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Showing posts with label information. Show all posts
Showing posts with label information. Show all posts

Monday 7 April 2014

What is Publicity and Marketing? Publicist Katie Rosin



1 Watch the video   and put the words into the gaps in the text.


- I’m Katie  Rosin of Kampfire PR and I do PR, marketing and (1)___ building plus (2)____ for the Indie theater community Off-Off-Broadway and I..
- That’s known as ‘(3)___’, what does it mean?
- What I do, so I do sort of three different things: I do publicity which is the free (4)____ of information. So that’s, you know, making sure that you have listings, possible (5)____ articles, (6)___, getting your photos out to people, creating a press kit, something like that.  I do all that but additionally  I do marketing so I can work with clients on their posters, postcards, e- blasts, anything that costs (7)___ and is sort of in the marketing realm, so anything you have to pay for. And then there’s audience building, which I think social networking falls under, which is reaching out to organizations that you think might be interested in this particular production and trying to get them to buy (8)____.
- Now that’s reaching out through a Facebook community …
- I do it in all different ways.
- So it’s not necessarily social networking as in computers social networking, it’s...
- Well, I think social networking falls under (9)___ building so I put social networking as sort of categorized as audience building. In audience building I can call the person, I could email them, I can send them a Facebook message, I could, so it’s all, you know, all the above. Publicity, as it’s defined, is the free dissemination of information to the (10)____. So often it’s confused in the fact that it’s could be publicity blitz, reaching out to industry or anything of the like,  but it’s really raising (11)____ of your show to the media, so that is to journalists,  critics, listings, feature editors  and that sort. And it’s free. I break publicity into four categories: it’s your, I said, your master (12)___ which is sort of the ‘who, what, wheres, whens’, I do listings which can be free manual uploads but also its that Time Out New York Theater section are those were theater section are the New York Times website, those are listings. Then there are critic call (13)____ which everyone’s always interested in and that, you know, the critics have evaluated your show  whether it’s online or in print. And then there are also feature articles. Usually feature articles run in advance in the profile of the people involved in the show or if the show’s on an interesting topic, it’s before the show opens. Let’s hope.
                          
publicity
feature
audience
money
reviews
social networking
dissemination
tickets










awareness
reviews
audience
press release
media




2 Vocabulary focus. Sudy the words and  word combinations, practise their translation, spelling. Check your knowledge in the test. Play vocabulary game and set your own vocabulary game record.

3 Mark the following statements as True or False.

1.     Publicity is the same as marketing and audience building.
2.     Free dissemination of information can include feature articles, listings, and reviews.
3.     Marketing has to deal with everything that costs money.
4.     Social networking falls under the category of marketing.
5.     In audience building a publicist can call the person, could email them.
6.     Usually feature articles run after the show starts.

4 Answer the Questions.
1.     How does the speaker define publicity?
2.     What components or activities can publicity include?
3.     What does work with marketing include?
4.     What does audience building include? What can publicists do in order to build audience?
5.     Why are feature articles and reviews important? Does it matter if the article or review in online or in print?


Thursday 23 January 2014

How a computer network works




1. Vocabulary focus. Sudy the words andword combinations, practise their translation, spelling. Check your knowledge in the test. Play vocabulary game and set your own vocabulary game record.
 


2.  Watch the video and put the words into the gaps in the text



Each (1)____ is limited in its size. The mail-room must decide how to divide the information and how to (2)____ it. Every package needs a (3)___, containing important information such as sender’s address, receiver’s (4)____ and the type of packet (5)___. Because this particular packet is going out onto the Internet, it also gets an address for the (6)____ which has a special function as we'll see later.
The packet is now (7)____ onto your local area network or (8)____. This (9)____ is used to connect all the local computers, (10)____, (11)_____ etc. for information exchange within the physical walls of the building. The highway of the LAN is packed with all types of information. These are IP packets, Novell packets, Apple Talk packets. The local router reads the address and if necessary lifts the packet onto another network. As the packets leave the router, they make their way into the corporate (12)____ and head for the router (13)____. As packets arrive at their destination they are picked up by the network (14)____, ready to be sent to the next level, in this case, the proxy. The proxy is used by many companies as a sort of (15)____ in order to lessen the load on their Internet connection and for security reasons as well.
The (16)____ opens the packet and looks for the web address or URL. Depending upon whether the address is (17)_____ the packet is sent on to the Internet. There are, however, some addresses which do not meet with the (18)____ of the proxy, that is to say corporate or management guidelines. These are summarily dealt with. For those who make it, it's on the road again. Next up - the (19)____.
package
proxy server
IDS
address
packet
label
routers
middleman
intranet
switch
network
interface
launched
LAN
printers

acceptable
proxy
firewall
approval



  The corporate firewall serves two purposes. It prevents some rather (20)____ things from the Internet from coming into the intranet. And it can also prevent sensitive corporate (21)____ from being sent out to the (22)____. Once through the firewall, a router picks up the packet and places it on to a much narrower road or (23)____, as we say. Obviously, the road is not (24)_____ enough to take them all.
Now you might wonder what happens to all those packets which don't make it along the way. Well, when IP doesn't receive an (25)___ that a packet has been received in due time, he simply sends a replacement packet. We are now ready to enter the world of the Internet, a (26)____ of inter-connected networks which spans our entire (27)____. Here, routers and switches establish links between networks. The paths our packets take maybe via (28)____, telephone lines, (29)____ or even trans-oceanic cable. Near the end of our destination, we'll find another firewall. The firewall is designed to let in only those packets that meet its (30)____. This firewall is operating on ports 80 and 25. Port 25 is used for mail packets, while port 80 is the entrance for packets from the Internet to the Web (31)____. Inside the firewall, packets are screened more (32)____, some packets make easily through customs while others look just a bit dubious.
For those packets lucky enough to make this far, the journey is almost over. It's just to line up on the (33) to be taken up into the web server. One by one, the packets are received, opened and (34)____. 

information
Internet
broad
bandwidth
nasty

globe
acknowledgment
server
wireless
spider web
criteria
satellite
thoroughly


unpacked
interface
 
3. Answer the questions.
1. What information does label contain?
2. What is local area network or LAN used for?
3. What is proxy used for?
4. What purposes does corporate firewall serve?
5. What are the assignments of ports 25 and 80?  

4. Mark the following statements as True or False.
1.     Each packet is unlimited in its size.
2.     Every package needs a label, containing important information.
3.     The highway of the LAN is packed with only IP packets.
4.  The proxy is used by many companies as a sort of middleman in order to increase the load on their Internet connection.
5.     The proxy opens the packet and looks for the web address or URL.
6.     Next level after proxy is the firewall.
7.     When mister IP doesn't get an acknowledgment that a packet has been received i n due time, he simply sends a replacement packet.
8.     Our packets are transferred only via telephone lines.
9.     Firewall is operating on six ports. 
10.  Inside the firewall, packets are screened more thoroughly, some packets make easily through customs while others look just a bit dubious.