30,187 research outputs found
The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI)
A bibliography of reports concerning the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence is presented. Cosmic evolution, space communication, and technological advances are discussed along with search strategies and search systems
Reviews
Eta De Cicco, Mike Farmer and James Hargrave, Using the Internet in Secondary Schools, London: Kogan Page (2nd edn), 2001. ISBN: 0–7494–3459–7. Softback, x + 192 pages, £16.99
Exploring Dynamic Capabilities in Open Business Models: The Case of a Public-Private Sector Partnership
The case explores and offers insight into the boundary-spanning dynamic capabilities
evidenced by the entrepreneurial CEO of a private-sector family-owned firm from the
sensing, seizing and transforming/reconfiguring perspectives during the opportunity
identification, evaluation and pursuit of the co-creation of a public-private sector partnership
in collaboration with the CEO of a public-sector firm. This partnership, which is situated in a
city-region in the North of England, is seen through the lens of an open business model
whereby value is co-created and captured outside the boundary of a single firm, and which
involves significant financial uncertainty being assigned from the public to the private sector
Dromoeconomics: Towards a Political Economy of Speed
In this article we present an alternative theoretical perspective on contemporary cultural, political and economic practices in advanced countries. Like other articles in this issue of parallax, our focus is on conceptualising the economies of excess. However, our ideas do not draw on the writings of Georges Bataille in The Accursed Share, but principally on Virilio’s Speed & Politics: An Essay on Dromology and Marx’s Capital and the Grundrisse.4 Using a modest synthesis of tools provided by these theorists, we put forward a tentative conceptualisation of ‘dromoeconomics’, or, a political economy of speed
Identification through technical analysis : A study of charting and UK non-professional investors
The usefulness of technical analysis, or charting, has been questioned because it flies in the face of the 'random walk' and tests present conflicting results. We examine chartists' decision-making techniques and derive a taxonomy of charting strategies based on investors' market ontologies and calculative strategies. This distinguishes between trend-seekers and pattern-seekers, and trading as a system or an art. We argue that interpretative activity plays a more important role than previously thought and suggest that charting's main appeal for users lies in its power as a heuristic device regardless of its effectiveness at generating returns.PostprintPeer reviewe
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