180 research outputs found

    The comparison of milk production and quality in cows from conventional and automatic milking systems

    Get PDF
    The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of two different types of milking systems (conventional parlour . automatic milking system) and the season of the year on the composition and hygienic quality of milk from Czech cows. A total of 500 cows were involved; 200 and 300 in conventional and automatic milking systems, respectively. Bulk milk samples were collected for 12 months from July 2010 to June 2011. The following milk components and quality indicators were determined: % of fat, % of protein, % of lactose, % of fat-free dry matter (FFDM), % of casein, urea content, somatic cell count (SSC), total germ count (TGC) and milk freezing point (FP). The data were processed and evaluated with MS Excel and the statistical software SAS 9.1. Significantly higher contents of fat, protein, FFDM and casein and increased TGC were observed in the automatic milking system, whereas SCC and FP were significantly lower. The highest contents of fat, protein and casein, and the lowest lactose content were found in the winter season

    Instances and connectors : issues for a second generation process language

    Get PDF
    This work is supported by UK EPSRC grants GR/L34433 and GR/L32699Over the past decade a variety of process languages have been defined, used and evaluated. It is now possible to consider second generation languages based on this experience. Rather than develop a second generation wish list this position paper explores two issues: instances and connectors. Instances relate to the relationship between a process model as a description and the, possibly multiple, enacting instances which are created from it. Connectors refers to the issue of concurrency control and achieving a higher level of abstraction in how parts of a model interact. We believe that these issues are key to developing systems which can effectively support business processes, and that they have not received sufficient attention within the process modelling community. Through exploring these issues we also illustrate our approach to designing a second generation process language.Postprin

    The political role of service delivery in state-building: Exploring the relevance of European history for developing countries

    Get PDF
    Concerns about failed and fragile states have put state- and nation-building firmly on the academic and policy agenda, but the crucial role of public services in this process has remained underexplored. The 1960s and '70s generated a substantial set of literature that is largely missing from current writing. It identified state penetration, standardisation and accommodation as key processes in the state- and nation-building sequence. This article analyses these three processes in Western Europe in the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries, and the role of public services therein, to explore how they may help us to understand the success and failure of state- and nation-building in developing countries and fragile states. © The Authors 2011. Development Policy Revie
    corecore