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CompTIA IT Fundamentals+ Course | Module 7 Part 7: WAN Communications
OSN-K Informatika 2024
OSN-K Informatika 2024
OSN-K Informatika 2024
OSN-K Informatika 2024
OSN-K Informatika 2024
CompTIA IT Fundamentals+ Course | Module 11 Part 8: Navigating the File System
CompTIA IT Fundamentals+ Course | Module 13 Part 3: Safer Web Browsing
CompTIA IT Fundamentals+ Course | Module 13 Part 6: Web Browser Extensions and Addons
CompTIA IT Fundamentals+ Course | Module 14 Part 2: Identifying the Problem
CompTIA IT Fundamentals+ Course | Module 14 Part 3: Research the Problem
CompTIA IT Fundamentals+ Course | Module 16 Part 7: Relational Methods
CompTIA IT Fundamentals+ Course | Module 18 Part 1
CompTIA IT Fundamentals+ Course | Module 19 Part 2
Visual images have been selected, edited, reframed—even manipulated—before they reach us, often in ways designed to elicit an emotional response. Explore the impact of reuse and mislabeling, photo selection effect, and deliberate alteration or forgery to affect how we see and feel about an image. Then, employ Label to Disable to diffuse the threat of visual misinformation.
Examine the birth of the 250-year Safavid Empire, established by the religious leader, warrior, and poet Ismail. Observe how Ismail forcibly converted his entire kingdom to the Shiite Islamic faith, introduced a new military system, and put in place the Persian bureaucratic framework that underlies the modern nation of Iran.
Examine the strengths and weaknesses of three primary types of evidence: narrative evidence, empirical evidence, and evidence based on authority. As you review each type of evidence, you will see them in action as Professor Atchison applies them to debates about gun control, climate change, and physician-assisted suicide.
Once each case is built, it's time for a cross-examination-a chance to interrogate your opponents to better understand their arguments, identify holes in their reasoning, and keep the audience engaged. This first of three lectures explores the history of debate and reflects on the goals of cross-examination.
No plan survives contact with the enemy, which means no matter how well you've constructed your case, you will need to defend it. Fortunately, there are several straightforward elements of a good rebuttal-assessment, organization, and emotional appeal-and Professor Atchison guides you through each element in this lecture.
You can't truly grasp a country's culture without understanding its ideas about the family. Explore the three main models of Japanese family life: the aristocratic model (uji), the samurai model (ie), and the postwar model. Along the way, learn about shifting attitudes toward domestic life, including women's rights and family planning.