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How To Create Educational Start-up Using Only Mobile

The area of online education has taken leaps and bounds in the last year, mainly thanks to COVID-19 rearing its head. The idea of online education has been around for over twenty years, although the earliest models of virtual classes were incredibly limited at the time. In recent years they’ve changed considerably, but it’s only in the last year that an educational online learning environment has seen serious consideration of use across the market.

As a result, people are scrambling to expand current online educational programs and many more are looking at the creation of new online education start-ups. There are a few different approaches that people are taking, such as attracting investors and hiring employees. It doesn’t take an army to build an educational start-up, though. All one really needs is a mobile phone. Here a few education start-up ideas:

It Has to Have A Few Bells and Whistles

A mobile phone can be as simple as something that people make calls from and send out the occasional text from. Understand that this kind of mobile will not meet the needs of someone who wants to create e-learning start-ups. Running a business will involve a lot of calls and e-mails, yes, but it also needs a great deal more than that.

To run everything from a mobile is going to be difficult. Realize that laptops and desktops may be cumbersome, but they’re also capable of doing just about anything a proper business person needs, and that’s what top edtech start-ups use. If, that isn’t an option, though, then get an amazing smartphone that comes pretty close!

Look For Mobile Support

This was more of an issue ten years ago, but it can still be a bit of a problem when a person is using their phone for more than just surfing the Net or making a payment. People running a start-up through their cellphone will need to access website software, educational apps, and other more complex software that simply wasn’t built for a phone.

The best way to avoid this is to look for and stick with sites, companies, and web hosting services that allow ease-of-use for a cellphone on their sites. This is information that most websites have readily available.

Make Sure You Can Pay

Nobody likes the guy at the table who skips out on the bill and forces everyone else to pay for him. The same thing exists online. It doesn’t matter if a company doesn’t have a brick-and-mortar store nearby, leaving them holding the bill will still damage your credit and reputation. Those are both things you can’t afford to lose for your educational business.

The best way to avoid this is to have a few avenues of payment available online. A credit card is a good start, as is an online payment service like PayPal. Finally, even a phone pay app isn’t such a bad thing to have on your mobile.

It’s a good idea to make sure that the sites or services you pay for do accept whatever payment methods you have available to you. Never go with any online service until you’ve seen their payment methods. It’s also important to be able to keep all of your bills and statements organized and paid. That’s why it’s absolutely essential that you’re able to be confident with personal statement service. The best way to do this is to find a personal statement service that is both professional and easy to use.

Have A Great Plan

Running an entire start-up through a smartphone means that you’re going to be making a lot of calls, texts, and spending many hours online every day. How much this will cost you depends on which country you’re in. Great Britain, for example, has reasonable fees, but Italy has the highest. Whichever country you’re in, always make sure that you have a great phone plan that has a tremendous amount of data coverage.

Get A Scheduling App

If you don’t already own one, then get one right away! Most people who are doing an educational start-up are also working a full or part-time job to keep the bills paid while they pursue that dream. That means that a person might be juggling their work life, home life, kids, bills, meetings, and whatever else they may be responsible for.

How does a person keep track of all of those myriad things? Simple. They download a scheduling app. Some are free, and some are by subscription, but offer more flexibility in how it works. There are even schedulers that will pay your bills for you and can access statements from personal statement writers, so it’s definitely worthwhile to have one.

Get Professionals to Set Up the Website and Advertising

An online school is never going to happen without a streamlined website that’s easy for people to access and use. It’s also not going to last long if it’s not set up for the bandwidth required for use by hundreds of students, many of which will be accessing the website at the same time.

There is the rare person who can do it themselves, but hiring a professional site builder and hosting service is usually the best way to go. Trust them, they know what they’re doing.

What’s just as important is not to handle the advertising yourself. Again, unless you’re an expert, it’s best to leave it up to them. They are the ones who will know how to put together a campaign and target the right people. The greatest advantage of leaving advertising and site-building to others is that they’ll be handling it on their hardware, so you don’t have to.

