totop

3interCat

iWith.org's Net









MORE INFO :

iwith.org





Join the iWith team

Headline news
What will be the next tech revolution?

What will be the next tech revolution?

Amazon is launching Echo Show, an assistant for your living room in the form of a speaker that allows a glimpse of the next leap in technology: machines we can talk to.

In recent years, we have seen technology advance at a dizzying rate. From game consoles with cartridges that we had to blow on to make them work all the way to self-driving cars, with computers, smartphones, laptops, pocket mp3 players, etc. in between. 

Now, the Internet of Things has come, and it seems it's here to stay. Specifically, Amazon's latest venture is offering a future where a speaker, rather than the smartphone, is the key. EchoShow is a speaker plugged into an outlet, with a touchscreen, designed for the user to make videocalls, watch Youtube videos, or control all manner of household devices.

The new revolution in technology presents another improvement afforded by EchoShow: the ability to speak to the screen and see your voice input converted into video output. Imagine you ask EchoShow, “What are the best films out today?”, and the speaker responds by showing what you asked for in a video onscreen. The idea of this new advance is to substitute text with images. The device has yet to arrive in Spain, but will be available in the US on 28 June, for $299.

Much like Apple's Siri, Alexa is Amazon' virtual assistant. Artificial intelligence is coming into our homes, and all it needs is a plug for electricity and a wireless connection. This is the trend for the coming years. If you would like to know more about the Internet of Things, you can click on the following link.

           

image/jpg

image/jpg


What will be the next tech revolution?

What will be the next tech revolution?

Amazon is launching Echo Show, an assistant for your living room in the form of a speaker that allows a glimpse of the next leap in technology: machines we can talk to.

In recent years, we have seen technology advance at a dizzying rate. From game consoles with cartridges that we had to blow on to make them work all the way to self-driving cars, with computers, smartphones, laptops, pocket mp3 players, etc. in between. 

Now, the Internet of Things has come, and it seems it's here to stay. Specifically, Amazon's latest venture is offering a future where a speaker, rather than the smartphone, is the key. EchoShow is a speaker plugged into an outlet, with a touchscreen, designed for the user to make videocalls, watch Youtube videos, or control all manner of household devices.

The new revolution in technology presents another improvement afforded by EchoShow: the ability to speak to the screen and see your voice input converted into video output. Imagine you ask EchoShow, “What are the best films out today?”, and the speaker responds by showing what you asked for in a video onscreen. The idea of this new advance is to substitute text with images. The device has yet to arrive in Spain, but will be available in the US on 28 June, for $299.

Much like Apple's Siri, Alexa is Amazon' virtual assistant. Artificial intelligence is coming into our homes, and all it needs is a plug for electricity and a wireless connection. This is the trend for the coming years. If you would like to know more about the Internet of Things, you can click on the following link.

           

image/jpg

image/jpg


We are improving the event’s tool in Abcore Cadi!

We are improving the event’s tool in Abcore Cadi!

With this new improvement, internet users will be able to check both previous and future events on the NGO’s website. 

The events’ service is a communication tool allowing you to organise future events by means of tags, a calendar, or an image used as a miniature. The organisations that use Abcore Cadi Internet Services Platform can manage their own events to appear on their website, and now there is a new improvement. Recently, we have made changes to the platform to allow browsers to search for not only future events -as they are able to now- but also previous ones.

One example is the website Barcelona Piano, an online magazine about the world of pianos in the city of Barcelona which has a very up-to-date schedule. On this schedule, you can check events such as concerts, master classes, shows, etc., and with the new system, it is now possible to receive a comprehensive overview of the running of the organisation’s events over the whole year. 

In this way, the Abcore Cadi Internet Services Platform continues to improve and introduce available changes to all organisations without additional charges.


image/jpg

image/jpg


GNRC 5th Forum: The Panama Declaration on Ending Violence Against Children

GNRC 5th Forum: The Panama Declaration on Ending Violence Against Children

Challenged by the global epidemic of violence against children, we, leaders and members of the world’s religious and spiritual traditions, girls and boys, women and men, from 70 countries, together with representatives of governments, the United Nations, and international and grassroots organizations, met in Panama City, Panama for the 5th Forum of the Global Network of Religions for Children (GNRC), from 9-11 May 2017.

Building upon the GNRC’s 17 years of service to the world’s children, we affirm the fundamental dignity of every boy and girl. We reaffirm the moral imperative to protect children from harm, as enshrined and protected in the teachings of all of the world’s religious and spiritual communities and in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and its optional protocols. We believe in the power of interfaith cooperation to transform the world.

