever gave them — the chance to pass on the best of what you know, and the best of who you are, to the next generation. We end up caring about things for which we sacrifice. So, finding opportunities for giving goes a long way to relieving personal and career anxieties – which can be rooted in the desire to get before we give.
Don't underestimate refuge and recovery. I’ve never met a career-driven person who’s found peace in work alone. You need a space for refuge – a way to be alone, to recreate, and to recover; or things can go south. Letdowns are inevitable; so make sure you meditate, pray, stay active, or have a close friend in whom you can confide. Making sure you have the time and place and support for recovery is not selfish. It’s essential.
Wealth, power, fame and influence – perhaps all well and good – don’t reliably deliver satisfaction or meaning in life. I submit that meaning comes from the ability to look back with pride, and to look forward with peace, knowing that those we’ve worked with and cared for are better off for having known us. If recent graduates could be sure of these, they might choose to live with their team in mind.
Author: Joel Peterson

Monday, October 7, 2013

8 Things You Should Not Do Every Day


If you get decent value from making to-do lists, you'll get huge returns--in productivity, in improved relationships, and in your personal well-being--from adding these items to your not to-do list:
Every day, make the commitment not to:
1. Check my phone while I'm talking to someone.
You've done it. You've played the, "Is that your phone? Oh, it must be mine," game. You've tried the you-think-sly-but-actually-really-obvious downwards glance. You've done the, "Wait, let me answer this text..." thing.
Maybe you didn't even say, "Wait." You just stopped talking, stopped paying attention, and did it.
Want to stand out? Want to be that person everyone loves because they make you feel, when they're talking to you, like you're the most important person in the world?
Stop checking your phone. It doesn't notice when you aren't paying attention.
Other people? They notice.
And they care.
2. Multitask during a meeting.
The easiest way to be the smartest person in the room is to be the person who pays the most attention to the room.
You'll be amazed by what you can learn, both about the topic of the meeting and about the people in the meeting if you stop multitasking and start paying close attention. You'll flush out and understand hidden agendas, you'll spot opportunities to build bridges, and you'll find ways to make yourself indispensable to the people who matter.
It's easy, because you'll be the only one trying.
And you'll be the only one succeeding on multiple levels.
3. Think about people who don't make any difference in my life.
Trust me: The inhabitants of planet Kardashian are okay without you.
But your family, your friends, your employees--all the people that really matter to you--are not. Give them your time and attention.
They're the ones who deserve it.
4. Use multiple notifications.
You don't need to know the instant you get an email. Or a text. Or a tweet. Or anything else that pops up on your phone or computer.
If something is important enough for you to do, it's important enough for you to do without interruptions. Focus totally on what you're doing. Then, on a schedule you set--instead of a schedule you let everyone else set--play prairie dog and pop your head up to see what's happening.
And then get right back to work. Focusing on what you are doing is a lot more important than focusing on other people might be doing.
They can wait. You, and what is truly important to you, cannot.
5. Let the past dictate the future.
Mistakes are valuable. Learn from them.
Then let them go.
Easier said than done? It all depends on your perspective. When something goes wrong, turn it into an opportunity to learn something you didn't know--especially about yourself.
When something goes wrong for someone else, turn it into an opportunity to be gracious, forgiving, and understanding.
The past is just training. The past should definitely inform but in no way define you--unless you let it.
6. Wait until I'm sure I will succeed.
You can never feel sure you will succeed at something new, but you can always feel sure you are committed to giving something your best.
And you can always feel sure you will try again if you fail.
Stop waiting. You have a lot less to lose than you think, and everything to gain.
7. Talk behind someone's back.
If only because being the focus of gossip sucks. (And so do the people who gossip.)
If you've talked to more than one person about something Joe is doing, wouldn't everyone be better off if you stepped up and actually talked to Joe about it? And if it's "not your place" to talk to Joe, it's probably not your place to talk about Joe.
Spend your time on productive conversations. You'll get a lot more done--and you'll gain a lot more respect.
8. Say "yes" when I really mean "no."
Refusing a request from colleagues, customers, or even friends is really hard. But rarely does saying no go as badly as you expect. Most people will understand, and if they don't, should you care too much about what they think?
When you say no, at least you'll only feel bad for a few moments. When you say yes to something you really don't want to do you might feel bad for a long time--or at least as long as it takes you to do what you didn't want to do in the first place.
Author: Jeff Haden