It’s with these tools, like getting personal statement writers uk, that anyone can create an educational start-up with just a mobile phone!

Album Review: IDLES, ‘Ultra Mono’

On the opening track of IDLES’ Ultra Mono, frontman Joe Talbot introduces the central conflict that runs throughout the Bristol punks’ already-divisive third studio album. “You’re unthinking, letting yourself go, it might sound silly and non-sensical, but it has the most purpose to me,” Talbot explained in an interview with Clash, referring to such lyrics as “Clack-clack, clack-a-clang clang!” and “Tukka-tuk, tuk, tuk, tuk-tukka.” There’s a deliberate frivolousness to Talbott’s delivery as he emulates what he claims to be “the sound of the gun going bang-bang” and “the sound of the drone button pusher”, which is undercut by the dark irony of the next couplet: “Shh, shhh, shhh!/ That’s the sound of the children tooker.” It leaves the impression of a performer who’s unsure where to position himself; whether to embrace the absurdity in all the chaos or expose it through meaningful satire.

What follows is an avalanche of noise: an attempt to drown it all out, or, in Talbot’s own words, an “explosion of not overthinking anything”. But the pummelling drums and roaring guitars, stripped of the complications of performance, also serve as an evocation of pure horror, the kind that the lyrics simultaneously seem to hint at and scour away from. There’s a darkness there that feels both real and inescapable, approaching an almost Swans-esque level of dread. Which is why the following call to arms – “This means war/ Anti-war!” – feels pointed rather than painfully on the nose, a moment of genuine defiance. IDLES may have found themselves at a crossroads, but their righteous anger hasn’t gone anywhere.

Still, Ultra Mono feels consistently torn between the band’s satirical, nihilist edge and the earnest positivity that has earned them such a devoted fanbase. But it never fully explores that conflict, and neither does it go to any great lengths to unpack some of the ideological uncertainty that’s bubbling under the surface. Instead, the album favours a more direct, in-your-face presentation, and while the results are often mixed, the energy remains exhilarating. Following in the footsteps of 2018’s Joy as an Act of Resistance, the themes of self-love could have had a greater impact had they been paired with more overt expressions of vulnerability – the utterly inane ‘Anxiety’ is the biggest offender in this respect – but the self-awareness showcased throughout mostly makes up for it. “How’d you like them clichés?” Talbot deadpans on ‘Mr. Motivator’, then proceeds to throw out a few: “Let’s seize the day/ All hold hands, chase the pricks away.”

He means every word he shouts. To be clear, IDLES don’t have to choose between humour and sincerity; they’ve proved they can be just as good at both. Their open-hearted embrace of love and kindness as the ultimate ideals is exactly what’s made them such a breath of fresh air in the scene; there’s something riotously fun about the gut-punch positivity of tracks like ‘Kill Them with Kindness’ and ‘The Lover’. But in the context of the record as a whole, they also have the tendency to undermine some of the album’s socio-political commentary by seemingly affording the issue of dealing with their own haters the same weight as the fight against systemic injustice. Because while the overall message of unity is effective across the board, the approach can sometimes lack nuance, particularly on ‘Carcinogenic’ and ‘Na Touche Pas Moi’, both of which feel redundant if not outright shallow.

But not all of Ultra Mono’s polemical moments fall flat. ‘Model Village’, a raucous attack on neo-fascism and reactionary politics, stands out as one of the more pertinent and cleverly written songs on the album, while ‘Reigns’ rails against the ruling class by posing a single yet powerful question: “How does it feel to have blue blood coursing through your veins?” Accompanied by an unsettling industrial instrumental, the line is suggestive enough on its own, to the point that it renders the ones that follow (“How does it feel to have shanked the working classes into dust?”) kind of unnecessary. Directness may be IDLES’ greatest weapon, but they can work around subtext just as well.

