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Organic Electronics is a novel field of electronics that has gained
an incredible attention over the past few decades. New materials,
device architectures and applications have been continuously
introduced by the academic and also industrial communities, and
novel topics have raised strong interest in such communities, as
molecular doping, thermoelectrics, bioelectronics and many others.
Organic Flexible Electronics is mainly divided into three sections.
The first part is focused on the fundamentals of organic
electronics, such as charge transport models in these systems and
new approaches for the design and synthesis of novel molecules. The
first section addresses the main challenges that are still open in
this field, including the important role of interfaces for
achieving high-performing devices or the novel approaches employed
for improving reliability issues. The second part discusses the
most innovative devices which have been developed in recent years,
such as devices for energy harvesting, flexible batteries, high
frequency circuits, and flexible devices for tattoo electronics and
bioelectronics. Finally the book reviews the most important
applications moving from more standard flexible back panels to
wearable and textile electronics and more futuristic applications
like ingestible systems.
This edited collection provides the first comprehensive history of
Florence as the mid-19th century capital of the fledgling Italian
nation. Covering various aspects of politics, economics, culture
and society, this book examines the impact that the short-lived
experience of becoming the political and administrative centre of
the Kingdom of Italy had on the Tuscan city, both immediately and
in the years that followed. It reflects upon the urbanising changes
that affected the appearance of the city and the introduction of
various economic and cultural innovations. The volume also analyses
the crisis caused by the eventual relocation of the capital to Rome
and the subsequent bankruptcy of the communality which hampered
Florence on the long road to modernity. Florence: Capital of the
Kingdom of Italy, 1865-71 is a fascinating study for all students
and scholars of modern Italian history.
This book reviews the state of the art in the use of organic
materals as physical, chemical and biomedical sensors in a variety
of application settings. Topics covered include organic
semiconductors for chemical and physical sensing; conducting
polymers in sensor applications; chemically functionalized organic
semiconductors for highly selective sensing; composite
organic-inorganic sensors; artificial skin applications; organic
thin film transistor strain gauges for biomedical applications;
OTFT infrared sensors for touchless human-machine interaction;
smart fabric sensors and e-textile technologie; image capture with
organic sensors; organic gas sensors and electronic noses;
electrolyte gated organic transistors for bio-chemical sensing;
ion-selective organic electrochemical transistors; DNA biosensors;
metabolic organic sensors; and conductive polymer based sensors for
biomedical applications.
Interaction Flow Modeling Language describes how to apply
model-driven techniques to the problem of designing the front end
of software applications, i.e., the user interaction. The book
introduces the reader to the novel OMG standard Interaction Flow
Modeling Language (IFML). Authors Marco Brambilla and Piero
Fraternali are authors of the IFML standard and wrote this book to
explain the main concepts of the language. They effectively
illustrate how IFML can be applied in practice to the specification
and implementation of complex web and mobile applications,
featuring rich interactive interfaces, both browser based and
native, client side components and widgets, and connections to data
sources, business logic components and services. Interaction Flow
Modeling Language provides you with unique insight into the
benefits of engineering web and mobile applications with an agile
model driven approach. Concepts are explained through intuitive
examples, drawn from real-world applications. The authors accompany
you in the voyage from visual specifications of requirements to
design and code production. The book distills more than twenty
years of practice and provides a mix of methodological principles
and concrete and immediately applicable techniques.
Reprint of the only edition. " What the author] has achieved
withgreat success is to render a systematic account of the
contributionwhich Italian scholarship and Italian diplomatic
practice have made inthis field of law throughout the centuries.
Since the writings ofItalian international lawyers are little known
in the Anglo-Americanworld, this study will be particularly welcome
to American and Englishreaders.": Yale Law Journal 54 (1944-1945)
165.
This textbook describes the design of reinforced and prestressed
concrete structures according to the latest advances both in the
field of materials, concrete and steel, and in the field of
structural analysis. These advances have been included in current
version of Eurocode 2, which is taken as reference. All subjects
are presented starting from their theoretical bases and passing to
corresponding EC2 formulations. A large part of the book is
concerned with the most innovative EC2 parts, like nonlinear
structural analyses, second-order effects, punching and
strut-and-tie models. The textbook is equipped with numerous worked
examples, useful for the reader who is not familiar with the design
of reinforced and prestressed concrete structures by the Limit
State Method. Examples have been chosen among the most frequent
cases of the professional practice. Thanks to this structure, it
can be of interest both to structural designers for their
professional training and to students of engineering and
architecture schools for their studies. The volume contains twelve
chapters, which follow the same structure of EC2, except for
chapter 6 (dealing with prestressed concrete structures), which
does not match any chapter of EC2, as prestressed concrete is
considered in EC2 as a particular case of reinforced concrete, and
corresponding formulations are shed over different chapters.
The Bible and its Rewritings examines some of the most beautiful and intriguing scenes from the Old and New Testament such as the encounter between Abraham and God, and Jesus and Mary Magdalene. The author also investigates the direct or indirect Re-Scriptures of these by writers like Thomas Mann, Chaucer, Shakespeare, T. S. Eliot, Faulkner, Tournier, Joseph Roth, as well as by ancient exegesis, catacomb frescoes, and church paintings.
