Here are 6 sources in bibliography format as requested:
Jobs, Steve. iCon: Steve Jobs, the Greatest Second Act in the History of Business. John Wiley & Sons, 2012.
Cook, Tim. Tim Cook on Apple's Values. Apple.com, February 2016. https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2016/02/16Tim-Cook-on-Apples-Values/. Accessed 12 May 2021.
Isaacson, Walter. Steve Jobs. Simon & Schuster, 2011.
Wozniak, Steve and Gina Smith. iWoz: Computer Geek to Cult Icon: How I Invented the Personal Computer, Co-Founded Apple, and
Microsoft Strategy Analysis 2015
Microsoft Corporation is an American multinational software corporation headquartered in Redmond, Washington that develops, manufactures, licenses, and supports a wide range of products and services related to computing.
Simple and and up to point presentation about different IT inventors and known people in the field of Information Technology from all the time period.
Mentioned all the sources from which I gathered this information about all of the inventors.
Maintained a decorum and a pattern the presentation so that people may understand properly.
Presentation for Canadian startup company Eventmobi (http://www.eventmobi.com/). They are visiting Iceland this september 2014 and are located in Reykavík University.
This presentation introduced some startups including my own, Betware which is not so much of a startup any more. I also introduce three companies that are members of the Icelandic gaming industry (IGI), CCP makers of the successful EVEOnline, Plain Vanilla markers of the rocket growth game Quizup and finally Skema Education which is about teaching programming to kids. The clip shown is from founder Rakel Sölvadóttir's TEDx lecture.
Then I talk about my work at RU and in particular some concepts from my New Technology course on technology trends. Which explains the title of the presentation.
Software is changing the way traditional business operate. People now have smartphones in their pockets - a supercomputer that is 25,000 times more powerful and the minicomputers of the 1960s. This is changing people´s behaviour and how people shop and use services. The organizational structure created in the 20th century cannot survive when new digital solution are being offered. Software is changing the way traditional business operate. People now have smartphones in their pockets - a supercomputer that is 25,000 times more powerful and the minicomputers of the 1960s. This is changing people´s behaviour and how people shop and use services. The organisational structure created in the 20th century cannot survive when new digital solution are being offered. The hierarchical structure of these established companies assumes high coordination cost due to human activity. But when the coordination cost drops
The organisational structure that companies in the 20th century established was based on the fact that employees needed to do all the work. The coordination cost was high due to the effort and cost of employees, housing etc. Now we have software that can do this for use and the coordination cost drops to close-to-zero. Another thing is that things become free. Consider Flickr. Anybody can sign up and use the service for free. Only a fraction of the users get pro account and pay. How can Flickr make money on that? It turns out that services like this can.
Many businesses make money by giving things away. How can that possibly work? The music business has suffered severely with digital distribution of content. Should musicians put all there songs on YouTube? What is the future business model for music?
The Internet grew out of US efforts to build the ARPANET, a network of peer computers built during the cold war. The two major players were military and academia. The network was simple and required no efforts for security or social responsibility. The early Internet community was mainly highly educated and respectable scientist. In the early 1990s the World Wide Web, a hypertext system is introduced, and soon browsers start to appear, leading the commercialization of Net. New businesses emerge and a technology boom known as the dot-com era.
The network, now over 40, is being stretched. Problems such as spam, viruses, antisocial behaviour, and demands for more content are prompting reinvention of the Net and threatening its neutrality. Add to this government efforts to regulate and limit the network.
In this lecture we look at the Internet and the impact of the network. We will also look at the future of the Internet.
The Internet grew out of US efforts to build the ARPANET, a network of peer computers built during the cold war. The two major players were military and academia. The network was simple and required no efforts for security or social responsibility. The early Internet community was mainly highly educated and respectable scientist. In the early 1990s the World Wide Web, a hypertext system is introduced, and soon browsers start to appear, leading the commercialization of Net. New businesses emerge and a technology boom known as the dot-com era.
The network, now over 40, is being stretched. Problems such as spam, viruses, antisocial behaviour, and demands for more content are prompting reinvention of the Net and threatening its neutrality. Add to this government efforts to regulate and limit the network.
In this lecture we look at the Internet and the impact of the network. We will also look at the future of the Internet.
This report on Russian PR-trends was prepared and presented within Worldcom PR Group Moscow Fall Conference by Svetlana Malkarova, Deputy Managing Director, Ya-corporation.