It helps that Ultra Mono finds the band once again revitalizing their sound. While noteworthy contributions from The Jesus Lizard’s David Yow, Warren Ellis, and Kenny Beats might easily go unnoticed, the album is peppered with inventive flourishes that prevent it from feeling stale and completely one-note. But it’s the song that finds IDLES most explicitly deviating from their signature formula that’s the biggest highlight on the album: downcast, fragile, and borderline existential, ‘A Hymn’ offers a glimpse into what the band could achieve if they allowed themselves to fully examine some of the darker implications of fame and mindless positivity. For now, Ultra Mono mostly works, if only as a joyous celebration of togetherness. But it’s safe to say it’s probably not gonna work a second time. Thankfully, this album offers enough proof that they’re capable of digging deeper and acknowledging their own contradictions.

Interview: Steve Ryfle on Kaiju Masterclass

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Most fans of Japanese monster cinema will, at some point, find out about G-Fest; the annual Godzilla convention held in Chicago, Illinois. For many U.S. fans, it’s a regular pilgrimage and cherished event. For international fans, it’s sometimes felt just out of reach.

With the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, G-Fest was cancelled for 2020, and fans and organisers stepped into the breach to offer Kaiju Con-Line instead. Featuring livestreams and interviews with the likes of James Flower (of Arrow Video), Matt Frank (artist for IDW’s Godzilla comics), and Steven Sloss (director of the Godzilla Unmade audio-dramas), it was a welcome alternative – and one accessible to fans all over the world.

Following this comes Kaiju Masterclass, a three-day online convention featuring some of the biggest names in Japanese monster cinema. Between the second and fourth of October, Kaiju Masterclass will offer an array of interviews and panels with some of the filmmakers behind this rich cinematic legacy. Among them are director Shusuke Kaneko (director of the ’90s Gamera trilogy), Shinji Higuchi (special effects director behind Kaneko’s Gamera trilogy, as well as the live-action Attack on Titan films and 2016’s Shin Godzilla), Bear McCreary (music composer for 2019’s Godzilla King of the Monsters), and Michiru Oshima (music composer for 2000’s Godzilla vs. Megaguirus, 2002’s Godzilla Against Mechagodzilla, and 2003’s Godzilla: Tokyo S.O.S.). These guests are just the tip of the iceberg.

One of the founders of this endeavour is Steve Ryfle, co-author of director Ishiro Honda‘s biography. Our Culture reached out to Steve to speak about Kaiju Masterclass; about the mechanics of putting together an online convention like this; and what’s next on the horizon for him.

Thanks for speaking with us, Steve. Please introduce yourself for our readers.

I’m a writer in Los Angeles, California and I’ve taken a longtime interest in Japanese science-fiction and fantasy films. I co-authored, with Ed Godziszewski, a biography of filmmaker Ishiro Honda titled Ishiro Honda: A Life in Film, From Godzilla to Kurosawa; I co-produced the feature documentary on the art of Japanese special effects, Bringing Godzilla Down to Size; and I’ve recorded a lot of audio commentaries for this type of film, most often in partnership with Ed.

How did Kaiju Masterclass get started?

It actually started as a germ of an idea in a Facebook comment thread. Matt Burkett had posted a video about the dearth of new kaiju eiga “experts,” and my friend Erik Homenick, who is the webmaster of akiraifukube.org and the official biographer of composer Akira Ifukube, and I both said it would be interesting if we could organize a small convention on the west coast (Erik is a PhD candidate at UC San Diego) with something of a more serious side, emphasizing the creative process behind these films and the themes underlying them. Although we didn’t envision a true academic conference we did think of maybe having it on Erik’s university campus. But it was just talk at this point. COVID-19 had already hit the U.S. pretty hard (this was in April) and we initially thought our con idea was something we’d do after the pandemic. But as I recall, we shifted pretty much immediately to the idea of doing something online. Erik and I asked a few colleagues and friends to join us in the effort: John DeSentis (a composer and conductor behind Kaiju Crescendo and other genre film music concerts); Patrick Galvan (a writer for syfy.com); Matt Parmley and Kyle Bird (Kaiju Transmissions podcast) and Kyle Gilmore (a filmmaker and graphic artist). We sort of figured it out as we go, dividing up the work amongst ourselves and playing to our individual strengths. This is an entirely volunteer, roll-up-your-sleeves kind of effort.

