217 research outputs found
Functions and of personnel management and its realization in a company "Varner Baltija" LLC
Darba tēma ir Personāla vadības funkcijas un to realizācija uzņēmumā SIA „Varner Baltija”.
Darba mērķis ir izpētīt, analizēt un novērtēt personāla vadīšanas būtību, funkcijas un to realizāciju SIA „Varner Baltija” „Dressmann” veikalu attīstībā un sniegt priekšlikumus personāla vadīšanas funkciju uzlabošanai un uzņēmuma attīstībai.
Darba mērķa sasniegšanai tika izvirzīti uzdevumi – izpētīt teorētiski personāla vadīšanas būtību, funkcijas un noskaidrot praktiski personāla vadīšanas efektivitāti uzņēmuma attīstībā, ar anketēšanas un intervēšanas palīdzību noskaidrot personāla un vadītāju viedokli.
Darba apjoms ir 53 lapaspuses, tajā ir 14 attēli, 3 tabulas un 4 pielikumi
Atslēgvārdi: personāla vadība, personālvadība, “Varner Baltija”.Bachelor thesis.
Functions and of personnel management and its realization in a company „Varner Baltija” LLC
The goal of this scientific work is to analyze and evaluate the essence, functions and its realization of personnel management in a company “Varner Baltija” LLC “Dressmann” shops’ development and to give proposals to improve functions of personnel management in this company.
To reach this goal, author has set following tasks – explore theoretical nature of personnel management, find out the effectiveness personnel management in company development, find out personnel’s and managers’ opinions using survey and interview
The thesis is written in Latvian language. This thesis consists of 53 pages, and it includes 14 pictures, 3 tables and 4 appendices.
Keywords: personnel management, human recourse management, “Varner Baltija”
"Author to lecture on the working poor"
News article"In conjunction with Oakland University's Women's History Month, the Student Life Lecture Board welcomes noted author, journalist and social commentator Barbara Ehrenreich to deliver her lecture "Nickel and Dimed: Down and Out in America" on Thursday, March 20, at noon in Varner Recital Hal
"Presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin to speak at OU April 13"
News article"Tickets are now available for Oakland University's 2017 Varner Vitality Lecture featuring Pulitzer Prizewinning author and presidential historian Doris Kearns Goodwin. Goodwin will present her talk "How Did We Get Here: The First 100 Days of an Unprecedented Presidency," at 7 p.m. (doors open at 6 p.m.) on Thursday, April 13 in the Athletics Center O'rena, on OU's campus.
"OU’s ‘Voice Day’ to focus on vocal function, health"
News article"Oakland University's School of Music, Theatre and Dance will welcome laryngologist and singing voice specialist Dr. Adam Rubin, author of The Vocal Pitstop, as the special guest speaker during OU's annual "Voice Day" event, which will take place from noon to 5:30 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 13 in Varner Recital Hall.
