Saturday, August 14, 2010

case 5

How new technology is rewiring our Brains?

=You think your car radio is broken because it doesn't display the name of the song and the artist. You tap a word on a paperback and wonder why the definition doesn't automatically pop up. You swipe a digit across the screen of your cell phone and all you get are fingerprint smudges.

Then you remember: That isn't a satellite radio. You're reading an actual book, not a Kindle. It's not a smart phone, it's a dumb one. You were expecting the cool capabilities of new technology--from old technology.

"It used to be we wanted to keep up with the Joneses," says Christine Louise Hohlbaum, author of The Power of Slow: 101 Ways to Save Time in Our 24/7 World. "Today all we want is to keep up with our gadgets. Technology pervades every aspect of our lives. Our touchscreen existence has literally rewired our brains. Our behavior is also informed by the technology we use. We tap, ping, and Skype, all day long."

So sometimes we get a little flummoxed when confronted by something that isn't digital--like a door that actually requires a key, or a book whose pages don't turn by themselves, or a TV that plays shows in real time with no skipping past the commercials.

Is this a common problem, or are we just spoiled geeks? We asked around. Turns out we're not the only ones who regularly have out-of-technology experiences. Here are some typical ones.
Case 4

1.What is Outsourcing?
= Outsourcing refers to a company that contracts with another company to provide services that might otherwise be performed by in-house employees. Many large companies now outsource jobs such as call center services, e-mail services, and payroll. These jobs are handled by separate companies that specialize in each service, and are often located overseas.

There are many reasons that companies outsource various jobs, but the most prominent advantage seems to be the fact that it often saves money. Many of the companies that provide outsourcing services are able to do the work for considerably less money, as they don't have to provide benefits to their workers and have fewer overhead expenses to worry about.

2.What are the advantages and disadvantages of outsourcing?
= Advantages of Outsourcing The benefits of outsourcing are:Less capital expenditure - For example, by outsourcing information technology requirements, a company does not have to buy expensive hardware and software.
Less management headache - For example, by outsourcing business process such as accounting, a company no longer has to hire and manage accounting personnel.
Focus on core competencies - Outsourcing non-core related processes will allow a business to focus more on it's core competencies and strengths, giving it a competitive advantage.

Disadvantages of Outsourcing

Before deciding on outsourcing your company's business process, keep in mind the disadvantages of outsourcing:

Less managerial control - It may be harder to manage the outsourcing service provider as compared to managing your own employees.

Outsourcing company goes out of business - If your outsourcing service provide goes bankrupt or out of business, your company will have to quickly transition to a new service provider or take the process back in-house.

May be more expensive - Sometimes it is cheaper to keep a process in-house as compared to outsourcing.

Security and confidentiality issues - If your company is outsourcing business processes such as payroll, confidential information such as salary will be known to the outsourcing service provider.

3.what is implication of Outsourcing
= deduction: something that is inferred (deduced or entailed or implied); "his resignation had political implications"
significance: a meaning that is not expressly stated but can be inferred; "the significance of his remark became clear only later"; "the expectation was spread both by word and by implication"
an accusation that brings into intimate and usually incriminating connection
a logical relation between propositions p and q of the form `if p then q'; if p is true then q cannot be false
a relation implicated by virtue of involvement or close connection (especially an incriminating involvement); "he was suspected of implication in several robberies"
wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn

Implicature is a technical term in the pragmatics subfield of linguistic coined by Paul Grice. It refers to what is suggested in an utterance, even though not expressed nor strictly implied (that is, entailed) by the utterance. ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implication_(pragmatics)

In linguistics, entailment is the relationship between two sentences where the truth of one (A) requires the truth of the other (B). This relationship is generalized below.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implication_(logical)

The material conditional, also known as the material implication or truth functional conditional, expresses a property of certain conditionals in logic. In propositional logic, it expresses a binary truth function from truth-values to truth-values. ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implication_(logic).

= Outsourcing is contracting with another company or person to do a particular function. Almost every organization outsources in some way. Typically, the function being outsourced is considered non-core to the business. An insurance company, for example, might outsource its janitorial and landscaping operations to firms that specialize in those types of work since they are not related to insurance or strategic to the business. The outside firms that are providing the outsourcing services are third-party providers, or as they are more commonly called, service providers.

Although outsourcing has been around as long as work specialization has existed, in recent history, companies began employing the outsourcing model to carry out narrow functions, such as payroll, billing and data entry. Those processes could be done more efficiently, and therefore more cost-effectively, by other companies with specialized tools and facilities and specially trained personnel.