Download the full Declaration in English or Spanish here.


Leaders from World’s Major Religions and Spiritual Traditions Commit to New Joint Efforts to End Violence Against Children

Leaders from World’s Major Religions and Spiritual Traditions Commit to New Joint Efforts to End Violence Against Children

GNRC 5th Forum

 

PRESS RELEASE

ISSUED 14th May 2017 – PANAMA CITY, PANAMA; NAIROBI, KENYA; SANTIAGO; CHILE; TOKYO, JAPAN;

Five hundred faith leaders from 70 countries, joined by representatives of governments, the United Nations, and international and grassroots organizations, have made a solemn commitment to greater effort and cooperation in the cause of ending violence against children. The leaders met in Panama City, Panama for the 5th Forum of the Global Network of Religions for Children (GNRC) from 9-11 May 2017, reaffirming the universal “moral imperative to protect children from harm.”

The outcomes of the forum were summed up in “The Panama Declaration on Ending Violence Against Children,” which was adopted enthusiastically by all the participants at the end of the Forum.

The President of the Republic of Panama H.E. Juan Carlos Varela officiated the opening of the Forum, calling for an urgent response from the international community and all of the human family to address the plight of children worldwide. Speaker after speaker, including UNICEF Executive Director Mr. Anthony Lake; UN Special Representative of the Secretary General on Preventing Violence Against Children Ms. Marta Santos Pais; Global Partnership and Fund to End Violence Against Children Director Dr. Susan Bissell; HRH Prince El Hassan bin Talal of Jordan; President of the Pontifical Council on Interreligious Dialogue Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran; World Council of Churches General Secretary Rev. Dr. Olav Fykse Tveit and WCC Moderator Dr. Agnes Abuom, declared in one voice that it is unacceptable that one billion children worldwide continue to endure physical, psychological or sexual violence.

The leaders thanked Rev. Keishi Miyamoto, President of Arigatou International, for convening the GNRC, calling for more support to end the conditions that cause one child to be killed every five minutes in a violent act, worldwide. The faith leaders promised to reject and speak out against all forms of violence against children. Welcoming participants to the GNRC 5th Forum, Rev. Miyamoto maintained that it is indeed possible to end violence against children if religious and spiritual communities, governments and international as well as multilateral organizations work together.

Noting that the causes of violence against children are complex and varied, including deep-seated cultural, political, familial and socio-economic causes such as poverty and social exclusion, the faith leaders called for “extraordinary and urgent collaboration among religious and spiritual communities, UN agencies, international and multilateral organizations, governments, civil society, the private sector, media — and, most importantly, with children” to end today’s unprecedented violence against children.

The faith leaders and international organizations represented also vowed to “embrace internationally agreed strategies and mechanisms to address violence against children, including the Sustainable Development Goals 16.2 on ending abuse, exploitation, trafficking and all forms of violence against and torture of children; 5.2 and 5.3 on ending violence against women and girls; and 8.7 on ending economic exploitation of children.”

The First Lady of the Republic of Panama Honorable Lorena Castillo Garcia de Varela, who also attended the GNRC 5th Forum, asked faith leaders to put aside their differences and do all they can to end violence.

The GNRC Forum is organized every five years by Arigatou International to address issues affecting children globally and bring people together to build a peaceful world.

END


arigatou international header 14

Note to Editors

Global Network of Religions for Children (GNRC)
The GNRC is a global-scale interfaith network of organizations and individuals specifically dedicated to securing the rights and well-being of children everywhere. GNRC members come from all of the world’s major religions and many other spiritual traditions. The GNRC is one of the four main initiatives of Arigatou International, a faith-based non-profit organization. Arigatou International works under the motto of “All for Children,” bringing together people from all walks of life to build a better world for children.

Arigatou International
The primary supporter of the Global Network of Religions for Children (GNRC), Arigatou International, is a non-profit organization which strives to bring people from all walks of life together to build a better world for children. Arigatou International is “All for Children,” and it draws on universal principles of common good to offer compelling new ways for people of diverse religious and cultural backgrounds to work together on children’s issues. Arigatou International develops and sustains unique multi-stakeholder initiatives designed to ensure that all children are treated with dignity, all children’s rights are respected, and all children have the opportunity to freely pursue their full human potential.

 


RSS news feed


iWith.org Improving the World using Information Technology to Help Organizations
Google + Facebook Twitter Youtube Rss