894 resultados para enterprise 2.0
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Today the Internet is entwined into our everyday society. From the beginning days in 1980 to today, the Internet has been evolving. The creator of the World Wide Web, Tim Berners-Lee, envisioned that the Internet would be a system with everything connected to everything. The web today is changing with new applications arriving from outside the previous channels of the megalithic software companies. Thousands of individual developers are creating micro-applications to enhance the earlier framework of the web. This revolution has been coined "Web 2.0". Many observers today are skeptical that Web 2.0 is really a revolution at all, but maybe is just a continuation of Berners-Lee's original concept. This paper examines, based on a critical literature review, the discussions taking place regarding Web 2.0.
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Internet Telephony (VoIP) is changing the telecommunication industry. Oftentimes free, VoIP is becoming more and more popular amongst users. Large software companies have entered the market and heavily invest into it. In 2011, for instance, Microsoft bought Skype for 8.5bn USD. This trend increasingly impacts the incumbent telecommunication operators. They see their main source of revenue – classic telephony – under siege and disappear. The thesis at hand develops a most-likely scenario in order to determine how VoIP is evolving further and it predicts, based on a ten-year forecast, the impact it will have on the players in the telecommunication industry.The paper presents a model combining Rogers’ diffusion and Christensen’s innovation research. The model has the goal of explaining the past evolution of VoIP and to isolate the factors that determine the further diffusion of the innovation. Interviews with industry experts serve to assess how the identified factors are evolving.Two propositions are offered. First, VoIP operators are becoming more important in international, corporate, and mobile telephony. End-to-end VoIP (IP2IP) will exhibit strong growth rates and increasingly cannibalize the telephony revenues of the classic operators. Second, fix-net telephony in SMEs and at home will continue to be dominated by the incumbents. Yet, as prices for telephony fall towards zero also they will implement IP2IP in order to save costs. By 2022, up to 90% of the calls will be IP2IP. The author recommends the incumbents and VoIP operators to proactively face the change, to rethink their business strategies, and to even be open for cooperation.
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Se, ao longo do século XX, as favelas foram representadas sob a ótica de atores externos, o século XXI marca o surgimento das autorrepresentações, trazendo à tona a perspectiva de habitantes de territórios populares. Neste contexto, o presente estudo investiga a categoria dos “comunicadores periféricos” que participam da renovação contemporânea das representações de favelas e bairros de periferia urbana no campo midiático. A partir da análise da rede de colaboradores do website “Viva Favela 2.0”, ativo entre 2010 e 2013, destacando as autorrepresentações inseridas nas páginas de “perfil” dos usuários cadastrados, a pesquisa identifica um grupo de moradores de favelas e periferias produtores de conteúdo jornalístico e cultural em diversas linguagens, articulados em múltiplas redes, com ensino superior iniciado ou concluído e dispostos a tomar parte no diálogo social não apenas como profissionais mas também como militantes pelo desenvolvimento de suas comunidades.
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Este projeto teve como principal objetivo continuar o desenvolvimento do quiosque multimédia FNAC. Filial do Grupo Pinault Printemps, a FNAC é líder europeu na distribuição de bens tecnológicos e culturais. Nesta fase do desenvolvimento, o foco do projeto centrou-se na procura da melhor forma de mostrar ao utilizador a localização de um produto na loja FNAC Madeira, expansão das funcionalidades aos restantes produtos e o redesenho da interface do quiosque multimédia FNAC. Por forma a identificar uma forma eficaz de dar a conhecer ao utilizador a localização de um produto dentro da loja FNAC Madeira, foi efetuado um estudo que consistiu em questionários e testes com utilizadores para comparar duas formas de localização, por planta da loja ou por vídeo em tempo real. A primeira versão do quiosque multimédia FNAC apenas possuía suporte a livros, pelo que foi necessário tornar a aplicação o mais abstrata possível por forma a gerar as categorias de produtos em runtime recorrendo a ficheiros XML. Por fim, para redesenhar a interface do quiosque multimédia FNAC, foram efetuadas análises às interfaces da primeira versão, utilizando as heurísticas de Nielsen e os “Principles of good form” de Larry Constantine. Após a fase de análise as interfaces foram redesenhadas tendo por base a análise efetuada, o guia de norma FNAC 2011 e breves testes de usabilidade com utilizadores. Do estudo realizado, na procura pela melhor forma de localização, foram identificados alguns problemas relacionados com a utilização de um vídeo em tempo real para a identificação, tal como as interferências externas por parte dos outros clientes do espaço comercial e foi possível constatar um melhor desempenho e aceitação da localização por planta. A localização por planta mostrou-se suficiente para os utilizadores conseguirem identificar o local onde o produto estava exposto, pois permitia-lhes identificar o local onde encontravam-se e obter uma localização mais precisa do local, necessitando apenas de olhar em volta para conseguir relacionar o que era possível visualizar na planta com aquilo que os rodeava na loja.