Emperor and author : the writings of Julian the Apostate /
Includes bibliographical references and index.Introduction Nicholas Baker-Brian and Shaun Tougher -- Julian the writer and his audience / Susanna Elm -- Reading between the lines : ; Julian's First Panegyric on Constantius II / Shaun Tougher -- 'But I digress...' : ; rhetoric and propaganda in Julian's second oration to Constantius / Hal Drake -- Is there an empress in the text? ; Julian's Speech of thanks to Eusebia / Liz James -- Julian's Consolation to himself on the departure of the excellent Salutius : ; rhetoric and philosophy in the fourth centurry / Josef Lössl -- The tyrant's mask? ; Images of good and bad rule in Julian's Letter to the Athenians / Mark Humphries -- Julian's Letter to Themistius -- and Themistius' response? / John W. Watt -- The emperor's shadow : ; Julian in his correspondence / Michael Trapp -- Julian the lawgiver / Jill Harries -- Words and deeds : ; Julian in the epigraphic record / Benet Salway -- Julian and his coinage : ; a very Constantinian prince / Fernando López Sánchez -- Roman authority, imperial authoriality, and Julian's artistic program / Eric R. Varner -- Julian's Hymn to the mother of the gods : ; the revival and justification of traditional religion / J.H.W.G. Liebeschuetz -- Julian's Hymn to King Helios : ; the economical use of complex Neoplatonic concepts / Andrew Smtih -- The forging of an Hellenic orthodoxy : ; Julian's speeches against the cynics / Arnaldo Marcone -- The Christian context of Julian's Against the Galileans / David Hunt -- The politics of virtue in Julian's Misopogon / Nicholas Baker-Brian -- The Caesars of Julian the Apostate in translation and reception, 1580-ca -- 1800 / Rowland SmithAfterword: studying Julian the author / Jacqueline Long
A comparative analysis among dual-diagnosis: Schizophrenic substance abusers' perceived satisfaction with mental health service delivery and perceived social support systems, 1996
The overall objective of this study is to explore, examine, assess and compare perceived satisfaction with service delivery and perceived social support systems among dual-diagnosis: schizophrenic clients. To attain this objective, the following areas were examined by the researcher: (1) Identifying data/demographic data; (2) Support systems, i.e., family and friends among dual-diagnosis: schizophrenic clients; and (3) Satisfaction with mental health service delivery. Fragmentation and gaps in service delivery were also examined. An exploratory descriptive research design was used in the study. A two-part questionnaire was administered by the researcher to thirty-four Dual-diagnosed Schizophrenic Consumers in two separate Mental Health Facilities in Fulton County. This study was an attempt to compare perceived satisfaction with service delivery and perceived social support systems among Dual-diagnosis: Schizophrenic Substance Abusers. The Null Hypothesis was accepted in this study. It was found that there were no statistical significance in perceived satisfaction with service delivery and perceived social support among Dual-diagnosis: Schizophrenic Substance Abusers
Bridging the Gap Between International Human Rights and International Cultural Heritage Law Instruments:A Functions Approach
With the activities of UNESCO in the recent decades international cultural heritage law has become its own area within public international law. By its very nature, namely its focus on cultural heritage and forms of cultural expression, it is closely linked to different human rights. However, this link has only really been realized in more recent instruments and even then not fully. States have obligations in both areas of international law. This raises the question of how to best accommodate State duties and rights under UNESCO instruments with individual and community rights under the respective human rights treaties. The author proposes to examine the functions of cultural heritage as one way in which to better bridge the gap between the two fields
Faculty Panel: Open Access and the Digital Humanities
Open Access @ Georgia Tech event held in conjunction with International Open Access Week. Presented on October 25, 2013 from 3-4 pm in the Klaus Advanced Computing Building, Seminar Room 1116.Dr. Ian Bogost is a scholar, author, and game designer. He is Ivan Allen College Distinguished Chair in Media Studies and Professor of Interactive Computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology, and Founding Partner at Persuasive Games LLC. As an author, he writes about videogames as a medium with many uses. As a game designer, he makes games for political, social, educational, and artistic uses. Bogost is author or co-author of seven books: Unit Operations, Persuasive Games, Racing the Beam, Newsgames, How To Do Things with Videogames, Alien Phenomenology, and 10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10. Bogost's videogames cover topics as varied as airport security, disaffected workers, the petroleum industry, suburban errands, and tort reform. His games have been played by millions of people and exhibited internationally. His game A Slow Year, a collection of game poems for