Warning! The Things You Must Not Tell Anyone At Work

There are some things we shouldn’t tell anyone at work. Sharing the ‘wrong’ things with co-workers can quickly backfire and leave us exposed, vulnerable or side-lined. While some banter with colleagues is great it is important to know where to draw the line.
Like most of us, I have definitely been there. We usually get an immediate sense for when we have crossed that line between acceptable banter and telling people things we shouldn’t have. It is the looks we get as if they wanted to say: I never thought YOU would do THAT!? Or YOU believe WHAT? You are no longer the person I thought you were…
Anything you tell colleagues will spread faster than a revelation of a secret sex tape showing Kate Middelton and Justin Bieber would on Facebook and Twitter. Always remember everyone loves to pass on gossip. What’s more, most people continue to talk and complain about colleagues when they get home or see friends.
So here are my top 10 things I believe you shouldn’t share with anyone at work:
  1. Salary or money details – Never talk about money at work, be it details about your salary or how much you have spent on your house, car or latest gadget. Talking about money can trigger lots of negative feelings such as jealousy and resentment.
  2. Intimate details about your love or sex life – you might have the most amazing or most miserable love life there is but don't ever share the detail at work.
  3. Whether and how much alcohol you drink – even if you are nursing the hangover from hell or want to share the excesses of your super party weekend, don’t do it at work. It will always look unprofessional. And as for talking about other drugs – don’t even think about it!
  4. Political views – You might feel like saying: Why would anyone in their right mind vote for Obama? Simply don’t do it. Politics can divide people and open up a massive can of worms.
  5. Religious views – The same applies to religious beliefs. It is great that people have their religions but remember that most wars are caused by religious differences.
  6. Non-pc jokes – We all like to have a laugh at work but not if it means you discriminate against anyone. If you feel the need to share jokes just think twice whether they might offend someone.
  7. Your Facebook account – Making friends at work is wonderful but I feel that connecting with all colleagues on Facebook is a step too far. I use LinkedIn for colleagues and Facebook only for close friends. I think it is so hard to control what goes out to others (e.g. comments of friends of friends etc.). Almost every day I see posts and pictures on Facebook that make me cringe (where friends of friends have posted completely inappropriate things) and it is best to keep colleagues out of that loop.
  8. Medical details – For whatever reason we love to talk about our illnesses and ailments. A bit like kids that can't wait to show others their scratches and bruises. Even though we all want to hear about medical details, work is not the place to share how you had an anal probe inserted to check for haemorrhoids.
  9. Gossip and negative comments about co-workers - Even if you think that everyone agrees David from the accounts department is a massive jerk – don’t say it out loud!
  10. That you are looking for a new job – You might feel unhappy in your job and are actively looking for now post, but don’t tell anyone at work. It will very quickly come out and could leave you in an awkward position.
So here you have it, my top 10 things you shouldn’t share at work. Of course you can disagree with any of them and hopefully you’ll let me know where you agree and disagree. Also, there are probably others you would add to this list – please let us know what they are…
Finally thought: Of course there are some work places where it is safe to share more personal details. I am not advocating that you become a work robot that ever share any part of your personality with others. The point I am making is that at work it is usually inappropriate to share these things and can give unwanted ammunition to those who want to expose or side-line you.
Author: Bernard Marr

Friday, September 20, 2013

What to Do Before Downloading iOS 7


Apple is launching its iOS 7 software on Wednesday, and if we've learned anything from major system updates in the past, there will be kinks.
Before you download the new software — which will be pushed to iOS users sometime during the day (we got the iOS 6 notification on our devices around lunchtime last year on the East Coast) — there are a few simple things to do ahead of time in case there are bugs. The last thing you'd want is to have your pictures, music and other files wiped along the way.
To download iOS 7 worry-free, the first step is to back up your data via iCloud. Apple actually backs up the most important data (if using iOS 5 or later) automatically, but the feature has to be enabled. To set this up, visit Settings > iCloud > Backup & Storage. This will back up your iPhone on a daily basis as long as the device's screen is locked, on a Wi-Fi network and connected to power.
But before you download iOS, we suggest doing a manual back up. To do so, follow the same steps as above (Settings > iCloud > Backup & Storage) and then click "Back Up Now."

It will take a bit of time to do a full backup, so just sit tight in the meantime. For those with a ton of data you might not be able to complete the backup — you'll have to either transfer files (photos, etc.) via an Apple connector to a computer, delete a few apps you haven't used in awhile, or make room elsewhere.
You'll probably run into the same issue when trying to update iOS 7 if your device is near storage capacity, so you might want to clean house now.
Another area worth backing up is your iTunes library. Connect your device to a computer to sync with iTunes, but note this might be disabled if you have iCloud backup turned on. RIght-click the device in iTunes under Devices and select Back Up. You can also back it up by clicking the file menu and select Devices > Back Up.
Will you be downloading iOS 7 when it launches or will you be waiting until possible bugs are updated?
Resource from masable