22 results on '"Standards organizations"'
Search Results
2. Technological Uncertainty and Standardization Strategies: A Coopetition Framework
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Cesare Antonio F. Riillo, Renaud Allamano-Kessler, Nader Asnafi, Vladislav V. Fomin, and Geerten van de Kaa
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standardization ,Competition ,Standards organizations ,Strategy and Management ,Uncertainty ,Technological innovation ,coopetition ,technological uncertainty ,Ecosystems ,Research and development ,uncertainty ,standards organizations ,companies ,technological innovation ,industries ,ecosystems ,research and development ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Companies ,Industries - Abstract
Standards may be arrived at through various coordination mechanisms, including cooperation, coopetition, or competition. This article explores how technological uncertainty affects the coordination mechanism for standardization. The article is based on the Community Innovation Survey, a sizeable firm-level survey representative of the Luxembourgish economy. The econometric analysis finds evidence that firms facing technological uncertainty will choose for standardization through competition and coopetition.
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- 2022
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3. Cybersecurity: Perceived Threats and Policy Responses in the Gulf Cooperation Council
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Jorge Tiago Martins and Haifa Nasser Alshabib
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SDG 16 - Peace ,Cybersecurity ,Computer crime ,Economics ,Strategy and Management ,Computer security ,computer.software_genre ,Politics ,Political science ,Digital economy ,Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Organizations ,Middle East ,business.industry ,Standards organizations ,SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Economic union ,Cybercrime ,Resilience (organizational) ,Europe ,regional cooperation ,Petroleum industry ,Elite ,cybercrime ,Security ,business ,computer - Abstract
The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) is a political and economic union of the Arab states, comprising some of the fastest growing economies in the world due to the prevalence of oil and gas industry and more recently due to significant investments in the digital economy. However, in recent years, rates of cybercrime and cyber-threats have risen significantly, posing challenges to the security and economic performance of the region. This article deals with the necessity to engage in transnational cooperation to counter the complex challenges posed by cybercrime across the GCC. Interviews were held with members of the GCC political elite who hold expertise in cybersecurity affairs. An analysis is presented of cybersecurity threats in the region, problems of strategic cooperation and lack of dialogue to tackle common challenges in the areas of cybercrime and cybersecurity. Finally, specific aspects of GCC cybersecurity policy are discussed: preventive and mitigation actions; potential intraregional and international cooperation avenues; and the formulation of effective strategy to enhance cybersecurity capabilities and resilience. Although grounded in the GCC as a regional bloc, the findings also carry implications for other contexts, especially other Middle East and North Africa countries and, thus, represent a promising avenue for future research.
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- 2022
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4. Reimagining Robust Distributed Systems Through Accountable MAS
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Matteo Baldoni, Roberto Micalizio, Stefano Tedeschi, and Cristina Baroglio
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Organizations ,Internet ,Task analysis ,Perturbation methods ,Unified modeling language ,Standards organizations ,Robustness ,Computer Networks and Communications ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Distributed computing ,Unified Modeling Language ,Robustness (computer science) ,The Internet ,business ,computer ,computer.programming_language - Published
- 2021
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5. Updates about TC-25: The Technical Committee on Biological and Medical Measurements
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Sabrina Grassini, Eulalia Balestrieri, Sergio Rapuano, and Voicu Groza
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Organizations ,Engineering ,Study groups ,Scope (project management) ,Standardization ,business.industry ,Standards organizations ,Interoperability ,Conferences ,Data processing ,Engineering management ,Instruments ,Sensor phenomena and characterization ,Technical committee ,Instrumentation (computer programming) ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Instrumentation - Abstract
The Technical Committee on Biological and Medical Measurements (TC-25) aims at establishing, developing, promoting and supporting cooperation among researchers in the different fields of biological and medical measurements. Sensors for the measurement of clinical and/ or biological parameters, instrument and procedure characterization, instrument interoperability and interconnection, and data processing are some of the topics of interest to the TC-25. To those aims, the technical committee designs and realizes joint activities, like study groups aimed at standardization, such as the Subcommittee on Blood Pressure Measurement (SCOBPM); conferences or special sessions, such as the IEEE International Symposium on Medical Measurements and Applications (MeMeA); and several special sessions during the annual IEEE Instrumentation and Measurement Technical Conferences. TC-25 is also continuously engaged to maintain liaisons with other committees, groups, societies and organizations working on topics related to the TC scope. This paper presents the latest updates about the main activities of the TC-25. Some information about the TC-25 activities and targets is briefly presented, then the objectives and the efforts of the SCOBPM are summarized, and finally, the history and latest updates of our main conference, the MeMeA Symposium, are reported.
