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Service platforms have moved into the center of interest in both academic research and the IT industry due to their economic and technical impact. These multitenant platforms provide own or third party software as metered, on-demand services. Corresponding service offers exhibit network effects. The present work introduces a graphical modeling language to support service platform design with focus on the exploitation of these network effects.
Control Theory --- Graphical Modeling Language --- Network Effects --- Service Platforms
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Software plays a critical role in today's global information economy. It runs the computers, networks, and devices that enable countless products and services. Software varies in size from vast enterprise and communications systems like SAP's enterprise resource planning system with hundreds of millions of lines of code to tiny apps like Angry Birds that run on mobile phones. Companies in the software industry produce and sell software products and related services. The industry is intensely competitive and has undergone a dramatic transformation from its roots in a handful of computer hardware mainframe producers in the 1960s to numerous large and small software companies today. Understanding how the software industry works and how the industry is evolving are important. Since software runs the computers and networks that support the flow of information in the global economy, the software industry also affects companies in all other industries that use these products and services for their own competitive advantage. This book offers a profile of the software industry and the companies in the industry. It describes the primary products and services produced in the industry; reviews the history of the industry; explains how the industry is structured; discusses its economics and competitive environment; and examines important trends and issues including globalization, workforce, regulation, and the emergence of new software business models.
Computer software industry. --- software standards --- software security --- software product --- software platforms --- software piracy --- software patent --- software industry --- software ecosystems --- software development --- software copyright --- software business model --- software as a service --- software --- outsourcing --- open-source software --- offshoring --- network effects --- intellectual property --- information technology management --- computers
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The Butterfly Defect addresses the widening gap between the new systemic risks generated by globalization and their effective management. It shows how the dynamics of turbo-charged globalization has the potential and power to destabilize our societies. Drawing on the latest insights from a wide variety of disciplines, Ian Goldin and Mike Mariathasan provide practical guidance for how governments, businesses, and individuals can better manage globalization and risk.Goldin and Mariathasan demonstrate that systemic risk issues are now endemic everywhere-in supply chains, pandemics, infrastructure, ecology and climate change, economics, and politics. Unless we address these concerns, they will lead to greater protectionism, xenophobia, nationalism, and, inevitably, deglobalization, rising inequality, conflict, and slower growth.The Butterfly Defect shows that mitigating uncertainty and risk in an interconnected world is an essential task for our future.
Globalization. --- Crisis management. --- Risk management. --- Contagion. --- Glass-Steagall Act. --- H5N1. --- HIV/AIDS. --- Hurricane Sandy. --- Katrina. --- SARS. --- Spanish flu. --- West Nile Virus. --- air transportation connectivity. --- bird flu. --- blackouts. --- butterfly effect. --- cascades. --- cholera. --- climate change. --- computer viruses. --- cyber attacks. --- disease control. --- earthquakes. --- ecological risks. --- economic crises. --- economic meltdown. --- financial crisis. --- global catastrophe. --- global connectivity. --- global infrastructure. --- global virus. --- globalism. --- great recession. --- greenhouse gas emissions. --- housing bubbles. --- hurricanes. --- infectious disease. --- influenza. --- infrastucture. --- isolationism. --- nationalism. --- natural disasters. --- network effects. --- pandemic management. --- pandemic. --- protectionism. --- quarantines. --- recession. --- risk management. --- super spreaders. --- supply bottleneck. --- supply chains. --- swine flu. --- systemic collapse. --- systemic shocks. --- terrorism. --- tsunamis. --- volcanic eruptions.
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