The calibre of guests is remarkable. Names like Pat Saperstein really stand out, as the importance of the English-language versions of these films (which her father helped bring overseas) is seldom discussed. How easy was it to get in touch with some of these people?

In the age of social media you can get in touch with most anybody. But the truth is that we already were acquainted with most of them in one way or another, which is probably why this thing came together so smoothly and so well. One of the great aspects of studying and writing about these films, and about the fandom that surrounds them, is that it’s possible to make contact with and even develop friendships with the creators of the genre. As you know, a lot of personalities from Japan, people who worked behind and in front of the camera, have come to the U.S. to participate in conventions and events over the past 20-plus years. Many of them are active on social media as well. The guest roster represents people that I’ve interviewed and stayed in touch with over the years, people who other members of the team have developed working relationships with (John DeSentis, for instance, conducted a concert with Michiro Oshima), as well as colleagues, and people we admire and want to give exposure to. I had interviewed both directors Shinji Higuchi and Shusuke Kaneko back in 1996 in Japan; Shinchi Wakasa was in a documentary that I worked on with Norman England and Ed Godziszewski, who are also both giving presentations. So, you can see the connections. In that sense, composers Bear McCreary and David Arnold were the two biggest “gets” for us, because we didn’t have those kind of connections with either of them. John DeSentis worked his tail off to get McCreary to join us, and I have to thank my friend Tab Murphy (who is also a presenter) for putting in a good word that enabled us to have Arnold on board.

Some areas of Japanese monster cinema have been discussed more than others. More people might be aware of Eiji Tsuburaya than they are of Koichi Kawakita, for example. Is there an area you’d like to see get more attention?

Because it is such a visual genre, and because the classic films were more or less handmade, there is a great deal of emphasis on special effects, particularly on the “how” – the techniques and materials used to achieve a certain effect or scene. What I hope we can get into is more of the themes and ideas underlying the films and the creative process by which the filmmakers, writers, composers, and artists go about their work.

What benefits are there with staging a convention online?

Again, this is an all-volunteer event. We’re dipping into our own pockets a little bit, to be honest. But we didn’t realize we could do something so special and so big, so we didn’t even try to monetize the event with sponsors. We do have a merchandise store at Red Bubble, which is linked on our website (kaijumasterclass.com), and if anyone wants to support us by purchasing something that might help offset our costs a little, and we’d appreciate that. But if this were an in-person event, it would either require a budget in the many many thousands of dollars, or it would have to be something much smaller in order to minimize the expenses for guest travel and appearances. What we are doing is only possible because it’s online. It also makes it possible for many more people, who would not be able to travel, to attend. Of course we’ll miss the in-person camaraderie but in this year of quarantines and time spent away from friends and family, this is a nice substitute and a way to give something back to the fan community.

Do you think we’ll see future Kaiju Masterclass conventions?

Let’s see how well we do this time before we think that far ahead. I’d certainly be open to it, and with a little experience under our collective belts, who knows what we’ll be able to do?

What’s next for you on the horizon?

As far as my interest in this genre is concerned, I am writing a new book titled Godzilla vs. the World: The Politics of Japan’s Disaster Monster for University of Texas Press. Also, Ed Godziszewski and I recorded a new audio commentary for The H-Man, to be released on bluray by Eureka in the UK.

Thanks very much to Steve Ryfle for speaking with Our Culture. To view the line-up of events on offer, please visit the Kaiju Masterclass website

Jónsi and Robyn Team Up for New Song ‘Salt Licorice’

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Jónsi has shared the latest preview from his upcoming album Shiver, which is out this Friday. It’s called ‘Salt Licorice’ and it features Swedish pop icon Robyn. Check it out below, alongside an accompanying music video.