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- 2021
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6. Privacy-Preserving Behavioral Correctness Verification of Cross-Organizational Workflow With Task Synchronization Patterns
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Hua Duan, MengChu Zhou, Jiujun Cheng, Cong Liu, Long Cheng, and Qingtian Zeng
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0209 industrial biotechnology ,Correctness ,Computer science ,Process (engineering) ,business.industry ,02 engineering and technology ,Petri net ,Task (computing) ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Workflow ,Computer engineering ,Computer security ,Task analysis ,Synchronization ,Organizations ,Petri nets ,Privacy ,Standards organizations ,Behavioral correctness verification ,business privacy preservation ,cross-organizational workflow ,discrete event systems ,task synchronization pattern ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Synchronization (computer science) ,Key (cryptography) ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Software engineering ,business - Abstract
Workflow management technology has become a key means to improve enterprise productivity. More and more workflow systems are crossing organizational boundaries and may involve multiple interacting organizations. This article focuses on a type of loosely coupled workflow architecture with collaborative tasks, i.e., each business partner owns its private business process and is able to operate independently, and all involved organizations need to be synchronized at a certain point to complete certain public tasks. Because of each organization’s privacy consideration, they are unwilling to share the business details with others. In this way, traditional correctness verification approaches via reachability analysis are not practical as a global business process model is unavailable for privacy preservation. To ensure its globally correct execution, this work establishes a correctness verification approach for the cross-organizational workflow with task synchronization patterns. Its core idea is to use local correctness of each suborganizational workflow process to guarantee its global correctness. We prove that the proposed approach can be used to investigate the behavioral property preservation when synthesizing suborganizational workflows via collaborative tasks. A medical diagnosis running case is used to illustrate the applicability of the proposed approaches. Note to Practitioners —Cross-organizational workflow verification techniques play an increasingly important role in ensuring the correct execution of collaborative enterprise businesses. This work addresses the issue of correctness verification for loosely coupled interactive workflows with collaborative tasks. To ensure the globally correct execution, a behavioral correctness verification approach is established. All proposed concepts and techniques are supported by open-source tools, and evaluation over a medical diagnosis process case has shown their applicability. The proposed methodology is readily applicable to industrial-size workflow correctness verification problems.
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- 2021
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7. An ambidextrous approach to practice-based innovation for social product development: lessons from a Dutch company
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Riccardo Rialti, Maria Carmela Annosi, Giacomo Marzi, Francesco Ciampi, Annosi, M. C., Marzi, G., Ciampi, F., and Rialti, R.
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Entrepreneurship ,Knowledge management ,Customer relationship management ,Decision making ,New product development (npd) ,Organizational aspects ,Research and development management ,Strategy and Management ,Face (sociological concept) ,Commercialization ,Competition (economics) ,Stakeholders ,0502 economics and business ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Green Economy and Landuse ,Knowledge engineering ,business.industry ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Standards organizations ,05 social sciences ,Business Management & Organisation ,N290 Management studies not elsewhere classified ,Technological innovation ,Organizational aspect ,Product development ,Groene Economie en Ruimte ,New product development ,business ,Inclusion (education) ,Companies ,050203 business & management - Abstract
In the face of increasing competition, an organization’s capacity to acquire knowledge from the outside has become fundamental for new product development. Pertinent extant literature has stressed how an organization should practice social product development, allowing for the inclusion of all types of stakeholders in idea generation, selection, validation, and commercialization. This study investigates how organizations can acquire, maintain, and use different sources of knowledge via ambidextrous habits of exploitation and exploration to sustain social product development. A case study based on 27 semi-structured interviews and field observations at a leading, large-size, Dutch food-service company has been carried out. The findings illustrate the organizational processes and mechanisms that the company has adopted to address and combine practice- and research-based knowledge, as well as the main barriers limiting the accumulation and usage of this knowledge inside organizational boundaries.
