951 research outputs found

    The Landscape of Salesforce for Nonprofits: A Report on the Current Marketplace for Apps

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    Do you use Salesforce as a Constituent Relationship Management database at your organization, or are you considering it? Since it launched in 1999, more than 20,000 nonprofits have employed the cloud-based system, which is made available to them for free through the philanthropic Salesforce Foundation. What's the catch? Making such a powerful system work for the particular needs of a nonprofit isn't always straightforward. This report can tell you everything you need to know.What's in it? To learn more about the benefits and drawbacks of Salesforce, we interviewed nine prominent consultants specializing in implementing Salesforce for nonprofits along with several members of the Salesforce.com Foundation about what the platform does well, and what you'll want to add to it to suit your needs. We evaluated some of the constituent management packages built on top of Salesforce, including the Salesforce Foundation's Nonprofit Starter Pack, which is aimed at turning the sales automation platform into a tool for nonprofits. We also took a look at the universe of add-ons to the base Salesforce platform -- called "apps" because of Salesforce's online marketplace, the App Exchange -- to find out which might be useful to support a nonprofit's processes.The goal for this report was to break down misconceptions about the tool and to collect disparate information in one place to help you make informed decisions. Whether you're already using Salesforce, are thinking about adopting it, or have yet to even consider it, there's information here for you.What's more, we've included a directory of consultants or firms with experience working with nonprofits to implement Salesforce and the additional App Exchange modules that we cover in this report to make it easier for you to find the help you'll need

    3D virtual world as an enabler for a hybrid virtual-physical situated civic engagement platform

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    Abstract. User participatory design concept in the domain of urban computing has been playing a significant role around the industry and research area since it first came out. Many researchers and organisations involved in this strive to reach out a larger diversity of people so they could build urban environment better supportive and salubrious towards the community members. In this regard, we created a common ground platform for sharing opinions of people within the society by delivering a free speech from the public place. The installation is evaluated in our study dedicated in the context of human psychological sensation systems in the virtual environment, tries to find the relation between the performance of the task (giving a speech) carried out in a virtual space and the user’s degree of presence and immersion. The results of our series of field experiments show that there is a positive association between the system user interface and the quality of work, though, we could not extend it to the statement which saying the superior performance is the direct result of high immersion and presence

    Slashdot, open news and informated media: exploring the intersection of imagined futures and web publishing technology

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    "In this essay, my interest is in how imagined media futures are implicated in the work of producing novel web publishing technology. I explore the issue through an account of the emergence of Slashdot, the tech news and discussion site that by 1999 had implemented a number of recommendation features now associated with social media and web 2.0 platforms. Specifically, I aim to understand the connection between the development of Slashdot’s influential content-management system (CMS) - an elaborate publishing infrastructure called “Slash” that allowed editors to choose reader submissions for publication and automatically distributed the work of moderating the comments sections among trusted users - and two distinct visions of a web-enabled transformation of media production.

    The comparative study of model-based and appearance Based gait recognition for leave bag behind

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    Nowadays, the increasing number of crimes and violence in the world has become a concern of modem society. This is why the need for criminal recognition using gait used for civilian and forensic analysis applications has evoked considerable interest. The literature accurate the result can be found in gait recognition by leave bag behind detection especially in .the critical area examples airport and shopping mall environment. This is important because the method used capable of identifying the subject based on their gait and can be presented as the most probable subject as a strong evidence for criminal identification. This research limited to leave the bag behind detection on gait recognition. In this research, the analysis perfonned using two methods which are Model-Based approaches and Appearance-Based approaches. The selected methods were implemented in MATLAB R2014a and R Studio and tested with a standard dataset from the Chinese Academy of Science (CASIA) and tested using two classifiers which is Support Vector Machine (SVM) and KNN (K nearest Neighbour) based on accuracy and misclassification rates (MER) metrics. The experiment results show that the accuracy and misclassification rate (MER) of Appearance-based approaches obtained is 93.66% and 6.33% respectively tested on SVM classifier then the accuracy and misclassification rate (MER) of Appearance­based approaches is 97.66% and 2.33% respectively tested on KNN algorithm. Meanwhile, the accuracy and misclassification rate (MER) of Model-based approaches obtained is 97.00% and 3.00% respectively tested on SVM classifier then the accuracy and misclassification rate (MER) of Model-based approaches is 99.00% and 1.00% respectively tested on KNN algorithm. It can be concluded from experiments conducted by Model-based approaches better than Appearance-based approaches because Model-Based approaches higher precision value as well as low misclassification

    Management Control Systems and Strategy Change in Buyouts

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    The impact of management buy-outs (MBO) on strategy and management control systems (MCS) is little understood. Previous research by Jones (1992) focused on efficiency-enhancing buy-outs that were a feature of the early development of the market. However, MBOs are heterogeneous and more recent developments have involved ownership changes that stimulate entrepreneurial practices. The novel contribution of this paper is to use Simons' (1995) classification of beliefs systems, boundary systems, diagnostic and interactive control systems to extend Jones' study to these newer forms of MBO. Within-case analysis and cross-case comparisons from four buyout firms are used to capture the interaction between management control systems and competitive strategy formulation, implementation and modification. This evidence supports arguments that buy-out managers undertake efforts in balancing the traditional feedback systems with the newer systems that stimulate opportunity seeking and learning

    Wikis of Locality: Insights from the Open Guides

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    In this paper we describe an emerging form of wikis - wikis of locality – that support physical rather than virtual communities. We draw on our experience as administrators of the Open Guide to Milton Keynes, one of the Open Guides family of community developed local information guides built using wiki software, and present observations of the potential value and unique characteristics of wikis of locality from a practitioner’s perspective. Preliminary findings from a current survey of other Open Guide administrators are presented to highlight types of usage, issues and potential areas for future research

    Spartan Daily, September 4, 1998

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    Volume 111, Issue 6https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/9294/thumbnail.jp

    Recovering Tech\u27s Humanity

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    Good Game

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    This thesis and its corresponding art installation, Lessons from Ziggy, attempts to deconstruct the variables prevalent within several complex systems, analyze their transformations, and propose a methodology for reasserting the soap box within the display pedestal. In this text, there are several key and specific examples of the transformation of various signifiers (i.e. media-bred fear’s transformation into a political tactic of surveillance, contemporary freneticism’s transformation into complacency, and community’s transformation into nationalism as a state weapon). In this essay, all of these concepts are contextualized within the exponential growth of new technologies. That is to say, all of these semiotic developments must be framed within the post-Internet sphere
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