“‘Salt Licorice’ is such a cute and perfect pop song,” Robyn said in a press release. “It makes me want to dance violently and make out at the same time. It was a no-brainer to say yes to singing it with Jónsi. The pretty emails I get with a thousand emojis in them from him is a bonus that came with our collaboration as well!”

Co-produced by A. G. Cook, Shiver marks the follow-up to Jónsi’s 2010 solo debut Go and will include the previously released singles ‘Cannibal’, ‘Exhale’ and ‘Swill’.

Goat Girl Announce New Album, Share New Song ‘Sad Cowboy’

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UK post-punk outfit Goat Girl have announced their sophomore album, On All FoursThe follow-up to their 2018 self-titled debut is set for release on January 29 via Rough Trade. The four-piece have also previewed the album with the lead single, ‘Sad Cowboy’. Check it out below, and scroll down for the album’s cover artwork and tracklist.

“’Sad Cowboy centres around the idea of losing a grip on reality and how often this can happen,” Goat Girl’s Lottie Cream explained in a statement. “When you’re within a world that constantly makes you feel as though you’re living out a really bad dream, disillusionment is inevitable.”

About the album as a whole, Rough Trade notes that it sees the group “veer away from the confrontational lyricism of their debut and indicates Goat Girl’s maturing perspectives in discussing the world’s injustices and social prejudices, using the music to explore global, humanitarian, environmental and mindful wellbeing.”

On All Fours Cover Artwork:

On All Fours Tracklist:
1. Pest
2. Badibaba
3. Jazz (In The Supermarket)
4. Once Again
5. P.T.S.Tea
6. Sad Cowboy
7. The Crack
8. Closing In
9. Anxiety Feels
10. They Bite On You
11. Bang
12. Where Do We Go?
13. A-Men

Bonnaroo Festival Postponed to September 2021

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The Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival, which takes place each year in Manchester, Tennessee, has been postponed for the third time. The festival was previously rescheduled from its usual summer slot in June to September of this year, but was then canceled entirely with the plan to return in June 2021. Now, it’s been announced that the festival will take place in autumn of next year, from September 2-5.

“We want to thank you for being a loyal Bonnaroovian,” the festival’s website wrote in a post today (September 30). “We appreciate your patience as we navigate the best options.”

The line-up for Bonnaroo 2020 was set to feature performances from Lizzo, Tame Impala, Vampire Weekend, Lana Del Rey, Miley Cyrus, Run the Jewels, and more.

 

 

Tame Impala Announce Rescheduled North American Tour Dates

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Tame Impala have announced the rescheduled tour dates for their 2021 North American tour. The tour was meant to kick off in May this year in support of their latest album, The Slow Rush, but was then postponed to February of 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic before now being pushed back to July. Check out the full schedule below.

Tame Impala’s North American tour is set to commence on July 22, 2021 in Mexico City, and will conclude on October 18 in Miami, Florida. Tickets sold for the original dates will be honored for the new shows, and refunds will be issued to those who won’t be able to attend.

The Slow Rush was released back in February. A few days ago, Blood Orange shared a remix of the album track ‘Borderline’, which Tame Impala recently performed on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon!.

Tame Impala North American Tour Dates:

July 2021:
Thursday 22 – Mexico City, Foro Sol
Wednesday 28 – Glendale, Gila River Arena
Friday 30 – Denver, Pepsi Center
August 2021:
Monday 2 – Portland, Moda Center
Wednesday 4 – Vancouver, Rogers Arena
August 6 – George, Gorge Amphitheatre
Thursday 12 – Houston, Toyota Center
Friday 13 – Dallas, American Airlines Center
Saturday 14 – Austin, Frank Erwin Center
September 2021:
Wednesday 15 – San Francisco, Chase Center
October 2021: 
Monday 4 – Toronto, Scotiabank Arena
Tuesday 5 – Detroit, Little Caesars Arena
Thursday 7 – Chicago, United Center
Friday 8 – Milwaukee, Fiserv Forum
Sunday 10 – St. Paul, Xcel Energy Center
Wednesday 13 – Washington, Capital One Arena
Friday 15 – Atlanta, State Farm Arena
Sunday 17 – Orlando, Amway Center
Monday 18 – Miami, American Airlines Arena

