On today's Digital Download, I discuss and debate NFTs and the future of the internet with senior communications consultants Stephen Waddington and Scott Guthrie as we seek to find answers to some of our questions, from basic definitions and explanations to potential impacts.īack in the summer of 2020 as the world got to grips with COVID-19, PR leader Gini Dietrich made a bold prediction on this podcast that the public relations industry would not survive the pandemic as a standalone discipline. And with so many different views and predictions and even explanations out there, cutting through the noise is an extremely tough task. And yet most are struggling to get their heads around the implications of NFTs, cryptocurrency, web3 and the metaverse.įrom a marketing communications perspective, opinions vary from those who believe NFTs are the start of a societal shift to those who believe it's all over-hyped rubbish. As 'the next big thing', marketers have more than a passing interest. NFTs have become ubiquitous over the last six months, with everyone from Snoop Dogg to Gary Vaynerchuck extolling their virtues. And finally, it would also be very awesome and hugely appreciated if you'd be able to take a moment to leave an honest review and rating for the podcast on iTunes or Podchaser, as this helps others discover Digital Download. I read and reply to every single email, tweet or message. I'd love to hear from you with any comments or thoughts. And if you enjoyed today’s show, please email it to a friend and/or share it on your favourite social media channels. Subscribe to the podcast to receive new episodes automatically to your mobile or email. In this episode of the Digital Download podcast, I talk to Josh Greene from the Mather Group, a specialist in Wikipedia and online reputation management, about the benefits of a Wikipedia presence and how to go about managing it. So what can be done to either secure a beneficial presence on Wikipedia or to help defend and control online reputation? And yet, especially for large companies and high profile individuals, it can be extremely important when it comes to corporate reputation. With some custom work, it might be possible to use trigger scripts to accomplish something like that kind of constraint.Wikipedia is an anomaly for marketing professionals a fiercely moderated bastion to neutrality on the internet that public relations and marketing professionals have failed to crack. Studies aren't set up to restrict to a predetermined list or ID format. That data can come into any dataset, and adding to that 'underlying' study-wide participant table is done as a 'side effect' - it's not possible to directly add rows to that table. Unfortunately, study participantIDs don't support regex validation - part of the reason is that a study will create new participants any time data comes in for a participantID that is not already in the study-wide table. Maintenance Notice - Upgrade of for Wednesday, February 15th 2023 8:30pm Pacific Time I hope one of these helps you get the behavior you're seeking, and happy to help further if not. This could effectively give you the yearly-total tally you may be seeking, on a per-sample-type basis. including a link to the image in a wiki-syntax page - ("link" or "new-tab-link" so that clicking will open it in a new tab).obtaining a screen image (jpg or similar) and displaying it as above.We don't directly support displaying a PDF within a wiki page (that could depend on browser settings, though none of the browsers I've tried will display them). I notice that what you pasted has an extra " before the image name which would prevent the image from displaying. The syntax in an HTML-syntax wiki is almost what you show: The easiest way to include an image in a wiki is to use a wiki-syntax page, then attach the image (jpg or png are common) to the page directly and include the image name in brackets within the text:
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