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- 2020
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8. Measuring and Improving Agile Processes in a Small-Size Software Development Company
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Michal Choras, Prabhat Ram, Lidia López, Rafał Kozik, Silverio Martínez-Fernández, Xavier Franch, Pilar Rodríguez, Tomasz Springer, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Departament d'Enginyeria de Serveis i Sistemes d'Informació, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. inSSIDE - integrated Software, Service, Information and Data Engineering, and Publica
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Computer software -- Development ,General Computer Science ,Computer science ,Informàtica::Enginyeria del software [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC] ,Programari àgil -- Desenvolupament ,SMEs ,Context (language use) ,Computer software -- Quality control ,Programari -- Control de qualitat ,02 engineering and technology ,Tools ,Software development process ,Software ,Empirical research ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,General Materials Science ,process metrics ,9. Industry and infrastructure ,business.industry ,Standards organizations ,General Engineering ,Software development ,020207 software engineering ,software quality ,Software quality ,Engineering management ,rapid software development ,Software measurement ,Programari -- Desenvolupament ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,lcsh:Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,Small and medium-sized enterprises ,Agile software development ,business ,Companies ,lcsh:TK1-9971 ,software engineering - Abstract
Context: Agile software development has become commonplace in software development companies due to the numerous benefits it provides. However, conducting Agile projects is demanding in Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), because projects start and end quickly, but still have to fulfil customers' quality requirements. Objective: This paper aims at reporting a practical experience on the use of metrics related to the software development process as a means supporting SMEs in the development of software following an Agile methodology. Method: We followed Action-Research principles in a Polish small-size software development company. We developed and executed a study protocol suited to the needs of the company, using a pilot case. Results: A catalogue of Agile development process metrics practically validated in the context of a small-size software development company, adopted by the company in their Agile projects. Conclusions: Practitioners may adopt these metrics in their Agile projects, especially if working in an SME, and customise them to their own needs and tools. Academics may use the findings as a baseline for new research work, including new empirical studies. The authors would like to thank all the members of the QRapids H2020 project consortium.
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- 2020
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9. A Novel Method for Visually Mapping Intellectual Property Risks and Uncertainties in Evolving Innovation Ecosystems: A Design Science Research Approach for the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Alexander Moerchel, Frank Tietze, Leonidas Aristodemou, Pratheeba Vimalnath, Moerchel, Alexander [0000-0002-2340-955X], Tietze, Frank [0000-0002-2899-6415], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Organizations ,Strategy and Management ,Standards organizations ,Uncertainty ,COVID-19 ,ecosystem evolution ,Technological innovation ,intellectual property ,IP networks ,Ecosystems ,industrial organization ,design science research methodology ,visual mapping methods ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,innovation ecosystems ,Visualization - Abstract
Prior management science literature proposes different visual methods for mapping ecosystems. These methods, however, largely lack an effective approach to visualizing intellectual property (IP) related risks and uncertainties appearing among stakeholders as the innovation ecosystem evolves. Using the design science research methodology, we develop a novel method that visualizes loci of IP risks and uncertainties, as well as dynamics of IP ownership and usage in evolving innovation ecosystems. We demonstrate and evaluate the effectiveness of the new method in uncovering IP related risks and uncertainties by presenting results from applying the method to the innovation ecosystem for crisis-critical products during the COVID-19 pandemic. The currently ongoing pandemic has caused structural changes to that innovation ecosystem with new relationships being formed between incumbent manufacturers and new entrants that have rushed into that innovation ecosystem to support the upscaling of manufacturing capacities. This article contributes to the literature on visual methods for innovation ecosystems and provides a new method for researchers, practitioners, and policy makers to identify IP related risks and uncertainties that can arise when innovation ecosystems undergo structural changes. The method allows researchers to formulate and test new theories, as well as practitioners and policy makers to develop strategies to anticipate and mitigate IP risks and uncertainties.