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The aim of this study was to comparatively evaluate the mechanical strength of squared and rectangular 2.0 mm system miniplates comparing them to the standard configuration with 2 straight miniplates in stabilizing fractures in the anterior mandible. Ninety synthetic polyurethane mandible replicas were used in mechanical test. The samples were divided into six groups of three different methods for fixation. Groups 1, 2 and 3 showed complete fractures in symphysis, characterized by a linear separation between the medial incisor, and groups 4, 5 and 6 showed complete fractures in parasymphysis with oblique design. Groups 1 and 4 were represented by the standard technique with two straight miniplates parallel to each other. Groups 2 and 5 were stabilized by squared miniplates and groups 3 and 6 were fixed by rectangular design. Each group was subjected to a mechanical test at a displacement speed of 10 mm/min on a universal testing machine, receiving linear vertical load on the region of the left first molar. The values of the maximum load and when displacements reached 5 mm were obtained and statistically analyzed by calculating the confidence interval of 95%. Fixation systems using squared (G2) and rectangular (G3) miniplates obtained similar results. No statistically significant differences with respect to the maximum load and the load at 5 mm displacement were found when compared to standard method in symphyseal fractures (G1). In parasymphysis the fixation method using squared miniplates (G5) obtained results without significant differences regarding the maximum load and the load at 5 mm when compared to the standard configuration (G4). The fixation method using rectangular miniplates (G6) showed inferior results which were statistically significant when compared to the standard configuration (G4) for parasymphysis fractures. The mechanical behavior of the fixation methods was similar, except when rectangular miniplates were used. The fixation methods showed better results with statistical significance in symphyseal fractures
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This dissertation aims at extending the JCircus tool, a translator of formal specifications into code that receives a Circus specification as input, and translates the specification into Java code. Circus is a formal language whose syntax is based on Z s and CSP s syntax. JCircus generated code uses JCSP, which is a Java API that implements CSP primitives. As JCSP does not implement all CSP s primitives, the translation strategy from Circus to Java is not trivial. Some CSP primitives, like parallelism, external choice, communication and multi-synchronization are partially implemented. As an aditional scope, this dissertation will also develop a tool for testing JCSP programs, called JCSPUnit, which will also be included in JCircus new version. The extended version of JCircus will be called JCircus 2.0.
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Purpose: Numerous "in vitro" investigations have been conducted to evaluate the role of screw size and pattern in determining optimal resistance to deformation, often these have been controversial. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of screw size and insertion technique on the stability of sagittal split osteotomies.Materials and methods: This study used twenty polyurethane replicas of human hemimandibles with a prefabricated sagittal split ramus osteotomy (SSRO). The hemimandibles were stabilized with 1.5 mm and 2.0 mm titanium screws inserted in an inverted L configuration. All specimens were tested to determine the strength and stability of the fixation.Results: In all cases there was failure of the synthetic bone before there was any evidence of screw failure. There were no significant differences in the load necessary to make the construct fail between the 1.5 or 2.0 mm screw sizes.Conclusion: There was no statistically significant difference between the strengths achieved with screws of 1.5 and 2.0 mm diameters for fixation of SSRO performed in synthetic mandibles. There was no fracture of the 1.5 mm or 2.0 mm diameter screws in any of the tests. 1.5 mm diameter screws in an inverted L pattern have as much stability and mechanical resistance as a 2.0 mm screw, may be safely used for this procedure. (C) 2010 European Association for Cranio-Maxillo-Facial Surgery.
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Usability evaluation (UE) methods may have several purposes: identify and diagnose usability problems; evaluate the implementation, comparing the one under evaluation with other systems, and also perform acceptance test. These methods are usually expensive, time-consuming and complex. In this context, the ErgoCoIn 1.0 has being used as an accessible system that can be used by several people all over the world, even if they are not usability experts or evaluators. This paper aims to present a new version of this environment considering that its basic objective is to propose a higher quality for the questions. Additionally, a new presentation questionnaire window small enough to be used both in web browsers and mobile devices is proposed.
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Service oriented architectures (SOA) based on Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) Web services have attracted the attention of enterprises mainly for business-to-business integration and to create composite applications that execute business processes. An existing problem is the lack of preoccupation with non technical users due to the fact that to create a composite application to fulfill users needs, it is necessary to be in contact with IT staff. To overcome this issue, enterprises can take advantage of web 2.0, 'introducing in the development stage some technologies like mashups and some concepts like user empowerment, collaborative work and collective intelligence. Some results [3] [13] have shown how web 2.0 concepts can help non technical users to produce relative complex business processes. However, traditional enterprise requirements goes beyond typical web 2.0 solutions in several aspects: (1) traditional enterprise systems are based on heterogeneous stack of technologies that are not directly exploitable from a web-based client (where SOAP web services play an important role); (2) web browsers set some cross-domain security constraints making difficult to integrate services from diverse domains. In this paper, a contribution to two web 2.0 research projects [14] [15] partially solves the problems described: provide a way to invoke cross-domain backend services (based on SOAP technologies) directly only using clientside languages, without a need for any adaptation layer. © 2010 ACM.