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четверг, 20 августа 2015 г.

Что Google-у известно про вас?


Hello guys.

Сегодня покажу как и где Google  следит за вашими действиями
Let’s go!


We know that your web-surfing can create some historical data-stamps. There are some data-stamps in cache of your PC and in cache in Google-server. With your private PC cache You can do any task yourself. But with your cache on the Google’s server – no.

Google has your data forever.) So what Google knows about you? Here are 7 links that will show you some of the data Google has about you.

1. Find out what Google thinks about you.
These features don’t require login to Google-account.

In order to serve relevant ads, Google collects data about you and creates a profile. You can control and review the information Google has on you here:
http://www.google.com/settings/ads/

Google also has a tool called Google Analytics, that helps publishers see what pages you have viewed on their website, how many times you have visited it, how long did you stay etc. You can opt out if you don’t want this type of data to be collected:
http://tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout

понедельник, 10 августа 2015 г.

Как выучить иностранный язык до уровня С1 за полгода?

Привет всем.
 
Нашел толковый рассказ о том как выучить иностранный язык до уровня С1 за полгода. Ранее я писал вам как это сделать за 16 часов. Но там максимум будет начальный уровень, типа А2. А тут реально человек стал полиглотом. Читаем вместе оригинал.
 
 
 
Lifehacker reader Gabriel Wyner was tasked with learning four languages in the past few years for his career as an opera singer, and in the process landed on "a pretty damn good method for language learning that you can do in limited amounts of spare time." Here's the four-step method that you can use, too (and you don't have to invest hundreds in a language course like Rosetta Stone).
 
This is the method I've used to learn four languages (Italian, German, French and now Russian); it's the method that got me to C1 fluency in French in about 5 months, and I'm currently using it with Russian (and plan on reaching C1 equivalent fluency by September).
 
I go in four stages. The stages will take different amounts of time for different languages and depend on how much time you have available per day, naturally. The US Foreign Service Institute makes estimates for language difficulties for native English speakers, and they seem to be spot on in terms of comparative difficulty—Russian seems to be taking twice as long as French did for me, and they estimate languages like Chinese to take twice as long as Russian. That being said, let's say we're talking about a language like French, and you have 30-60 minutes a day to spend on it, I've included estimates for how long each stage might take.

Stage 1: Learn the correct pronunciation of the language.

Time: 1-2 weeks (or longer for languages that have a new alphabet that will take some time to get comfortable with)
 
Starting with pronunciation first does a few things—because I'm first and foremost learning how to hear that language's sounds, my listening comprehension gets an immediate boost before I even start traditional language learning. Once I start vocabulary training, I retain it better because I'm familiar with how words should sound and how they should be spelled. (Correct spellings in French, for example, are much easier to remember when there's a connection between the spelling and the sound), and once I finally start speaking to native speakers, they don't switch to English for me or dumb down their language, which is awesome sauce.
 
If you're learning a language with a different alphabet, this is where you learn the phonetic alphabet(s) (Kana, for Japanese or Pinyin for Chinese, for example).
How do you learn pronunciation?
 
There are a few routes here, and a lot of excellent online and in-print resources (Pronunciation guides with CDs or mp3s are usually very good). Personally, I think it's worth the (short) time to learn the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) for the English language first (Wikipedia / some video tutorials I've been producing), and then see what sounds are different in your target language. In the process of learning IPA, you learn the components of each vowel and consonant and you'll really understand what makes a French word sound French, and a Chinese word Chinese.