144 research outputs found
University 4.4 – A Development Strategy for Education and Research Centers
Due to increased demand for qualified human resources, for 'new & rare skills', for software solutions, reliable products and services in the field of applied informatics, there are large available financial funds that can be accessed by Informatics and Cybernetics schools. Edu-cational and research departments must capitalize funds provided by the Europe-an/international institutions and private companies, by supporting the creation of spin-off en-tities that will conduct technology transfer projects. These funds must be used to increase the quality of teaching and to improve research results by assuring the financial needs and tech-nical resources of teachers (project based payments), students (scholarships projects) and the community (public available projects). The presented strategy, University 4.4 describes four development directions for a four years period. It has been developed by Catalin Boja, Razvan Bologa, Marius Popa and Cristian Toma and since November 2011 it represents the assumed development strategy of The Department of Economic Informatics and Cybernetics (DICE) from The Bucharest University of Economic Studies.University, Research, Strategy, Education, Informatics, Cybernetics, Department, DICE
Secure Electronic Cards in Public Services
The paper presents the electronic wallet solution implemented within a GSM SIM technology for accessing public services. The solution is implemented in the medical field to provide information on the patient's medical history and payment for private medical services. The security issue is a very important one as the patient's history is confidential and the payment has to be safe.public services, mobile, security, m-application, smart card
THE JAPANESE MANAGEMENT, A KEY ELEMENT OF TOYOTA’S SUCCESS
After its defeat in the World War II, Japan was a country in ruin. The Japanese economy faced huge problems as unemployment and hyperinflation increased. The vast majority of its industry was destroyed and new industrial facilities had to be re-constructed from the ashes. In the 1970s Japan achieved a giant economic stature, evolving into the second largest economy of the world. There are many ways of analyzing the Japanese economic miracle, but in the final, management has to being considered as one of its most important factors. The aims of our paper are to emphasize some of the main features of the Japanese management in the globalization era, and to present the case of Toyota Motor Company. The research type is a literature review combined with a case study
Secure Electronic Cards in Public Services
The paper presents the electronic wallet solution implemented within a GSM SIM technology for accessing public services. The solution is implemented in the medical field to provide information on the patient’s medical history and payment for private medical services. The security issue is a very important one as the patient’s history is confidential and the payment has to be safe
University 4.4 – A Development Strategy for Education and Research Centers
Due to increased demand for qualified human resources, for 'new & rare skills', for software solutions, reliable products and services in the field of applied informatics, there are large available financial funds that can be accessed by Informatics and Cybernetics schools. Edu-cational and research departments must capitalize funds provided by the Europe-an/international institutions and private companies, by supporting the creation of spin-off en-tities that will conduct technology transfer projects. These funds must be used to increase the quality of teaching and to improve research results by assuring the financial needs and tech-nical resources of teachers (project based payments), students (scholarships projects) and the community (public available projects). The presented strategy, University 4.4 describes four development directions for a four years period. It has been developed by Catalin Boja, Razvan Bologa, Marius Popa and Cristian Toma and since November 2011 it represents the assumed development strategy of The Department of Economic Informatics and Cybernetics (DICE) from The Bucharest University of Economic Studies
Innovation at the Global Level: An Analysis of the Global Innovation Index in the Period 2021-2023
The last decades have seen an increase in entrepreneurial development based on innovation.
Having access to innovation and setting up a business in a country that can serve as an innovationenabler can increase the degree of attractiveness of that respective country. Governments around
the world have adopted innovation-centered views and implemented relevant policies to serve as a
driver for reaching high competitiveness and to ensure a more rapid economic and, implicitly, social
progress. The aim of the paper is to present the top ten countries in the world in their evolution
specific to the Global Innovation Index (GII) for the 2021-2023 period. The research methodology
is based on a qualitative method. The paper shows that the top ten ranked countries in the world
using this specific index remained the same for the investigated period, also maintaining a fairly
constant relative position for the three years subject to analysis, Switzerland being the acknowledged
leader
A missing high-spin molecule in the family of cyano-bridged heptanuclear heterometal complexes, [(LCuII)6FeIII(CN)6]3+, and its CoIII and CrIII analogues, accompanied in the crystal by a novel octameric water cluster
Three isostructural cyano-bridged heptanuclear complexes,
[{CuII(saldmen)(H2O)}6{MIII(CN)6}](ClO4)38H2O (M = FeIII 2; CoIII, 3;
CrIII 4), have been obtained by reacting the binuclear copper(II) complex,
[Cu2(saldmen)2(mu-H2O)(H2O)2](ClO4)22H2O 1, with K3[Co(CN)6],
K4[Fe(CN)6], and, respectively, K3[Cr(CN)6] (Hsaldmen is the Schiff base
resulted from the condensation of salicylaldehyde with
N,N-dimethylethylenediamine). A unique octameric water cluster, with
bicyclo[2,2,2]octane-like structure, is sandwiched between the heptanuclear
cations in 2, 3 and 4. The cryomagnetic investigations of compounds 2 and 4
reveal ferromagnetic couplings of the central FeIII or CrIII ions with the CuII
ions (JCuFe = +0.87 cm-1, JCuCr = +30.4 cm-1). The intramolecular Cu-Cu
exchange interaction in 3, across the diamagnetic cobalt(III) ion, is -0.3
cm-1. The solid-state1H-NMR spectra of compounds 2 and 3 have been
investigated
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