Friday, August 13, 2010

Case 3

1.Who are they're competitors?
= The competitors of Google are yahoo, YouTube, twitter, Facebook, yelp, Friendster and other social networking site and also the most useful for searching in the Internet are the search engine. But the most competitors of Google is Yahoo. According to www.pcworld.com Google held on to its commanding lead as the preferred search engine in the U.S. in May, processing almost 60 percent of all queries filed, way ahead of its two closest competitors Yahoo and Microsoft. Google nabbed 59.3 percent of search queries, followed by Yahoo in a very distant second place with 22 percent and Microsoft's MSN with 12.1 percent, market researcher Hit wise said Thursday.
- Main Competitors include Yahoo and Microsoft. Yahoo’s Search and Microsoft’s Bing a competitor to Google Search. Has Launched Various Products to counter the dominance of Microsoft like Gmail. Google Earth , Google chrome etc. Will launch a Linux Based operating system which will directly compete against windows.

2. How have they used information technology to their advantage?
= They used information technology to find an accurate information through the technology and users can easily find answer about what they want to search using search engine. Google upgrade their data storage to store more data and information to have more user to visit them. They create some application like Gmail that have 50X more storage than industry average – 25GB of email storage per employee according to Google apps. According to co-founder Larry Page We stand alone in our focus on developing the "perfect search engine," "understands exactly what you mean and gives you back exactly what you want." To that end, we have persistently pursued innovation and refused to accept the limitations of existing models. As a result, we developed our serving infrastructure anddiscovery PageRank™ technology that changed the way searches are conducted. From the beginning, our developers recognized that providing the fastest, most accurate results required a new kind of server setup. Whereas most search engines ran off a handful of large servers that often slowed under peak loads,hours employed linked PCs to quickly find each query's answer. The innovation paid off in faster response times, greater scalability and lower costs. It's an idea that others have since copied, while we have continued to refine our back-end technology to make it even more efficient. The software behind our search technology conducts a series of simultaneous calculations requiring only a fraction of a second. Traditional search engines rely heavily on how often a word appears on a web page. We use more than 200 signals, including our patented PageRank™ algorithm, tocheck the entire link structure of the web and find which pages are most important. We then conduct hypertext-matching analysis to find which pages are relevant to the specific search being conducted. By combining overall importance and query-specific relevance, we're able to put the most relevant.

3. How competitive are they in the market?
= The degree to which a market or industry can be described as competitive depends in part on how many suppliers are seeking the demand of consumers and the ease with which new businesses can enter and exit a particular market in the long run.

The spectrum of competition ranges from highly competitive markets where there are many sellers, each of whom has little or no control over the market price - to a situation of pure monopoly where a market or an industry is dominated by one single supplier who enjoys considerable discretion in setting prices, unless subject to some form of direct regulation by the government.

In many sectors of the economy markets are best described by the term oligopoly - where a few producers dominate the majority of the market and the industry is highly concentrated. In a duopoly two firms dominate the market although there may be many smaller players in the industry.

Competitive markets operate on the basis of a number of assumptions. When these assumptions are dropped - we move into the world of imperfect competition. These assumptions are discussed below.

4.What new services do they offer?
= Ecosystem Services are the processes by which the environment produces resources that we often take for granted such as clean water, timber, and habitat for fisheries, and pollination of native and agricultural plants. Whether we find ourselves in the city or a rural area, the ecosystems in which humans live provide goods and services that are very familiar to us.

Ecosystems provide “services” that:
These services are extensive and diverse … affecting the quality of our land, water, food, and health.

* moderate weather extremes and their impacts
* disperse seeds
* mitigate drought and floods
* protect people from the sun’s harmful ultraviolet rays
* cycle and move nutrients
* protect stream and river channels and coastal shores from erosion
* detoxify and decompose wastes
* control agricultural pests
* maintain biodiversity
* generate and preserve soils and renew their fertility
* contribute to climate stability
* purify the air and water
* regulate disease carrying organisms
* pollinate crops and natural vegetation

5.What makes them so unique?
= There are a number of different kinds of gifts out there today that are considered to be special and given purely for the joy of sharing. One such gift would have to the groomsmen gift, which is mainly given to ensure that the joy of the wedding is not just restricted to the bride and the groom and spread to everyone else as well. If you are considering skipping on this gift, think again, as these are definitely an important gift that you would want to include in the ceremony. There are a lot of reasons for this to be quite an important gift for you to consider, some of which are listed below.