Microsoft Strategy Analysis 2015
Microsoft Corporation is an American multinational software corporation headquartered in Redmond, Washington that develops, manufactures, licenses, and supports a wide range of products and services related to computing.
Simple and and up to point presentation about different IT inventors and known people in the field of Information Technology from all the time period.
Mentioned all the sources from which I gathered this information about all of the inventors.
Maintained a decorum and a pattern the presentation so that people may understand properly.
Presentation for Canadian startup company Eventmobi (http://www.eventmobi.com/). They are visiting Iceland this september 2014 and are located in Reykavík University.
This presentation introduced some startups including my own, Betware which is not so much of a startup any more. I also introduce three companies that are members of the Icelandic gaming industry (IGI), CCP makers of the successful EVEOnline, Plain Vanilla markers of the rocket growth game Quizup and finally Skema Education which is about teaching programming to kids. The clip shown is from founder Rakel Sölvadóttir's TEDx lecture.
Then I talk about my work at RU and in particular some concepts from my New Technology course on technology trends. Which explains the title of the presentation.
Software is changing the way traditional business operate. People now have smartphones in their pockets - a supercomputer that is 25,000 times more powerful and the minicomputers of the 1960s. This is changing people´s behaviour and how people shop and use services. The organizational structure created in the 20th century cannot survive when new digital solution are being offered. Software is changing the way traditional business operate. People now have smartphones in their pockets - a supercomputer that is 25,000 times more powerful and the minicomputers of the 1960s. This is changing people´s behaviour and how people shop and use services. The organisational structure created in the 20th century cannot survive when new digital solution are being offered. The hierarchical structure of these established companies assumes high coordination cost due to human activity. But when the coordination cost drops
The organisational structure that companies in the 20th century established was based on the fact that employees needed to do all the work. The coordination cost was high due to the effort and cost of employees, housing etc. Now we have software that can do this for use and the coordination cost drops to close-to-zero. Another thing is that things become free. Consider Flickr. Anybody can sign up and use the service for free. Only a fraction of the users get pro account and pay. How can Flickr make money on that? It turns out that services like this can.
Many businesses make money by giving things away. How can that possibly work? The music business has suffered severely with digital distribution of content. Should musicians put all there songs on YouTube? What is the future business model for music?
The Internet grew out of US efforts to build the ARPANET, a network of peer computers built during the cold war. The two major players were military and academia. The network was simple and required no efforts for security or social responsibility. The early Internet community was mainly highly educated and respectable scientist. In the early 1990s the World Wide Web, a hypertext system is introduced, and soon browsers start to appear, leading the commercialization of Net. New businesses emerge and a technology boom known as the dot-com era.
The network, now over 40, is being stretched. Problems such as spam, viruses, antisocial behaviour, and demands for more content are prompting reinvention of the Net and threatening its neutrality. Add to this government efforts to regulate and limit the network.
In this lecture we look at the Internet and the impact of the network. We will also look at the future of the Internet.
The Internet grew out of US efforts to build the ARPANET, a network of peer computers built during the cold war. The two major players were military and academia. The network was simple and required no efforts for security or social responsibility. The early Internet community was mainly highly educated and respectable scientist. In the early 1990s the World Wide Web, a hypertext system is introduced, and soon browsers start to appear, leading the commercialization of Net. New businesses emerge and a technology boom known as the dot-com era.
The network, now over 40, is being stretched. Problems such as spam, viruses, antisocial behaviour, and demands for more content are prompting reinvention of the Net and threatening its neutrality. Add to this government efforts to regulate and limit the network.
In this lecture we look at the Internet and the impact of the network. We will also look at the future of the Internet.
This report on Russian PR-trends was prepared and presented within Worldcom PR Group Moscow Fall Conference by Svetlana Malkarova, Deputy Managing Director, Ya-corporation.
Van egy világmegváltó ötleted és azt gondolod abből lesz a Google vagy a Facebook utódja?
