8,124 research outputs found
Sustainable Development Report: Blockchain, the Web3 & the SDGs
This is an output paper of the applied research that was conducted between July 2018 - October 2019 funded by the Austrian Development Agency (ADA) and conducted by the Research Institute for Cryptoeconomics at the Vienna University of Economics and Business and RCE Vienna (Regional Centre of Expertise on Education for Sustainable Development).Series: Working Paper Series / Institute for Cryptoeconomics / Interdisciplinary Researc
Four-Letter Super Connoisseur\u27s Ladders
Four-letter words are famously well connected to each other. Fewer than one per cent of words connect to no other, whereas over 70 per cent in each of the four possible positions-on average, there are 23 neighbours for each word. For our present purpose, note that more than three-quarters are heterograms. This means that Connoisseur\u27s Ladders (those with sequential replacement between heterograms, plus a relationship between the first and last words) become commonplace. On the other hand, the number of such ladders is restricted by the relatively small number (fewer than 20,000) of four-letter words available
Alphabetic Trigrams and Tetragrams Update
An update on an article from May 1999 with examples for each alphabetic set
Integration of blockchains with management information systems
In the era of the fourth industrial revolution (Industry 4.0), many Management Information Systems (MIS) integrate real-time data collection and use technologies such as big data, machine learning, and cloud computing, to foster a wide range of creative innovations, business improvements, and new business models and processes. However, the integration of blockchain with MIS offers the blockchain trilemma of security, decentralisation and scalability. MIS are usually Web 2.0 clientserver applications that include the front end web systems and back end databases; while blockchain systems are Web 3.0 decentralised applications. MIS are usually private systems that a single party controls and manages; while blockchain systems are usually public, and any party can join and participate. This paper clarifies the key concepts and illustrates with figures, the implementation of public, private and consortium blockchains on the Ethereum platform. Ultimately, the paper presents a framework for building a private blockchain system on the public Ethereum blockchain. Then,integrating the Web 2.0 client-server applications that are commonly used in MIS with Web 3.0 decentralised blockchain applications
Sustainable Development Report: Blockchain, the Web3 & the SDGs
This is an output paper of the applied research that was conducted between July 2018 - October 2019 funded by the Austrian Development Agency (ADA) and conducted by the Research Institute for Cryptoeconomics at the Vienna University of Economics and Business and RCE Vienna (Regional Centre of Expertise on Education for Sustainable Development).Series: Working Paper Series / Institute for Cryptoeconomics / Interdisciplinary Researc
Co-ordination to improve access in the UK : the response of the JISC to the parliamentary report 'Scientific publications: free for all?'
JISC is the Joint Information Systems Committee of the four Higher Education Funding Councils in the UK and also has a responsibility for networked services to the Further Education Colleges. JISC Strategy includes “improving the effectiveness of scholarly communication”. This involves implementing cost-effective improvements in access to academic content for learners and researchers in colleges and universities. One route to cost-effective improvements in access through negotiation of “big deals” – Pilot Site Licence Initiative 1996-99, NESLI 1999-2002, NESLi2 2002-. This route partially effective but many difficulties – e.g. long negotiations, small publishers not included, many universities and colleges unable to buy in. Push for Open Access coming from both JISC Journals Working Group and JISC Scholarly Communication Group
A new wine tasting approach based on emotional responses to rapidly recognize classic european wine styles
Conventional tasting sheets are widely used to evaluate wine quality in wine tasting
competitions. However, the higher scores are mostly obtained by international commercial wines,
resulting in lower scores being awarded to the classic Europeanwines. We hypothesize that this is due to
the tasting methodology that fails to recognize this wine style. Therefore, the purpose of this work was
to show the implementation of a new wine tasting approach to overcome this drawback. The proposed
training technique is based on the emotional responses of the taster after smelling two wines of
clearly opposite styles. The first wine is characterized by high aromatic intensity but low in-mouth
intensity, perceived as disappointing to the taster, here defined as an “easy” wine. The second
wine is characterized as a wine with low aromatic intensity but that provides an unexpectedly
positive in-mouth experience, here defined as a “difficult” wine. These emotions are explained by the
wine sensorial characteristics. The “easy” wine has an intense, simple smell with short persistence
while the “difficult” wine has a low intensity, complex aroma, and long persistence. The first style
corresponds to the international commercial wines most prized in international wine challenges.
The second, frequently rejected by untrained tasters, is consistent with the “so called” classic European
wines, and is characterized by light red or yellow straw colors, weak smell intensity, and aggressive
mouth-feel. After no more than four training sessions and using the OIV tasting sheet, inexperienced
tasters were able to score “difficult” wines equally as “easy” wines and understand their different
attributes. In conclusion, this new tasting approach may be used by wine professionals to explain the
characteristics of high quality wines that are not easily recognized by untrained consumersinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
State Name Overlaps
In previous issues of Word Ways, attention has been drawn to US towns with names reflecting their position on the border between two states. Ed Wolpow\u27s article Names on the Border in May 1984 provides a definitive list, including examples such as Florala (border of Florida Alabama) and Calneva (border of California and Nevada)
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