2,631 research outputs found
Business-Driven IT Transformation at Royal Philips: Shedding Light on (Un)Rewarded Complexity
In 2013, Royal Philips was two years into a daunting transformation. Following declining financial performance, CEO Frans van Houten aimed to turn the Dutch icon into a “high-performing company” by 2017. This case study examines the challenges of the business-driven IT transformation at Royal Philips, a diversified technology company. The case discusses three crucial issues. First, the case reflects on Philips’ aim at creating value from combining locally relevant products and services while also leveraging its global scale and scope. Rewarded and unrewarded business complexity is analyzed. Second, the case identifies the need to design and align multiple elements of an enterprise (organizational, cultural, technical) to balance local responsiveness with global scale. Third, the case explains the role of IT (as an asset instead of a liability) in Philips’ transformation and discusses the new IT landscape with its digital platforms, and the new practices to create effective business-IT partnerships
Producer-side Use Cases of Digitized Products: What’s Best for Your Company?
Digital technologies are moving into physical products. Smart cars, connected lightbulbs and data-generating tennis rackets are examples of previously “pure” physical products that turned into “digitized products”. Digitizing products offers many use cases for consumers that will hopefully persuade them to buy these products. Yet, as revenues from selling digitized products will remain small in the near future, digitized product manufacturers have to look for other sources of benefits. Producer-side use cases describe how manufacturers can benefit internally from the digitized products they produce. Our article identifies three categories of such use cases: product-, service-, and process-related ones. We suggest digitized product manufacturers to (1) also consider internal value creation opportunities when developing digitized products, (2) take stock and identify blind spots, and (3) prioritize use cases. Our research can help product manufacturers when building a business case for digitizing their products
Strategic Flexibility and IT Infastructure Investments - Empirical Evidence in Two Case Studies
This paper presents an empirical study to explore how firms invest in their IT infrastructure to support strategic flexibility. It investigates how IT infrastructure capabilities relate to strategic flexibility, how firms build flexibility into their IT investment decisions, and how the firms use IT to support strategic flexibility. Our cases indicate that different types of needed flexibility at the organizational level, ask for different types of IT infrastructure capabilities. In both cases, flexibility is supported by centrally organized management-oriented IT infrastructure capabilities. In the IT investment process, flexibility in the investment decision-making process is implicitly taken into account, whereas IT infrastructure flexibility is explicitly valued for. In both cases, management expects more explorative use of applications supported by IT infrastructure investments to better enhance strategic flexibility than exploitative use does. The implications for further research are discussed
Spectroscopy of Orbitally Excited Bs Mesons with the CDF II Detector
Die Arbeit beschreibt die weltbeste Messung der Masse der orbital angeregten Bs Mesonen, die in einer D Welle in ein Kaon und ein Bu Meson zerfallen. Massenresultate der Arbeit sind in das PDG Buch eingegangen. Darueberhinaus wurde ein maximales Limit auf die Breite gesetzt, und die Produktions- und Zerfallsverzweigungen der untersuchten Zustaende betrachtet
Recent results on B spectroscopy at the Tevatron
The Tevatron collider at Fermilab provides a rich environment for B spectroscopy. Recently the first direct observation of the B{sub c} meson has reduced its mass uncertainty by two orders of magnitude. A search for {eta}{sub b} mesons provides the best limit on its production in p{bar p} colliders. In studies on orbitally excited B{sub d} mesons for the first time the narrow states could be separated from each other. The orbitally excited B{sub s} mesons have been observed for the first time. With the charged {Sigma}{sub b}{sup (*)} a second B baryon could be established beside the {Lambda}{sub b}
Single particle algorithms to reveal cellular nanodomain organization
Formation, maintenance and physiology of high-density protein-enriched
organized nanodomains, first observed in electron microscopy images, remains
challenging to investigate due to their small sizes. However, these regions
regulate molecular trafficking, assembly and sorting required for higher cell
functions, such as communication or plastic changes. Over the past ten years,
super-resolution single-particle trajectories (SPTs) have been used to sample
these sub-cellular environments at a nanometer resolution for both membrane and
soluble proteins. We present here data analysis developments and algorithms
that convert high-throughput molecular trajectories into maps of molecular
density, diffusion and local drift organization. These approaches transform
intrinsic trajectory properties into statistics of the underlying cellular
organization. The automatic identification of large numbers of high-density
regions allows quantifying their boundary location and organization, their
stability over time and their ability to transiently retain molecules. To
conclude recent automated algorithms can now be used to extract biophysical
parameters of sub-cellular nanodomains over a large amount of trajectories.Comment: 6 fig
A neural network z-vertex trigger for Belle II
We present the concept of a track trigger for the Belle II experiment, based
on a neural network approach, that is able to reconstruct the z (longitudinal)
position of the event vertex within the latency of the first level trigger. The
trigger will thus be able to suppress a large fraction of the dominating
background from events outside of the interaction region. The trigger uses the
drift time information of the hits from the Central Drift Chamber (CDC) of
Belle II within narrow cones in polar and azimuthal angle as well as in
transverse momentum (sectors), and estimates the z-vertex without explicit
track reconstruction. The preprocessing for the track trigger is based on the
track information provided by the standard CDC trigger. It takes input from the
2D () track finder, adds information from the stereo wires of the
CDC, and finds the appropriate sectors in the CDC for each track in a given
event. Within each sector, the z-vertex of the associated track is estimated by
a specialized neural network, with a continuous output corresponding to the
scaled z-vertex. The input values for the neural network are calculated from
the wire hits of the CDC.Comment: Proceedings of the 16th International workshop on Advanced Computing
and Analysis Techniques in physics research (ACAT), Preprint, reviewed
version (only minor corrections
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