Islanda, lava, ghiacci ed aurore da reykjavik 5 giorni invernoSergio Di Muro
Islanda offre moltissimo ai turisti che vi si avventurano durante i mesi invernali. Gran parte della popolarità dell’Islanda è dovuta alle sue bellezze naturali: ghiacciai, sorgenti termali, geyser, vulcani attivi, picchi innevati e vasti deserti di lava. Si potrà accedere alla famosa Laguna Blu per un bagno caldo tra i fanghi termali osservando la danza celeste delle aurore boreali.
The conventional use of technology at an administrative level constitutes much more than its usage as
an engineered object. Factual evidence of this was established through a study conducted at LSE, to
analyze how the ultimate outcome of technology in practice is largely determined by the interactions
that technology has with its users coming from different institutionalized environments. To do so, the
popular technical deterministic approach is extended, by adopting a socio-political lens aimed at
understanding “technology in practice”. The social constructivist and the structurational stance, put
together, highlight the delicate intricacies that take place during the recursive interaction between the
user and technology, which shapes technology into a socially politicized object.
Islanda, lava, ghiacci ed aurore da reykjavik 5 giorni invernoSergio Di Muro
Islanda offre moltissimo ai turisti che vi si avventurano durante i mesi invernali. Gran parte della popolarità dell’Islanda è dovuta alle sue bellezze naturali: ghiacciai, sorgenti termali, geyser, vulcani attivi, picchi innevati e vasti deserti di lava. Si potrà accedere alla famosa Laguna Blu per un bagno caldo tra i fanghi termali osservando la danza celeste delle aurore boreali.
The conventional use of technology at an administrative level constitutes much more than its usage as
an engineered object. Factual evidence of this was established through a study conducted at LSE, to
analyze how the ultimate outcome of technology in practice is largely determined by the interactions
that technology has with its users coming from different institutionalized environments. To do so, the
popular technical deterministic approach is extended, by adopting a socio-political lens aimed at
understanding “technology in practice”. The social constructivist and the structurational stance, put
together, highlight the delicate intricacies that take place during the recursive interaction between the
user and technology, which shapes technology into a socially politicized object.
The document discusses Cisco's corporate social responsibility (CSR) focus and programs. It describes Cisco's CSR areas of focus as society, environment, supply chain, and corporate governance/ethics. For society, Cisco's focus is on education, healthcare, economic empowerment, and disaster response. It then provides details on Cisco's Networking Academy program, including its history, impact, and community engagement efforts in Italy.
The document discusses four "miracles" that have enabled greater access to information and communication technologies (ICT) in developing countries: 1) the mobile miracle of widespread cellular connectivity, 2) the broadband miracle of growing internet access, 3) the open-source miracle of accessible software, and 4) the cloud computing miracle of shared online services. The author argues that future ICT development efforts should capitalize on these technologies by minimizing local infrastructure, using open-source software, training local management, adopting existing solutions over creating new ones, and pursuing replicable and scalable approaches.
The document discusses Cisco's corporate social responsibility (CSR) focus and programs. It describes Cisco's CSR areas of focus as society, environment, supply chain, and corporate governance/ethics. For society, Cisco's focus is on education, healthcare, economic empowerment, and disaster response. It then provides details on Cisco's Networking Academy program, including its history, impact, and community engagement efforts in Italy.
The document discusses four "miracles" that have enabled greater access to information and communication technologies (ICT) in developing countries: 1) the mobile miracle of widespread cellular connectivity, 2) the broadband miracle of growing internet access, 3) the open-source miracle of accessible software, and 4) the cloud computing miracle of shared online services. The author argues that future ICT development efforts should capitalize on these technologies by minimizing local infrastructure, using open-source software, training local management, adopting existing solutions over creating new ones, and pursuing replicable and scalable approaches.
3. Vista sul naviglio: il ponte delle gabelle e l’edificio delle cucine economiche
lunedì 23 aprile 2012
4. 1959-1960, lavori di tombinatura del Naviglio Martesana lungo via Melchior
Gioia; L’edificio al 6/a non rientra nell’immagine, ma si trova poco più in
basso a sinistra della visuale inquadrata.
lunedì 23 aprile 2012