96,789 research outputs found
Telecommunications service accounting management based on TINA
Master of Science in Engineering - EngineeringThe next generation telecommunication networks offers traditional voice type services as
well as advanced data services, typically of the multi-media based type, on top of an open
resource, heterogeneous network that delivers services with a specified level of quality of service (QoS). The need for a comprehensive telecommunications service accounting management
system in the such Next Generation Network is envisaged as the traditional telecommunications
billing system does not meet the accounting management requirements in such network. This report present the design and implementation of a service accounting management system based on the Telecommunications Information Networking Architecture (TINA). The service accounting management in TINA service environment, which allows the users to obtain multiple service with specified network connection QoS, is emonstrated
on the South Africa TINA Trial platform, which provides a next generation service environment
conceived by TINA. This work shows the generation and the flow of the service and
network usage accounting information in the distributed processing environment
The Effects of service deregulation on industry growth
Treballs Finals del MĆ ster d'Economia, Facultat d'Economia i Empresa, Universitat de Barcelona, Curs: 2018-2019, Tutor: Vahagn JerbashianThis study analyses the impact of service deregulation on industry growth, to observe if industries that use less regulated services more intensively experience faster value added growth rates. Considering a sample of 18 OECD countries between two periods of time. The analysis focuses on the regulation of telecommunications, energy, transports and professional services. Results indicate that deregulating services increases industry growth in downstream manufacturing industries. Moreover, I have identiļ¬ed threshold eļ¬ects, after some level of deregulation the regulations seem not to matter. Preliminary results indicate that foreign service dependence is the most important. Estimates are robust to accounting for diļ¬erent measures of ļ¬nancial development
The Reality of the Employees Performance in the Palestinian Cellular Telecommunications Company (Jawwal)
The aim of this study was to identify the reality of the performance of the employees in The Palestinian Cellular Telecommunications Company (Jawwal), and to find the differences between the views of the study sample on the variables of the study according to the variables (age, scientific qualification, field of work and years of service). To achieve the objectives of the study, a questionnaire was designed and developed to measure the variables of the study applied to the company's 70 employees. The Complete Census method was used and 60 samples were recovered for analysis with a recovery rate (85.7%). The SPSS statistical package was adopted. The study reached several results, the most important of which is that the degree of approval for the job performance of the employees working in The Palestinian Cellular Telecommunications Company (Jawwal) is 81.56%. The results showed that there were no statistically significant differences at the level of Ī±ā¤ 0.05 between the average of the respondents' opinions on the performance of the workers in the Palestinian Cellular Telecommunications Company (Jawwal) due to the following variables (age, scientific qualification, field of work, number of years of service). The most important recommendations were to increase the efficiency of the employees of the company using the equipment of their work, and the need to pay attention to the development of the skills of employees through specialized training programs to improve their performance. And focus on moral incentives because of their role in improving the performance of employees by spreading the spirit of cooperation between
Iowa Department of Commerce, Iowa Utilities Board Division Performance Report, FY 2004
Agency Performance Repor
Conceptualising Regulatory Change - Explaining Shifts in Telecommunications Governance
Drawing on perspectives from telecommunications policy and neo-Gramscian
understandings of international political economy, this paper offers an
explanation and analysis of the shifting patterns of regulation which have been
evident in the telecommunications sector in recent years. It aims to illustrate
explain and explore the implications of the movement of regulatory sovereignty
away from the nation-state, through regional conduits, to global organisations
in the crystallisation of a world system of telecommunications governance.
Our central argument is that telecommunications governance has evolved from a
regulatory arena characterised, in large part, by national diversity, to one
wherein a more convergent global multilayered system is emerging. We suggest
that the epicentre of this regulatory system is the relatively new World Trade
Organisation (WTO). Working in concert with the WTO are existing
well-established nodes regulation. In further complement, we see regional
regulatory projects, notably the European Union (EU), as important conduits and
nodes of regulation in the consolidation of a global regulatory regime.
By way of procedure, we first explore the utility of a neo-Gramscian approach
for understanding the development of global regulatory frameworks. Second, we
survey something of the recent history - and, in extension, conventional wisdom
- of telecommunications regulation at national and regional levels. Third, we
demonstrate how a multilayered system of global telecommunications regulation
has emerged centred around the regulatory authority of the WTO. Finally, we
offer our concluding comments.Comment: 29th TPRC conference, 200
Power relations, ethnicity and privatisation: A tale of a telecommunications company
The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate the confluence of political and economic interests of the Fijian elite in transforming state assets into private property and financial gain. Drawing on a Habermasian theoretical framework applied to a privatised state monopoly (Telecom Fiji), it is demonstrated how an implementation of privatisation concealed social and political interests. Thus privatisation provided a convenient rhetoric and tool of implementation for social and political gain by a ruling elite. For those inside the Telecom company, the ethos of public service could not withstand the messengers of capitalism with their rhetoric of the need for greater efficiency, effectiveness and consumer awareness. However, as for many other privatisation programmes around the world, the results are not reflected in the improved organisational performance or wellbeing of the ordinary citizen when state monopolies are privatised
Iowa Department of Commerce, Iowa Utilities Board Division Performance Report, FY 2008
Agency Performance Repor
Inter-Domain Integration of Services and Service Management
The evolution of the global telecommunications industry into an open services market presents developers of telecommunication service and management systems with many new challenges. Increased competition, complex service provision chains and integrated service offerings require effective techniques for the rapid integration of service and management systems over multiple organisational domains. These integration issues have been examined in the ACTS project Prospect by developing a working set of integrated, managed telecommunications services for a user trial. This paper presents the initial results of this work detailing the technologies and standards used, the architectural approach taken and the application of this approach to specific services
Experiences in Integrated Multi-Domain Service Management
Increased competition, complex service provision chains and integrated service offerings require effective techniques for the rapid integration of telecommunications services and management systems over multiple organisational domains. This paper presents some of the results of practical development work in this area, detailing the technologies and standards used, the architectural approach taken and the application of this approach to specific services. This work covers the integration of multimedia services, broadband networks, service management and network management, though the detailed examples given focus specifically on the integration of services and service management
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