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How did the conduct of business come to be so different in
different countries? Why are some less developed countries in the
process of rapid industrialization while so many others remain
poor? Analysts often point to national differences in the cultures
of business to explain these patterns. What then, accounts for
these differences in culture? We can gain some insights into these
issues by considering the incentives that are likely to shape the
behaviors of upwardly mobile sub-elites. Patterns of elite
initiatives in the early years of industrialization have an
enduring impact on the subsequent conduct of business.
Understanding the impact of history can provide important insights
into contemporary business practices. Viewed from the perspective
of developmental history, apparently independent phenomena can
often be seen as different aspects of a common pattern. Questions
about the relation between our collective past experiences and
future performances are also relevant for our understanding of
democratic self-governance. Governments are generally engaged in
nation building. What works? Why? Where are we collectively headed?
This volume suggests some answers. Author David Hanson develops an
analysis that focuses on governing elites, the need for security,
and the search for status. His analysis rests on considerations of
social structure, conflict, and psychology rather than on
resources, markets and economics. The result is a book to offer
international managers an understanding of history's critical role
in fully understanding the societies in which they operate.
Every programmer and software project manager must master the art
of creating reusable software modules; they are the building blocks
of large, reliable applications. Unlike some modern object-oriented
languages, C provides little linguistic support or motivation for
creating reusable application programming interfaces (APIs). While
most C programmers use APIs and the libraries that implement them
in almost every application they write, relatively few programmers
create and disseminate new, widely applicable APIs. C Interfaces
and Implementations shows how to create reusable APIs using
interface-based design, a language-independent methodology that
separates interfaces from their implementations. This methodology
is explained by example. The author describes in detail 24
interfaces and their implementations, providing the reader with a
thorough understanding of this design approach.
Features of C Interfaces and Implementations:
- Concise interface descriptions that comprise a reference manual
for programmers interested in using the interfaces.
- A guided tour of the code that implements each chapter's
interface tp help those modifying or extending an interface or
designing related interfaces.
- In-depth focus on "algorithm engineering: " how to package data
structures and related algorithms into reusable modules.
- Source code for 24 APIs and 8 sample applications is examined,
with each presented as a "literate program" in which a thorough
explanation is interleaved with the source code.
- Rarely documented C programming tricks-of-the-trade.
- Convenient access to all source code in the book via the World
Wide Web at http: //www.cs.princeton.edu/software/cii/
0201498413B04062001
Designed as a self-study guide, the book describes the real-world tradeoffs encountered in building a production-quality, platform-retargetable compiler. The authors examine the implementation of lcc, a production-quality, research-oriented retargetable compiler, designed at AT&T Bell Laboratories for the ANSI C programming language. The authors' innovative approach-a "literate program" that intermingles the text with the source code-uses a line-by-line explanation of the code to demonstrate how lcc is built.
Making a robot that looks and behaves like a human being has been
the subject of many popular science fiction movies and books.
Although the development of such a robot
facesmanychallenges,themakingofavirtualhumanhaslongbeenpotentiallypossible.
With recent advances in various key technologies related to
hardware and software, the making of humanlike robots is
increasingly becoming an engineering reality. Development of the
required hardware that can perform humanlike functions in a
lifelike manner has benefitted greatly from development in such
technologies as biologically inspired materials, artificial
intelligence, artificial vision, and many others. Producing a
humanlike robot that makes body and facial expressions,
communicates verbally using extensive vocabulary, and interprets
speech with high accuracy is ext- mely complicated to engineer.
Advances in voice recognition and speech synthesis are increasingly
improving communication capabilities. In our daily life we
encounter such innovations when we call the telephone operators of
most companies today. As robotics technology continues to improve
we are approaching the point where, on seeing such a robot, we will
respond with ''Wow, this robot looks unbelievably real!'' just like
the reaction to an artificial flower. The accelerating pace of
advances in related fields suggests that the emergence of humanlike
robots that become part of our daily life seems to be imminent.