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- 2022
10. Extremely interactive and low-latency services in 5G and beyond mobile systems
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JaeSeung Song, Hannu Flinck, Tarik Taleb, Zinelaabidine Nadir, Mobile Network Softwarization and Service Customization, Department of Communications and Networking, Nokia Bell Labs, Sejong University, Aalto-yliopisto, and Aalto University
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Organizations ,User interfaces ,6G mobile communication ,Standardization ,Computer Networks and Communications ,Computer science ,Standards organizations ,Virtual reality ,Extended reality ,Human–computer interaction ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Next-generation network ,5G mobile communication ,Use case ,Augmented reality ,User interface ,Latency (engineering) ,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality ,Law ,5G - Abstract
Funding Information: This research work is partially supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the CHARITY project with grant agreement no. 101016509. It is also partially funded by the Academy of Finland Project 6Genesis under grant agreement no. 318927. Prof. Song was supported by the Institute of Information and Communications Technology Planning and Evaluation~(IITP) under Grant 2019-0-00426. Publisher Copyright: © 2017 IEEE. This article provides an overview on extremely interactive and low-latency immersive services as well as the relevant industry and standardization activities. Immersive services immerse a viewer or the viewed digital objects into an environment that is either real, virtual, or a mixture of both. The applications are accordingly named virtual reality, augmented reality, extended reality, and holography applications. These applications benefit from the ongoing advances in user interfaces, computing technologies, and networking technologies. Such applications are expected to generate most of the traffic in the next generation networks, particularly 6G networks. In this article, the main relevant use cases are introduced along with their respective requirements. The article also provides insights on the relevant architectures and solutions, and highlights some research challenges and directions.
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- 2021
11. Demo: AIML-as-a-service for SLA management of a digital twin virtual network service
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Konstantin Tomakh, Josep Mangues-Bafalluy, Engin Zeydan, Carlos Guimaraes, Corrado Puligheddu, Milan Groshev, Marco Malinverno, O. Kolodiazhnyi, Claudio Casetti, D. Kucherenko, Jorge Baranda, Carla-Fabiana Chiasserini, and European Commission
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Service (systems architecture) ,Standardization ,Computer science ,02 engineering and technology ,AIML ,computer.software_genre ,AIMLasaS ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Orchestration (computing) ,Virtual network ,computer.programming_language ,Pipelines ,Measurement ,Telecomunicaciones ,5G, ML, fully-automated network management, AIMLasaS, ML as a service ,Standards organizations ,Conferences ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,fully-automated network management ,ML ,Pipeline (software) ,Digital twin ,NO KEYWORDS ,Workflow ,Information engineering ,Runtime ,Operating system ,ML as a service ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,computer ,5G - Abstract
This demonstration presents an AI/ML platform that is offered as a service (AIMLaaS) and integrated in the management and orchestration (MANO) workflow defined in the project 5Growth following the recommendations of various standardization organizations. In such a system, SLA management decisions (scaling, in this demo) are taken at runtime by AI/ML models that are requested and downloaded by the MANO stack from the AI/ML platform at instantiation time, according to the service definition. Relevant metrics to be injected into the model are also automatically configured so that they are collected, ingested, and consumed along the deployed data engineering pipeline. The use case to which it is applied is a digital twin service, whose control and motion planning function has stringent latency constraints (directly linked to its CPU consumption), eventually determining the need for scaling out/in to fulfill the SLA., © 2021 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.
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- 2021
12. Deployment Strategies for Service Innovation
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Wang, Qiang, Voss, Chris, and Zhao, Xiande
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Handover ,Deployment strategies ,longitudinal case study ,Standards organizations ,innovation diffusion ,multidivisional organizations ,Technological innovation ,Companies ,service innovation - Abstract
In large organizations, local use of innovations is not enough; extracting the full use of the innovation requires deployment across the organization. The purpose of this paper is to explore strategies for the deployment of service innovations and factors influencing success. We adopt an inductive theory-building approach with a longitudinal embedded case study of ten successful service innovations. We find two deployment strategies: required adoption, in which subsidiaries are required to adopt innovations, and voluntary adoption, in which adoption is not compulsoryinnovations are showcased, but the adoption decision is left to the subsidiaries. We have investigated the factors influencing deployment, including the decentralized nature of service innovation, fit with the internal and external context, extrinsic and intrinsic motivations, and handovers. Based on analyses of case evidence, we put forward research propositions accordingly. This study provides managerial guidance for multidivisional organizations to extract full value from service innovations. Although some results may be particular to the Chinese context, research in other contexts can broaden the generalizability of the findings.
