3,680 research outputs found

    Jochen Kade / Werner Helsper / Christian Lüders / Birte Egloff / Frank-Olaf Radtke / Werner Thole (Hrsg.): Pädagogisches Wissen, Erziehungswissenschaft in Grundbegriffen, Stuttgart: Kohlhammer 2011 [Rezension]

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    Rezension von: Jochen Kade / Werner Helsper / Christian Lüders / Birte Egloff / Frank-Olaf Radtke / Werner Thole (Hrsg.): Pädagogisches Wissen, Erziehungswissenschaft in Grundbegriffen, Stuttgart: Kohlhammer 2011 (256 S.; ISBN 978-3-1702-1144-5; 24,90 EUR

    Werner Helsper / Reinhard Hörster / Jochen Kade (Hrsg.): Ungewissheit. Pädagogische Felder im Modernisierungsprozess. Weilerswist: Velbrück Wissenschaft 2003 (394 S.) [Rezension]

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    Rezension von: Werner Helsper / Reinhard Hörster / Jochen Kade (Hrsg.): Ungewissheit. Pädagogische Felder im Modernisierungsprozess. Weilerswist: Velbrück Wissenschaft 2003 (394 S.; ISBN 3-934730-73-6; 29,00 EUR)

    Jochen Werner MAYER, Imus ad villam. Studien zur Villeggiatur im stadtrömischen Suburbium in der späten Republik und frühen Kaiserzeit.

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    Cébeillac-Gervasoni Mireille. Jochen Werner MAYER, Imus ad villam. Studien zur Villeggiatur im stadtrömischen Suburbium in der späten Republik und frühen Kaiserzeit.. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 76, 2007. pp. 554-555

    Cicero, Werke in drei Bänden. Übersetzt von Liselot Huchthausen, Elisabeth Ibendorff, Jochen Kleinert, Christian Rothe, Ursula Rothe, Rigobert Günther, Walter Hofmann, Werner Krenkel, Friedmar Kühnert, Reimar Müller, Jürgen Werner, Horst Dieter

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    Van Looy Herman. Cicero, Werke in drei Bänden. Übersetzt von Liselot Huchthausen, Elisabeth Ibendorff, Jochen Kleinert, Christian Rothe, Ursula Rothe, Rigobert Günther, Walter Hofmann, Werner Krenkel, Friedmar Kühnert, Reimar Müller, Jürgen Werner, Horst Dieter. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 60, 1991. pp. 394-395

    Implementing Persistent Identifiers

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    Traditionally, organisations have relied on URL hyperlinks to provide interested parties with access to their digitised content via the internet. However, over time, more and more of these hyperlinks are ‘broken’. The URL relies on providing the specific location details for a document. When, for example, an organisation’s website is re-organised and its directories are renamed, the URL no longer provides a correct location path, thus rendering the documents effectively inaccessible to the end-user. In the mid 1990s, a number of schemes were developed that, rather than relying on the precise address of a document, introduced the idea of name spaces for recording the names and locations of documents. The identifiers for documents are registered centrally. When an end-user wishes to access a certain document, the identifier in his request is ‘resolved’, i.e. the correct document is retrieved, without the end-user needing to know the exact location of the document. This report describes a number of such schemes in detail. Key concepts introduced include Handles, Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs), Archival Resource Keys (ARKs), Persistent Uniform Resource Locators (PURLs), Uniform Resource Names (URNs), National Bibliography Numbers (NBNs), and the OpenURL. These schemes are described with examples and extensive references. The report emphasises that supporting persistent identification requires administrative effort and commitment. The systems presented support these administrative tasks but do not render them obsolete. All changes in location, ownership or metadata must be reflected in the name-space system – causing the organisations that run an identification system to incur costs. To assist organisations that wish to implement a persistent identification scheme, the report details questions that need to be addressed and offers possible strategies to tackle a number of scenarios. Organisations are strongly recommended to investigate collaboration with partners with existing schemes that have similar problems to solve and to choose the syntax for their persistent identifiers in such a way that they can be integrated into any of the schemes introduced in this report

    Implementing Persistent Identifiers

    No full text
    Traditionally, organisations have relied on URL hyperlinks to provide interested parties with access to their digitised content via the internet. However, over time, more and more of these hyperlinks are ‘broken’. The URL relies on providing the specific location details for a document. When, for example, an organisation’s website is re-organised and its directories are renamed, the URL no longer provides a correct location path, thus rendering the documents effectively inaccessible to the end-user. In the mid 1990s, a number of schemes were developed that, rather than relying on the precise address of a document, introduced the idea of name spaces for recording the names and locations of documents. The identifiers for documents are registered centrally. When an end-user wishes to access a certain document, the identifier in his request is ‘resolved’, i.e. the correct document is retrieved, without the end-user needing to know the exact location of the document. This report describes a number of such schemes in detail. Key concepts introduced include Handles, Digital Object Identifiers (DOIs), Archival Resource Keys (ARKs), Persistent Uniform Resource Locators (PURLs), Uniform Resource Names (URNs), National Bibliography Numbers (NBNs), and the OpenURL. These schemes are described with examples and extensive references. The report emphasises that supporting persistent identification requires administrative effort and commitment. The systems presented support these administrative tasks but do not render them obsolete. All changes in location, ownership or metadata must be reflected in the name-space system – causing the organisations that run an identification system to incur costs. To assist organisations that wish to implement a persistent identification scheme, the report details questions that need to be addressed and offers possible strategies to tackle a number of scenarios. Organisations are strongly recommended to investigate collaboration with partners with existing schemes that have similar problems to solve and to choose the syntax for their persistent identifiers in such a way that they can be integrated into any of the schemes introduced in this report

    <b>Supplemental Material - Corporate Digital Responsibility in Service Firms and Their Ecosystems</b>

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    Supplemental Material for Corporate Digital Responsibility in Service Firms and Their Ecosystems by Jochen Wirtz, Werner Kunz, Nicole Hartley, and James Tarbit in Journal of Service Research</p

    <b>Supplemental Material - Corporate Digital Responsibility in Service Firms and Their Ecosystems</b>

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    Supplemental Material for Corporate Digital Responsibility in Service Firms and Their Ecosystems by Jochen Wirtz, Werner Kunz, Nicole Hartley, and James Tarbit in Journal of Service Research</p
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