7 resultados para collaborative production
em Archivo Digital para la Docencia y la Investigación - Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad del País Vasco
Resumo:
[ES] La participación activa del usuario en la Red no solo ha empezado a fomentar nuevos modelos productivos, sino también todo un modelo de negocios alrededor de los mismos. Muchas empresas están comenzando a explotar ventajas competitivas, en costes o en diferenciación, derivadas de la participación del usuario y su disponibilidad a colaborar en diversos proyectos en los que no siempre media, necesariamente, contraprestación económica; y cuando existe, suele ser inferior a la que exigiría un profesional medio por realizar el mismo trabajo. En este trabajo se analiza el fenómeno del crowdsourcing desde ambas vertientes, así como el importante impacto económico y social que genera esta nueva forma de trabajo. Dado que la base del crowdsourcing se encuentra en el efecto red, se comienza realizando un planteamiento crítico basado en la consideración de Internet como un espacio participativo que empodera a individuos y agentes económicos y en el que se analizan sus ventajas y límites. Posteriormente, y en base al estudio de diferentes casos, se sistematizan las características principales del crowdsourcing para definir tres modelos básicos en función de su consideración como modelo de negocio, como producción colaborativa con fines altruistas o como un híbrido de ambos.
Resumo:
221 p.
Resumo:
This work analyzes a managerial delegation model in which firms can choose between a flexible production technology which allows them to produce two different products and a dedicated production technology which limits production to only one product. We analyze whether the incentives to adopt the flexible technology are smaller or greater in a managerial delegation model than under strict profit maximization. We obtain that the asymmetric equilibrium in which only one firm adopts the flexible technology can be sustained under strategic delegation but not under strict profit maximization when products are substitutes. We extend the analysis to consider welfare implications.
Resumo:
This work analyzes a managerial delegation model in which firms that produce a differentiated good can choose between two production technologies: a low marginal cost technology and a high marginal cost technology. For the former to be adopted more investment is needed than for the latter. By giving managers of firms an incentive scheme based on a linear combination of profit and sales revenue, we find that Bertrand competition provides a stronger incentive to adopt the cost-saving technology than the strict profit maximization case. However, the results may be reversed under Cournot competition. We show that if the degree of product substitutability is sufficiently low (high), the incentive to adopt the cost-saving technology is larger under strict profit maximization (strategic delegation).
Resumo:
370 p.: il., graf.
Resumo:
This study was designed to compare the quality of veal produced from ‘Tudanca x Charolais’ cross (n=6) and Limousin (n=6) breeds when allowed to feed freely on mountain pastures and suckle naturally from birth to 7 months of age. After 80 days of age calves also had access to concentrate (maximum of 3 Kg/day), while mothers did not. At slaughter, Limousin calves were heavier (P<0.01) and provided better carcass yield (P<0.05) and conformation (P<0.001) than Tudanca calves. Tudanca beef provided higher fat content (P<0.05) was less tough (P<0.05), and was scored as more tender and juicy (P<0.1) with higher acceptability than Limousin beef (P<0.1). In general, Tudanca had a better fatty acid profile than Limousin beef, especially in terms of the content of polyunsaturated (P<0.05), long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (P<0.05) and their n-6/n-3 ratios (P<0.1), as well as vaccenic acid (P<0.1) and the overall trans-18:1 isomer profile.