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- 2019
13. Participation in standards organizations: The role of R&D expenditures, patents, and the product-market position
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Baron, Justus, Li, Qian Cher, and Nasirov, Shukhrat
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R&D expenditures ,R&D expenditure ,standards organizations ,patents ,trademarks - Abstract
This paper examines the determinants of participation of R&D-intensive firms in standards development. Using data on R&D spending, patent, and trademark activities of the world's largest corporate R&D investors and their membership of standards organizations, we find a highly robust positive association between a firm's R&D spending and its participation in standards development. However, the causal effect of R&D spending on membership of standards organizations is conditional upon the firm's patent and/or product-market position, and varies across different types of standards organizations. More specifically, a strong patent position amplifies the effect of R&D spending on participation in standards-developing organizations, while a strong product-market position strengthens the impact of R&D spending on participation in the organizations that promote established standards. Finally, we also show that policy changes that increase the value of patents, such as variations in the preferential tax treatment of patent-related revenue, induce R&D-intensive firms to intensify their participation in standards organizations.
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- 2018
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14. A reflection on the use of 'electric flux' in introductory physics instruction
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Colm O'Sullivan
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Physics ,Textbook ,Flux ,Physics education ,Electric fields ,Nomenclature ,Standards organizations ,05 social sciences ,Methodology ,050301 education ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Electric flux ,01 natural sciences ,Computational physics ,Electric field ,Electrical engineering ,0103 physical sciences ,Reflection (physics) ,College physics teaching and learning ,Introductory physics ,010306 general physics ,0503 education ,Discrepancy ,Introductory electromagnetism - Abstract
The treatment of electric fields and flux in most textbooks on introductory physics, at least in the English language, differs radically from the nomenclature recommended by all relevant standards organisations and authorities. The general approach also conflicts with the usual methodology adopted in electrical engineering texts. The origin of the discrepancy is outlined and it is suggested that resolving the conflict would be beneficial to the teaching and learning of this and related topics.
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- 2018
15. Hands-On Education about Standardization : Is That What Industry Expects?
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Mario Kusek, Iva Bojic, Gordan Jezic, Pavle Skocir, Damjan Katusic, and Carlo Ratti
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Knowledge management ,Standardization ,Computer Networks and Communications ,business.industry ,Emerging technologies ,Computer science ,05 social sciences ,Interoperability ,Technical standard ,050301 education ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,02 engineering and technology ,Computer Science Applications ,Young professional ,Information and Communications Technology ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Communications technology ,Education ,Industries ,Standards organizations ,Organizations ,Engineering ethics ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,0503 education ,Curriculum - Abstract
Technical standards support compatibility and interoperability among numerous entities existing in the telecommunications market. However, the university curricula rarely include standards analysis and rarely encourage students to create solutions that are based on the standards. This fact poses a hindrance in the adoption of new technologies due to the fact that recent graduates as young professionals will most certainly have difficulties in using new standards they may get in touch with on their first job. In our approach, we acknowledge the need for students to work with standards before they graduate. Research activities, connected with industrial projects in which application of new standardized technologies is in focus, are combined with student projects, enabling students to get their own hands-on experience in analyzing and applying telecommunications standards. As the result, students gain valuable experience for their future careers, an academic setting is used as a safe environment for testing and possibly even enhancing new standards, and the industry attains deeper knowledge about standards and technologies that could be used in their real-world deployments.
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- 2017
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16. Experience reuse to improve agility in knowledge-driven industrial processes
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J. C. Romero Bejarano, Laurent Geneste, Thierry Coudert, Valentina Llamas, A. de Valroger, Axsens (FRANCE), Institut National Polytechnique de Toulouse - INPT (FRANCE), Institut National Polytechnique de Toulouse - Toulouse INP (FRANCE), Laboratoire Génie de Production (LGP), Ecole Nationale d'Ingénieurs de Tarbes, AXSENS (AXSENS), and AXSENS
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0209 industrial biotechnology ,Engineering ,Process management ,Business process ,Problem-solving ,02 engineering and technology ,Reuse ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Stakeholders ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Adaptation (computer science) ,Requirements analysis ,Agile usability engineering ,business.industry ,Standards organizations ,Context ,Agile Unified Process ,Agile manufacturing ,Gestion et management ,Systems engineering ,[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,business ,Agile software development - Abstract
International audience; Companies need to become more agile to survive to the unstable and highly changing market-place. This can be achieved through the adaptation and control of their business processes. A process sufficiently structured but not over constrained by standards and based on experience feedback principles is necessary. This article describes a proposition of agile process driven by the reuse of experiences and knowledge. For this purpose, based on Case-Based Reasoning (CBR) principles, the complete lifecycle of an agile process is introduced, from requirements definition, retrieval, reuse, adaptation, and storage steps. Finally, an example applied to the domain of industrial problem solving is presented to illustrate the methodology.