These robots are expected to raise ethical concerns and may also
raise many complex questions related to their interaction with
humans.
How did the conduct of business come to be so different in
different countries? Why are some less developed countries in the
process of rapid industrialization while so many others remain
poor? Analysts often point to national differences in the cultures
of business to explain these patterns. What then, accounts for
these differences in culture? We can gain some insights into these
issues by considering the incentives that are likely to shape the
behaviors of upwardly mobile sub-elites. Patterns of elite
initiatives in the early years of industrialization have an
enduring impact on the subsequent conduct of business.
Understanding the impact of history can provide important insights
into contemporary business practices. Viewed from the perspective
of developmental history, apparently independent phenomena can
often be seen as different aspects of a common pattern. Questions
about the relation between our collective past experiences and
future performances are also relevant for our understanding of
democratic self-governance. Governments are generally engaged in
nation building. What works? Why? Where are we collectively headed?
This volume suggests some answers. Author David Hanson develops an
analysis that focuses on governing elites, the need for security,
and the search for status. His analysis rests on considerations of
social structure, conflict, and psychology rather than on
resources, markets and economics. The result is a book to offer
international managers an understanding of history's critical role
in fully understanding the societies in which they operate.
CE Marking, the European system of mandatory product safety
standards, has created major obstacles for US exporters to the
European Union (EU). CE Marking, Product Standards and World Trade
is one of the first books to analyze the nature and dynamics of
this major non-tariff trade barrier. David Hanson looks at the
patterns of EU decision-making through a functional comparative
analysis with the US, and in the context of the institutional
alliances and rivalries that shape outcomes. An increasingly
important but little understood issue, CE Marking is also an
example of a growing problem in international commerce - the impact
of inconsistent domestic product requirements on international
trade. The author examines the way in which the EU has implemented
the CE Marking system, its impact on US exporters, the dynamic of
US - EU trade and negotiations, and the political and
administrative arrangements that support them. This comprehensive
study will be of great interest to students and scholars of
industrial economics and international business. Business people
and policymakers will also find much of interest in this timely
volume.
Channel 4's The Mill captivated viewers with the tales of the lives
of the young girls and boys in a northern mill. Focusing on the
lives of the apprentices at Quarry Bank Mill, David Hanson's book
uses a wealth of first-person source material including letters,
diaries, mill records, to tell the stories of the children who
lived and worked at Quarry Bank throughout the nineteenth century.
This book perfectly accompanies the television series, satisfying
viewers' curiosity about the history of the children of Quarry
Bank. It reveals the real lives of the television series' main
characters: Esther, Daniel, Lucy and Susannah, showing how
shockingly close to the truth the dramatisation is. But the book
also goes far beyond this to create a full and vivid picture of
factory life in the industrial revolution. David Hanson has written
an accessible narrative history of Victorian working children and
the conditions in which they worked.
The electronic age has tethered children to keyboards and
diminished active play, which is the corenerstone of healthy
development. Flawed government policies and market-driven biases
have ignored developmentally appropriate practices to the detriment
of our childrens' physical, cognitive, social, and emotional
health. It is time to change course, for the benefit of our
children and our society.
A compilation of poetry that addresses complex issues related to
self, relationship, and world matters, in rhymed format that
preserves raw emotion, while simultaneously adhering to
well-respected, age-old, artistic- poetic forms.
People have always grown food in urban spaces - on windowsills and
sidewalks, and in backyards and neighborhood parks - but today,
urban farmers are leading an environmental and social movement that
transforms our national food system. To explore this agricultural
renaissance, brothers David and Michael Hanson and urban farmer
Edwin Marty document twelve successful urban farm programs, from an
alternative school for girls in Detroit, to a backyard food swap in
New Orleans, to a restaurant supply garden on a rooftop in
Brooklyn. Each beautifully illustrated essay offers practical
advice for budding farmers, such as composting and keeping
livestock in the city, decontaminating toxic soil, even changing
zoning laws.
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