Read more: http://www.articlesbase.com/shopping-articles/groomsmen-gift-what-makes-them-so-unique-2302660.html#ixzz0wcZ0XMcb
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution

6.How competitive are they in the international market?
= The authors examine how firms adapt different components of their marketing strategies in foreign markets compared with their domestic market and how such adaptation decisions influence the firms’ competitive positions and performance in foreign markets. The authors conceptualize that adaptation of a marketing-mix component is a purposeful process that is influenced by a firm’s past adaptation strategy, and they investigate the importance of that marketing-mix component to the firm’s success. The authors propose that the adaptation process helps define a firm’s competitive advantage, which in turn affects its performance in the foreign market. The authors develop hypotheses and propositions and test them with a sample of 183 export firms in Hong Kong.
CASE 2

1.Cio
= Central Intelligence Organisation, the secret police in Zimbabwe
Chief information officer, the head of information technology within an organization
* Chief Innovation Officer, the head of innovation, responsible for innovation management
* Chief investment officer, the head of investments within an organization
* Congress of Industrial Organizations, a former United States trade union federation also known as the Committee of Industrial Organization that merged to form the AFL-CIO in 1955
* The International Olympic Committee (French: Comité international olympique)
* The Central Imagery Office, a predecessor organization of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency
* Concurrent Input/Output, a file systems feature introduced in JFS (file system) in May 2003
* Cry It Out, an aspect of the Ferberization technique for solving childhood sleep problems

2.Global Warming
= is the increase in the average temperature of Earth's near-surface air and oceans since the mid-20th century and its projected continuation. According to the 2007 Fourth Assessment Report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), global surface temperature increased 0.74 ± 0.18 °C (1.33 ± 0.32 °F) during the 20th century.[2][A] Most of the observed temperature increase since the middle of the 20th century was caused by increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases, which results from human activity such as the burning of fossil fuel and deforestation.[3] Global dimming, a result of increasing concentrations of atmospheric aerosols that block sunlight from reaching the surface, has partially countered the effects of greenhouse gas induced warming.

Climate model projections summarized in the latest IPCC report indicate that the global surface temperature is likely to rise a further 1.1 to 6.4 °C (2.0 to 11.5 °F) during the 21st century.[2] The uncertainty in this estimate arises from the use of models with differing sensitivity to greenhouse gas concentrations and the use of differing estimates of future greenhouse gas emissions. An increase in global temperature will cause sea levels to rise and will change the amount and pattern of precipitation, probably including expansion of subtropical deserts.[4] Warming is expected to be strongest in the Arctic and would be associated with continuing retreat of glaciers, permafrost and sea ice. Other likely effects include changes in the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, species extinctions, and changes in agricultural yields. Warming and related changes will vary from region to region around the globe, though the nature of these regional variations is uncertain.

3.The Advantage of Green
= Green Advantage (GA), the country’s longest-standing green certification for builders and building-related practitioners, offers three certification exams:

* Commercial
* Residential
* Commercial/Residential

Green Advantage Certified Practitioners (GACPs) have passed one or more exams, demonstrating their knowledge of the latest in green building principles, materials and techniques. Green Advantage Certification helps builders get jobs, contractors win bids, and allows building occupants to enjoy healthier, more efficient homes and buildings.


Individual GA Exams™ are offered by Green Advantage nationwide at conveniently located testing centers. While attending a training event is not required to sit for the exam, it is always recommended. Preparatory training courses and workshops are developed and delivered by organizations independent of Green Advantage. Group administered Green Advantage Exams may be coordinated with these events.

4.Effect Of Computers
= As computers have become less expensive they have been purchased by more and more families for their homes. Because of this, many children begin to use computers at an early age. Even if computers are not available in their home, children almost certainly will begin to come into contact with computers in school.
Some adults are amazed by how readily young children use computers. Many children find that using computers gives them a sense of power and accomplishment. And, unlike many adults whose first or primary contact with computers is work related, most children first use computers for entertainment purposes and games. This is by no means the only use that children have for computers. Children also use computers for accessing information, as well as for writing stories and research papers.Many individuals who work at a computer experience eye-related discomfort and visual problems. However, based on current evidence it is unlikely that the use ofcomputers causes permanent changes or damage to the eyes or visual system. This report will review the factors relating to eye and vision problems associated with computer work and provide recommendations for preventing or reducing their development.

5.Data center server
= Our comparisons of server , including VMware, Microsoft Hyper-V, as well as open source and Linux options, can help you find the best technologies for your IT department's needs. Our experts advise on migrating to servers from a physical environment and selecting tools. They share techniques for simplifying server management and data center performance monitoring with Other topics include reducing IT costs by consolidating with using energy-efficiency benefits as part a green data center strategy; reaping advantages of in data center disaster recovery planning; and more.