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- 2016
17. Polaris: Providing context aware navigation in spreadsheets
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Bas Jansen
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Computer science ,IDE ,Context (language use) ,02 engineering and technology ,end-programming language ,Code (semiotics) ,World Wide Web ,Polaris ,020204 information systems ,programming languages ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Selection (linguistics) ,Visualization ,Software engineering ,business.industry ,InformationSystems_INFORMATIONSYSTEMSAPPLICATIONS ,Standards organizations ,ComputingMilieux_PERSONALCOMPUTING ,020207 software engineering ,ubiquitous computing ,spreadsheet programs ,programming environments ,Navigation ,spreadsheets ,integrated development environments ,context aware navigation ,business ,Switches ,Computer languages - Abstract
Spreadsheets are a successful example of an end-user programming language, and the spreadsheet paradigm shares several characteristics like composition, selection, and repetition with programming languages. There are compelling reasons that spreadsheets are code. For most programming languages, developers are supported by powerful IDEs. However, spreadsheets are missing such an IDE. In our current work we are researching how spreadsheet users could be supported by an IDE for spreadsheets and what kind of functionality should be included? As a preliminary result of this research, we introduce in this showpiece: Polaris, an excel Add-in that provides users with context-aware navigation in spreadsheets.
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- 2016
18. DC Task Team Report
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Charles J. Mozina, M. Hittel, Ed Larsen, B. Lequesne, B. Patterson, P. Garland, D. Scheuerman, Giuseppe Parise, T. D. Mills, D. Neeser, Marcelo E. Valdes, B. Brusso, T. E. Johnson, D. McCullough, C. Cook, B. Hornberger, Erling Hesla, David D. Shipp, B. Giese, Wei-Jen Lee, Claudio S. Mardegan, K. W. Kozol, Gary H. Fox, R. Hoerauf, Thomas J. Dionise, L. Floyd, Massimo Mitolo, Kurt Clemente, M. Halpin, Peter E. Sutherland, Dev Paul, L. B. McClung, Daleep Mohla, and L. Downey
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AC–DC power converters ,Engineering ,business.industry ,power distribution ,power sources ,Control engineering ,direct-current ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Task (project management) ,Engineering management ,Electric power system ,power system ,Control and Systems Engineering ,power supply ,standards organizations ,Power engineering ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Large group ,business ,energy efficiency - Abstract
In light of the rapid growth of dc loads, ICPS created a small team to outline design considerations for dc distribution and controls. Broad interest in the subject brought in a large group who provided substantial support for the Team. The report begins with a brief background followed by discussion of design considerations that affect ICPS and IAS. The key part of the report is Part IV, which outlines in detail a path forward for ICPS and for IAS. Appendix A outlines an approach toward developing dc standards or recommended practices for design of industrial and commercial power systems. Appendix B lists some of the organizations and individuals that are working on related dc issues at present.
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- 2014
19. Strategic alignment and project management offices: case studies from successful implementations in Turkey
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Gamze Karayaz, O. Gungor, Işık Üniversitesi, İktisadi ve İdari Bilimler Fakültesi, İşletme Bölümü, Işık University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Department of Management, Karayaz, Gamze, and Güngör, Özge
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Strategic alignment ,Design management ,Knowledge management ,Process management ,Turkey ,Project management offices ,Project prioritization ,Global business environment ,Management science ,Strategic alignment offices ,Project ,Strategic goals ,Globalisation ,Project charter ,Interviews ,IT companies ,Project management ,Competitive intelligence ,Industry ,Training ,Global business environments ,Extreme project management ,Complex projects ,Project management triangle ,Alignment ,OPM3 ,Business strategy ,business.industry ,Project stakeholder ,Research ,Standards organizations ,Systems science ,Project management methodology ,Project control ,Project management office(PMO) ,PMO ,Telecommunication companies ,Project planning ,Competitive strategies ,Organisational aspects ,Higher management ,Strategic planning ,Project management methodologies ,business ,Companies ,Competitive strategy - Abstract
Due to an increased need for learning modern project management methodologies, companies have been forced to improve their knowledge of Project Management Offices (PMO). Global business environment resulted with increased importance of project management methodologies, aligned with competitive strategies. Today, many organizations have recognized the importance of implementing PMO's for effective project control and better stakeholder (executives) support for projects. PMOs also undertake strategic roles such as incorporating higher management support to achieve strategic goals, integrating business strategies into project management efforts, and prioritization of projects. This paper examines PMOs in the process of strategic alignment. Moreover, the contribution of PMOs to achieve strategic goals is explored. Our initial findings are promising represented in a framework, and demonstrated by a case study application review using IT and telecommunication companies selected from Turkey. The research offers future directions and implications of a well-established successful PMO system. Publisher's Version
