... Improving prioritization of features 28 ■ Increasing team buy -in and involvement 28 Clarifying priorities and reminding everyone of the consequences of changing them 28 ■ Adapting to change ... a gas line that ran close to the target drilling point; and if their coordinates were incorrect, they might rupture the line and create an explosion. Being careful to avoid the gas line, the ... deploy a working system. 3Use human-centric methods. Don’t abandon practices and disciplines, but put more focus on individuals and interactions. Your focus should be on collabo-ration and communication....
... Japan Industrial Standard Association, Tokyo (in Japanese). Obara, H. and akai, M. (2004). Available phosphate of arable lands in Japan -Changes of soil characteristics in Japanese arable lands ... precipitation and the concentrations of various water quality parameters. Solid line in the box is the median, lower and upper broken lines represent the 25th and 75th percentiles, and lower and upper ... is that specific pollutant outflows from forests and agricultural lands may have increased in recent years. This is because poorly managed forests and agricultural lands in the under-populated...
... within the organization. All ofthese changes must be identified early and continually managed, and change initiatives coordinated and integrated in a timely fashion.Your change management plan ... understand the pro-cess in which change occurs, and incorporate the following rec-ommendations into an effective organizational change plan:■Know the tools and methods that can be used to analyze ... be used to analyze and manage change ■Plan and implement proactive change management principles ■Understand the nature and impact of change in the programenvironment ■Manage the negative...
... Children inan increasingly urban world 1 An urban future 2Poverty and exclusion 3Meeting the challenges of an urban future 8CHAPTER 2 Children’s rights in urban settings 13 An environment ... These are mothers and fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers, sons and daughters, scratching out a life in shantytowns the world over. With the direct disadvan-tages of urban poverty – disease, ... corridors spark business and change the nature and function of individual towns and cities, promoting regional economic growth but also often reinforcing urban primacy and unbalanced regional...
... the incentive to invent and provide an environment“conducive to securing the complementary assets, capital, manufacturing,marketing and support” that are necessary in order to bring that invention ... Napster,Grokster, Microsoft, and DeCSS cases, are critically examined. Many of theissues and controversies introduced in this chapter are explored and analyzed in greater detail in the subsequent chapters ... common good, which is manifest in thesharing and communication of information.Chapter IX, by Elizabeth Buchanan and James Campbell, examines thegrowing threats to the “information commons” that...
... housing can protect children and families living in densely populated urban settings against many injuries, accidents and diseases.Sound policies combine action to improve and expand housing ... communities’ and children’s perspectives are often invaluable in improving urban planning and design. Take the example of CLEAN-Delhi, a joint advocacy initiative of NGOs and schoolchildren in New ... iden-tifying and removing the barriers to inclusion; putting children rst within a broader pursuit of equity in urban planning, infrastructure development, governance and service delivery; promoting...
... is well interpretable). 4.3 Structural Interpretation The last step consists in trying to instantiate the found candidates in the semantic network of the module (Briel2mann 1984 and 1986). ... des Instimts ffir Mathematische Maschinen und Datenverarbeitung (IMMD), Band 17(5). Erlangen. A. Brietzmann, U. Ehrlich: The Role of Semantic Processing inan Automatic Speech Understanding ... 'timetable information' and has the "1" only for the concept itself. An example for pragmatic bitvectors and priorities pP(w) is given in Fig. 4. 3. Scoring A nmin problem in reducing...
... later in this chapter.Rewriting Your NotesReorganizing and rewriting your notes gives you a chance to reviewmaterials and recognize the most significant points. When writingdown notes in class, ... identify and separatewhat is opinion and what is fact in your notes. And any time you don’tunderstand or don’t accept a fact or opinion, be sure to put a questionmark in your notes, so you can follow ... headings, the infor-mation in bullets, and any information that is otherwisehighlighted to show that it is important.You can jump back at any time in the reading process, and youshould do it any time...
... practices in organic systems including soil incorporation of legume cover crops and animal manures can result in mitigation of GWP and GHGI relative to NT and CT systems, primarily by increasing ... rates and the absence of synthetic nitrogen fertilizer. Kustermann and Hülsbergen [24], in a review of 33 German organic and conventional commercial farms examining direct and indirect energy inputs, ... more study. Finally, reducing transport offers some additional, if smaller, potential for E and GHG gains (and again data for the Canadian food system is lacking) and a significant body of literature...
... rather than clinical end points, clinical trials comparing the safety and efficacy between these DES types and BMSs have yielded inconsistent results. In the ENDEAVOR I, II,II Continued Access ... recorded in our study were comparable with the Taxus VI popu-lation To understand the safety and performance of the ZES and PES in the real -world patients, (patients not subject to any anatomic ... significant. RESULTS Baseline clinical, coronary angiographic and le-sion characteristics are shown in Table 1 and Table 2. No significant differences were present in the baseline clinical or demographic...