Tudni szeretnéd miként szerezz befektetőt, akár magyar akár nemzetközi piacról?
http://www.meetup.com/veszprem
Please read the information and give me a brief respondThe mo.docxmattjtoni51554
Please read the information and give me a brief respond:
The most important concepts for me begin with the differences in certain Philosophies, and understanding that just as their are differences in each individual there is diversity in their methods and strategies when doing business. To accept the different choices also gives you an idea of which type of people and organization you will work well with and those you decide not to work with. When making decisions that involve my community and family I need you to have similar values and good moral standings that encourage you to put others first. To be aware of the harm you may cause if not considerate of everyone. I will not work with those that have a different agenda orthat cannot leave their self interest behind.
Social responsibility will come into play with every decision that I make. We are not alone in this world and to respect the people the laws and environment is a substantial commitment. I would expect everyone to live with morals and decent values in whatever capacity of employment that you are involved in and everywhere you travel. I would also hope that this generation will be more accepting of individuals with disabilities and challenges that they are not familiar with.
Environmental awareness will be my strong point in establishing a service that supports the air, land and water, We need to preserve our elements for our future generations to come. In whatever feild you choose to be employed in there will always be some method of preservation, because it begins at home.
The most difficult ethical issues of the future in my opinion will be preservation of privacy and identy saving. With so many methods of communication and gadgets in technology , there will always be individuals trying to hack into a data system , if no more than to prove that it can bedone. Most gadgets require passwords and personal information just to sign on to them. Stealing private information and details will continue to get more difficult to contain.
Case study 1- Microsoft
Microsoft is the world’s most successful software company. The company was founded by Bill Gates and Paul Allen in 1975 with the original mission of having “a computer on every desk and in every home, running Microsoft software.” Since then, Microsoft has grown to become the third most valuable brand in the world through strategic marketing and aggressive growth tactics.
Microsoft’s first significant success occurred in the early 1980s with the creation of the DOS operating system for IBM computers. The company used this initial success with IBM to sell software to other manufacturers, quickly making Microsoft a major player in the industry. Initial advertising efforts focused on communicating the company’s range of products from DOS to the launch of Excel and Windows—all under a unified “Microsoft” look.
Microsoft went public in 1986 and grew tremendously over the next decade as the Windows operating system and Microsoft O.
1. Media Company Case
Study
Task 1 Understand the structure
and ownership of the media sector
Ken Ishii
2. Apple
American multinational corporation that designs
and sells consumer electronics, computer
software, and personal computers. The
company's best-known hardware products are
the Macintosh line of computers, the iPod, the
iPhone and the iPad.
3. The owner
Apple is now a public company due to Steve Job’s
death but the current CEO of Apple Inc is Tim
Cook and he is part of the board member of Nike.
The founders of Apple Inc are Steve Jobs, Steve
Wozniak and Ronald Wayne.
4. How is it organized?
The company is vertically integrated, with
anything done under one roof. Vertical
integration is where everything is produced,
exhibit and distribution.
All Apple profits stay within Apple, but this
increases the risk that if the company fails all the
money will be lost.
5. Who are its competitors?
In recent years, it could be argued that most PC manufacturers were rivals to Apple,
like Dell, Alien ware, Gateway etc. but of course you can also factor in Microsoft as a
rival to their Operating System (OS X/XP).
But in recent years they have branched out considerably, into online media (iTunes,
Mobile Me, iPhone) so you can factor in Napster and other legal music download
sites, Hotmail and Gmail, and Nokia, Samsung, Blackberry and alike.
Also, they rival in the server markets with HP, Sun, SGI and IBM with regards to High
Performance Computing, Web serving, Centralised storage, which also brings further
rivals like Brocade and Sanrad.
There's also networking, the Airport lines now rival Cisco, Net gear etc.
So, they now have a very diverse range of products, and there are many rivals that are
fighting with Apple in those markets.
6. Who are the customers?
1) Middle/Upper income people who are willing to pay a bit more for a
better user experience. paying 500 more for a computer is not a huge deal
if you have a decent income.
2) People who like to have fun with technology. No other platform offers as
many entry level tools (the whole iLife bunch and more). This includes
people who like to shoot a lot of digital photos or video. It's the whole
digital hub concept. People are starting to buy into it.
3) Music enthusiasts and fans ages 12-35.
4) Professionals in media and design.
7. What changes in organisational structure
has there been and what were the
implications.
8. Hasit had any controversies ( eg News
Corporation and the News Of The World
Phone Hacking Scandal)
9. Bibliography
Find at least 6 sources of your info -
don’t use wikipedia
Place the list in this order
Surname, first name, title of book,
website, date, place it was published,
who it was published by