Extra Value Creation via Application of Synchronous Communication Means Antosha
Application of synchronous communication means to tutoring of the Open University Business School business education programs in Russia creats extra value for students and tutors
The Irish Software Show, ( http://epicenter.ie ) Werner Keil: UCUM
Developers who work with physical quantities (such as developers in the scientific, engineering, medical, and manufacturing domains) need to be able to handle measurements of these quantities in their programs.
Inadequate models of physical measurements can lead to significant programmatic errors.
In particular, the practice of modeling a measure as a simple number with no regard to the units it represents creates fragile code. Another developer or another part of the code may misinterpret the number as representing a different unit of measurement. For example, it may be unclear whether a person's weight is expressed in pounds, kilograms, or stones.
Problems multiply once a client has to communicate with one or more servers or services in a Cloud.
This session provides an overview of the UCUM standard and related interoperability efforts like UnitML by OASIs. It also outlines various implementations based on Eclipse, Java Mobile (JSR-256) or OSGi, just to name the most common examples. And looks at ways, different platforms, e.g. .NET/F# and JVM based languages can exchange measurements preserving their value and units.
http://epicenter.ie/2010.html?zone_id=20&mode=agenda&session=143#session
Extra Value Creation via Application of Synchronous Communication Means Antosha
Application of synchronous communication means to tutoring of the Open University Business School business education programs in Russia creats extra value for students and tutors
The Irish Software Show, ( http://epicenter.ie ) Werner Keil: UCUM
Developers who work with physical quantities (such as developers in the scientific, engineering, medical, and manufacturing domains) need to be able to handle measurements of these quantities in their programs.
Inadequate models of physical measurements can lead to significant programmatic errors.
In particular, the practice of modeling a measure as a simple number with no regard to the units it represents creates fragile code. Another developer or another part of the code may misinterpret the number as representing a different unit of measurement. For example, it may be unclear whether a person's weight is expressed in pounds, kilograms, or stones.
Problems multiply once a client has to communicate with one or more servers or services in a Cloud.
This session provides an overview of the UCUM standard and related interoperability efforts like UnitML by OASIs. It also outlines various implementations based on Eclipse, Java Mobile (JSR-256) or OSGi, just to name the most common examples. And looks at ways, different platforms, e.g. .NET/F# and JVM based languages can exchange measurements preserving their value and units.
http://epicenter.ie/2010.html?zone_id=20&mode=agenda&session=143#session
Turning Continuous Improvement and a PMO into an Innovation Team KaiNexus
Presented by one of our customers – Erin Edwards, continuous improvement manager from Four Seasons Produce.
In this webinar, you will learn:
- How communication breaks down siloes and to create a cross functional effort for continuous improvement
- The value of communication when it comes to educating vs. cheerleading
- How to leverage PMO and CI efforts for key strategic projects
- Get a snapshot of a new innovation team model that merges the best elements of CI and a PMO
Turning Continuous Improvement and a PMO into an Innovation Team KaiNexus
Presented by one of our customers – Erin Edwards, continuous improvement manager from Four Seasons Produce.
In this webinar, you will learn:
- How communication breaks down siloes and to create a cross functional effort for continuous improvement
- The value of communication when it comes to educating vs. cheerleading
- How to leverage PMO and CI efforts for key strategic projects
- Get a snapshot of a new innovation team model that merges the best elements of CI and a PMO