Helen Reddy, ‘I Am Woman’ Singer, Dies at 78

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Helen Reddy, the Australian singer best known for her feminist anthem ‘I Am Woman’, has passed away at the age of 78. Reddy’s children, Traci and Jordan, confirmed the news in a statement posted on the ‘Helen Reddy Official Fan Page’ on Facebook. “It is with deep sadness that we announce the passing of our beloved mother, Helen Reddy, on the afternoon of September 29th 2020 in Los Angeles,” they wrote. “She was a wonderful Mother, Grandmother and a truly formidable woman. Our hearts are broken. But we take comfort in the knowledge that her voice will live on forever.”

Born in Melbourne in 1941, Reddy grew up in a show-business family and started singing publicly at the age of 4. By 1966, she won a talent contest on a television program called Bandstand, and later moved to Los Angeles to pursue an international singing career. She recorded her debut singles ‘One Way Ticket’ and ‘I Believe in Music’ in 1968 and 1970 respectively, but it was with the B-side of the latter single, ‘I Don’t Know How to Love Him’, that she scored her first hit. Having signed to Capitol Records, she found international success in the 1970s, topping the US Billboard Hot 100 three times: first with 1972’s ‘I Am Woman’, followed by 1973’s ‘Delta Dawn’ and ‘Angie Baby’ a year later.

Reddy went on to host the variety program The Helen Reddy Show and became a musical theater mainstay in the ’80s. She announced her retirement in 2002 but made a brief comeback within the past decade before being diagnosed with dementia in 2015. In 2017, she performed an a cappella version of ‘I Am Woman’ at the Women’s March in LA. A biopic titled I Am Womandirected by Unjoo Moon and starring Tilda Cobham-Hervey, was released earlier this year.

Paying tribute to the late singer, Moon said: “She paved the way for so many and the lyrics that she wrote for I Am Woman changed my life forever like they have done for so many other people and will continue to do for generations to come.”

Watch Sharon Van Etten Cover Nine Inch Nails’ ‘Hurt’

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Sharon Van Etten performed a cover of the Nine Inch Nails classic ‘Hurt’ for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and Sound of Saving’s ‘Song that Found Me at the Right Time’ series. Check it out below.

The video opens with the singer-songwriter discussing her own experiences with depression. “It doesn’t make you a weak person for talking about your darker times, you know,” she said. “It actually makes you stronger by being vulnerable and open and sharing who you are with the people you care about.”

Speaking about her relationship with ‘Hurt’, she added: “I was the cliché middle child and always felt misunderstood, and then the oldest brother was the one that I connected to the most with music. When I was learning to play guitar, he gave me a box of cassettes. By the time “Hurt” came on, I just remember connecting to it so much but also realizing that my brother had listened to it, and we’d never really talked about any deep feelings, but we always shared music. It was my first sign that my brother was trying to connect with me on a more emotional level than just “we’re sharing music.””

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The xx’s Romy Releases First Solo Single ‘Lifetime’

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The xx’s Romy Madley Croft has shared her first official solo single. It’s called ‘Lifetime’ and it was produced with Fred again.. and Marta Salogni in London during the coronavirus lockdown. In a statement, the artist said the track is about “being totally in the moment and celebrating it.” Check it out below.

Romy Madley Croft first revealed that she is working on her debut solo project during an Instagram Live session in April, where she performed new music. She described it as being “a lot more upbeat”, adding it’s “not exactly going to be guitar music, but it’s going to be fun.” The xx’s most recent album was 2017’s I See You.