- Published
- 2013
20. Integrated configuration of enterprise systems for interoperability : towards process model and business document specification alignment
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Christian Janiesch, Sonia Lippe, Ulrike Greiner, and Alexander Dreiling
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Process management ,Computer science ,Vendor ,Technology management ,Standards organizations ,Interoperability ,Australia ,information systems ,Distributed computing ,Personalization ,Configuration Management (ITSM) ,International collaboration ,Enterprise system ,Customer base ,Packaging ,Information system ,Business ,Manufacturing processes ,080600 INFORMATION SYSTEMS ,De facto standard ,Document handling - Abstract
Enterprise Systems (ES) can be understood as the de facto standard for holistic operational and managerial support within an organization. Most commonly ES are offered as commercial off-the-shelf packages, requiring customization in the user organization. This process is a complex and resource-intensive task, which often prevents small and midsize enterprises (SME) from undertaking configuration projects. Especially in the SME market independent software vendors provide pre-configured ES for a small customer base. The problem of ES configuration is shifted from the customer to the vendor, but remains critical. We argue that the yet unexplored link between process configuration and business document configuration must be closer examined as both types of configuration are closely tied to one another.
- Published
- 2006
21. New image processing models for opacity image analysis in chest radiographs
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Pattichis, Marios S., Muralldharan, H., Pattichis, Constantinos S., Soliz, P., Pattichis, Constantinos S. [0000-0003-1271-8151], and Pattichis, Marios S. [0000-0002-1574-1827]
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Opacity ,Medical conditions ,Regions of interest ,Chest radiographs ,Computer science ,Radiography ,Image processing ,Amplitude modulation ,Image analysis ,Image (mathematics) ,X-rays ,Silicon compounds ,International labor organizations ,Spectral analysis ,Computer vision ,Medical image processing ,Pattern spectrum ,X rays ,business.industry ,Standards organizations ,AM-FM models ,Shape measurements ,Image segmentation ,Density measurement (specific gravity) ,Spectrum analysis ,Radial patterns ,Medical imaging ,Artificial intelligence ,Lungs ,Density measurement ,Shape measurement ,business ,International labor organization - Abstract
The aim of this research is to develop new image processing models that can be used to characterize single opacities and opacity density within pre-selected regions of interest (ROI). We derive our new image processing models based on the International Labor Organization (ILO) standard for assessing opacity shape and profusion. Pattern spectrum analysis is used for opacity shape and profusion measurements. Opacity enhancement is done using a novel AM-FM model. We use radial pattern spectra to detect the presence of opacities within the ROI, and measure opacity density. The opacity shape and profusion measurement results compare favorably with the ILO standards. The AM-FM model appears to be well-suited for single opacity enhancement. © 2002 IEEE. 2002-January 260 264 Sponsors: IEEE Computer Society Conference code: 115840 Cited By :4
- Published
- 2003
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22. Government Open Systems Interconnection Profile (GOSIP) transition strategy
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Laxen, Mark R., Suh, Myung W., Frew, Barry, Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.), and Department of Administrative Sciences
- Subjects
GOSIP ,Standards organizations ,Transition ,OSI ,Open systems ,Interoperability ,Network architectures - Abstract
This thesis analyzes the Government Open Systems Interconnection Profile (GOSIP) and the requirements of the Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) Publication 146-1. It begins by examining the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) architecture and protocol suites and the distinctions between GOSIP version 1 and 2. Additionally, it explores some of the GOSIP protocol details and discusses the process by which standards organizations have developed their recommendations. Implementation considerations from both government and vendor perspectives illustrate the barriers and requirements faced by information systems managers, as well as basic transition strategies. The result of this thesis is to show a transition strategy through an extended and coordinated period of coexistence due to extensive legacy systems and GOSIP product unavailability. Recommendations for GOSIP protocol standards to include capabilities outside the OSI model are also presented. http://archive.org/details/governmentopensy1094539966 Lieutenant, United States Navy Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
- Published
- 1985
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