7,956 research outputs found
A Geometric Approach to Noncommutative Principal Torus Bundles
A (smooth) dynamical system with transformation group is a
triple , consisting of a unital locally convex algebra
, the -torus and a group homomorphism
\alpha:\mathbb{T}^n\rightarrow\Aut(A), which induces a (smooth) continuous
action of on . In this paper we present a new, geometrically
oriented approach to the noncommutative geometry of principal torus bundles
based on such dynamical systems. Our approach is inspired by the classical
setting: In fact, after recalling the definition of a trivial noncommutative
principal torus bundle, we introduce a convenient (smooth) localization method
for noncommutative algebras and say that a dynamical system
is called a noncommutative principal
-bundle, if localization leads to a trivial noncommutative
principal -bundle. We prove that this approach extends the
classical theory of principal torus bundles and present a bunch of
(non-trivial) noncommutative examples.Comment: This paper is an extended version of "Smooth Localization in
Noncommutative Geometry", arxiv:1108.4294v1 [math.DG], 22 Aug 2011, with an
application to the noncommutative geometry of principal torus bundles. All
comments are welcome. 43 page
Business Method Patents in Europe and their Strategic Use - Evidence from Franking Device Manufacturers
There has been a wide-spread misconception based on the imprecise wording of Art. 52 of the European Patent Convention (EPC)
that the protection of business methods by patents is prohibited in Europe. This paper investigates the legal framework set by patent laws with respect to the patentability of business methods, contrasting the situation in lege in Europe and the situation in the US. It is shown that in praxi business methods have never been excluded from patentability in Europe. In the empirical part of the paper, 1,901 European patent applications relating to business methods are identified and major patent indicators are computed. Further, a case study from the franking device industry which is characterized by strong competition
for intellectual property rights is conducted. It contains evidence for the strategic use of business method patents leading to opposition rates against granted patents of 44%
Make-or-Buy Decisions in Patent Related Services
Among the most prominent theoretical frameworks dealing with the economic
underlyings of firmsâ make-or-buy decisions are Transaction Cost Economics (TCE) and the Resourced Based View (RBV). Relying on panel data covering 107 European firms over eight years I test predictions from both TCE and
RBV with regard to the outsourcing of patent related services simultaneously. Modelling the share of outsourced patent applications in a Negative Binomial Panel Regression Model I find joint explanatory power of both approaches. My findings support previous literature arguing for an integration of TCE and RBV to a comprehensive theoretical framework of firms make-or-buy decisions
Correct and Control Complex IoT Systems: Evaluation of a Classification for System Anomalies
In practice there are deficiencies in precise interteam communications about
system anomalies to perform troubleshooting and postmortem analysis along
different teams operating complex IoT systems. We evaluate the quality in use
of an adaptation of IEEE Std. 1044-2009 with the objective to differentiate the
handling of fault detection and fault reaction from handling of defect and its
options for defect correction. We extended the scope of IEEE Std. 1044-2009
from anomalies related to software only to anomalies related to complex IoT
systems. To evaluate the quality in use of our classification a study was
conducted at Robert Bosch GmbH. We applied our adaptation to a postmortem
analysis of an IoT solution and evaluated the quality in use by conducting
interviews with three stakeholders. Our adaptation was effectively applied and
interteam communications as well as iterative and inductive learning for
product improvement were enhanced. Further training and practice are required.Comment: Submitted to QRS 2020 (IEEE Conference on Software Quality,
Reliability and Security
Reliability of genetic networks is evolvable
Control of the living cell functions with remarkable reliability despite the
stochastic nature of the underlying molecular networks -- a property presumably
optimized by biological evolution. We here ask to what extent the property of a
stochastic dynamical network to produce reliable dynamics is an evolvable
trait. Using an evolutionary algorithm based on a deterministic selection
criterion for the reliability of dynamical attractors, we evolve dynamical
networks of noisy discrete threshold nodes. We find that, starting from any
random network, reliability of the attractor landscape can often be achieved
with only few small changes to the network structure. Further, the evolvability
of networks towards reliable dynamics while retaining their function is
investigated and a high success rate is found.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Make-or-Buy Decisions in Patent Related Services
Among the most prominent theoretical frameworks dealing with the economic underlyings of firmsâ make-or-buy decisions are Transaction Cost Economics (TCE) and the Resourced Based View (RBV). Relying on panel data covering 107 European firms over eight years I test predictions from both TCE and RBV with regard to the outsourcing of patent related services simultaneously. Modelling the share of outsourced patent applications in a Negative Binomial Panel Regression Model I find joint explanatory power of both approaches. My findings support previous literature arguing for an integration of TCE and RBV to a comprehensive theoretical framework of firms make-or-buy decisions.outsourcing; patent attorney; make-or-buy; negative binomial panel regression
Business Method Patents in Europe and their Strategic Use â Evidence from Franking Device Manufacturers
There has been a wide-spread misconception based on the imprecise wording of Art. 52 of the European Patent Convention (EPC) that the protection of business methods by patents is prohibited in Europe. This paper investigates the legal framework set by patent laws with respect to the patentability of business methods, contrasting the situation in Europe and the situation in the US. It is shown that in praxi business methods have never been excluded from patentability in Europe. Further, 1,901 European patent applications relating to business methods are found by identifying European equivalents to granted USPTO patents filed in US Class 705 (i.e. business method patents). The computation of major patent indicators reveals that European applications for business method patents differ from the average of all EPO patent applications with respect to the number of claims, the number of references made and the frequency of legal actions against granted patents. Additionally, a case study from the franking device industry gives evidence of the strategic use of business method patents leading to comparably high opposition rates against 44% of all granted patents.
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