Atari, won the Vanguard and Virtuoso awards at the 2010 Indiecade Festival.TyAnna Herrington, JD, PhD, is a Professor at Georgia Tech. She specializes in intellectual property law and in international technical communication. Her books are in law and her articles treat issues in law and international communication, focused on digital learning. She serves on ATTW's Executive Committee as its Information Officer, is an Executive Advisory Board Member for CPTSC's Programmatic Perspectives, and is a member of the CCCC"s Intellectual Property Task Force. Herrington served as a member of Georgia's State Board of Regents Copyright Committee and has delivered keynote, featured, and plenary addresses in venues including the NINCH Copyright Town Hall, CCCC, and CPTSC.Robin Wharton holds a law degree (1999), and a PhD in English with an emphasis in late-medieval English law and literature (2009) from the University of Georgia. She was formerly a Marion L. Brittain Postdoctoral Fellow and then Assistant Director of Writing and Communication at the Georgia Institute of Technology. At present, she is a collaborator on the Hoccleve Archive, a collection of resources related to study of the fifteenth century London-based poet Thomas Hoccleve and his works, a co-founder and director of the Calliope Initiative, a non-profit organization building open source tools for project- and process-oriented multimodal composition pedagogy, and the Production Editor at Hybrid Pegagogy, a digital journal of learning, teaching, and technology. An advocate for open access and open source development and distribution models, her interdisciplinary scholarship--in digital humanities and pedagogy, critical theory, and medieval studies--considers the complex discursive exchange among literary, academic, and legal modes of cultural production.Stewart Varner is the Digital Scholarship Coordinator at Emory University's Robert W. Woodruff Library. He works with scholars who want to incorporate technology into their research and is particularly interested in building a robust role for libraries in Open Access digital publishing. He joined the staff at Emory in 2010 after working for three years as a graduate student fellow in the Beck Center for Electronic Texts. He earned his doctorate in American Studies from Emory's Institute for the Liberal Arts and his MLIS from the University of North Texas.Brian Croxall is Digital Humanities Strategist and Lecturer of English at Emory University. In the new Emory Center for Digital Scholarship (ECDS), he helps carry out an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation-sponsored grant. Along with developing and managing digital scholarship projects in collaboration with faculty, graduate students, librarians, and developers, he teaches courses on digital humanities, media studies, and American literature. He has co-edited an issue of Neo-Victorian Studies on steampunk, is co-editing a book on the same subject, is a cluster editor at #alt-academy, and is a writer for the group blog ProfHacker.Runtime: 64:54 minutes
Agile, Post-quantum Secure Cryptography in Avionics
To introduce a post-quantum-secure encryption scheme specifically for use in flight-computers, we used avionics’ module-isolation methods to wrap a recent encryption standard (HPKE – Hybrid Public Key Encryption) within a software partition. This solution proposes an upgrade to HPKE, using quantum-resistant ciphers (Kyber/ML-KEM and Dilithium/ML-DSA) redundantly alongside well-established ciphers, to achieve post-quantum security.
Because cryptographic technology can suddenly become obsolete as attacks become more sophisticated, crypto-agility -– the ability to swiftly replace ciphers – represents the key challenge to deployment of software like ours. Partitioning is a crucial method for establishing such agility, as it enables the replacement of compromised software without affecting software on other partitions, greatly simplifying the certification process necessary in an avionics environment.
Our performance measurements constitute initial evidence that both the memory and performance characteristics of this approach are suitable for deployment in flight-computers currently in use. Prior to optimisation, performance measurements show a modest memory requirement of under 400 KB of RAM, but employ a more substantial stack usage of just under 200 KB. Our most advanced redundant post-quantum cipher is five times slower than its non-redundant, pre-quantum counterpart
Oakland University News: February 26, 1974
NewsletterRalph Nader Speaks March 4, OU Faculty, Admissions Staff Active in Saginaw, Woody Varner Takes Fresh Look at OU, UJAMAA Theatre Performs at OU Feb. 28-March 3, Daytime Class Matrix in Effect for Fall Term, Studio Company Offers Chekhov's Three Sisters, Violinist Eugen Sarbu Performs in Recital Series, Lilliston Named Editorial Consultant, Freeman Accepted for USA-USSR Program, Singer Will Be Conference Participant, Campus Calendar, Campus Ticket Office, Graphics Display Slated for Feb. 27-28 in Oakland Center, Wyatt Heads University Congress, Smith Is Co-Author of Counseling Article
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