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Eulogy of Judges (Hardcover)
Piero Calamandrei; Translated by John Clarke Adams; Preface by Jacob A Stein
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R812
Discovery Miles 8 120
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Reprint of the first American edition. First published in Italian
in 1936, Elogio dei Giudici Scritto da un Avvocato, this is a
collection of maxims, anecdotes and observations on the nature of
law and justice by a professor of legal procedure at the University
of Florence. Some chapters are: On the Faith of Judges, The Prime
Requisite of Lawyers; On Etiquette (Or Discretion) in The Court; On
the Relationship Between the Lawyer and the Truth, or on the
Necessary Partisanship of the Lawyer. With a new preface by Jacob
A. Stein, prominent Washington D.C. trial lawyer and author of
Eulogy of Lawyers (2010), Legal Spectator & More (2003) and
other titles.
This volume intergrates one contextual, developmental, and
relational theory of personality socialization in the family and
other settings with a complementary model of relational styles.
Both the theory and the model share complementary characteristics
of replicable operations in laboratory evaluation and in
preventative and psychotherapeutic interventions in problems with
intimate relationships. Further, both the theory and the model are
linked to two major models of personality and intimate
relationships, the circumplex and attachment, respectively. The
theory's 15 models are derived from a variety of social
psychological sources, including the social comparison model and
resource exchange theory in social psychology. The complementary
model, Elementary Pragmatic, owes its origins to communication and
systems theories, going beyond them in specificity and
applications.
Scholars and researchers looking for novel and original ideas
demonstrating how to link theory with practice and evaluation with
interventions will find this volume of interest.
This book presents the proceedings of the 2nd Karl Schwarzschild
Meeting on Gravitational Physics, focused on the general theme of
black holes, gravity and information.Specialists in the field of
black hole physics and rising young researchers present the latest
findings on the broad topic of black holes, gravity, and
information, highlighting its applications to astrophysics,
cosmology, particle physics, and strongly correlated systems.
This book explores the parallels between the Renaissance during the
14th to 16th centuries and the upheavals in human and physical
sciences in the 21st Century that herald an insurgent
entrepreneurial renaissance. The first Renaissance, conceived and
developed in an urban environment, with the Medici family in
Florence as pioneers, was a melting pot of art, culture, science
and technology. It is in that context that entrepreneurship derived
from artisan tradition and, hence, customized, was born to meet the
demands and anticipate the needs of individual consumers. Starting
with the mechanical technologies of the first industrial
revolution, art, culture and science became separated from
entrepreneurship. The latter took on Fordist features which
depersonalized and, therefore, standardized the producer-consumer
relationship. The emerging model of entrepreneurship returns to its
origins in customization (e.g., 3D printing technologies,
sharing/on-demand economy) strongly linked to the sequence
"art-culture-science-technology." The road to a new entrepreneurial
renaissance is traveled by cities with creative communities. These
communities actively participate in promoting international talent
mobility, encouraging connections among the knowledge nomads who
move around the world and the resources and talents rooted locally.
Brought back to life under the conditions of the current age,
entrepreneurship is once again woven into the fabric of art,
culture, science and technology, and contributing to civic identity
and pride. Featuring case studies from local experts that highlight
innovative initiatives and developments in diverse cities around
the world, this book aims to stimulate deep thought, theories and
applications in the fields of entrepreneurship and innovation.
This book presents readers with the opportunity to fundamentally
re-evaluate the processes of innovation and entrepreneurship, and
to rethink how they might best be stimulated and fostered within
our organizations and communities. The fundamental thesis of the
book is that the entrepreneurial process is not a linear
progression from novel idea to successful innovation, but is an
iterative series of experiments, where progress depends on the
persistence and resilience of the individuals involved, and their
ability and to learn from failure as well as success. From this
premise, the authors argue that the ideal environment for new
venture creation is a form of "experimental laboratory," a
community of innovators where ideas are generated, shared, and
refined; experiments are encouraged; and which in itself serves as
a test environment for those ideas and experiments. This
environment is quite different from the traditional "incubator,"
which may impose the disciplines of the established firm too early
in the development of the new venture. Featuring case examples of
start-ups across a wide spectrum of industries, from Wikipedia to
Ryanair, the authors explore the qualities of successful
innovation, including a high tolerance of risk and unpredictability
and commitment to building knowledge enterprises that value
intangible assets. This volume is a clarion call to those in
academia, enterprise, and government who seek to work together to
promote innovation and entrepreneurship, with a stark message for
academic institutions: engage or be left behind.
The Springer book series Innovation, Technology, and Knowledge
Management was launched in March 2008 as a forum and intellectual,
scholarly "podium" for global/local, transdisciplinary,
transsectoral, public-private, and leading/"bleeding" -edge ideas,
theories, and perspectives on these topics. The book series is
accompanied by the Springer Journal of the Knowledge Economy, which
was launched in 2009 with the same editorial leadership. The series
showcases provocative views that diverge from the current "conv-
tional wisdom," that are properly grounded in theory and practice,
and that consider 1 2 the concepts of robust competitiveness,
sustainable entrepreneurship, and demo- 3 cratic capitalism,
central to its philosophy and objectives. More specifically, the
aim of this series is to highlight emerging research and practice
at the dynamic intersection of these fields, where individuals,
organizations, industries, regions, and nations are harnessing
creativity and invention to achieve and sustain growth. Books that
are part of the series explore the impact of innovation at the
"macro" (economies, markets), "meso" (industries, firms), and
"micro" levels. (teams, indi viduals), drawing from such related
disciplines as finance, organizational psychology, research and
development, science policy, information systems, and 1 We define
sustainable entrepreneurship as the creation of viable, profitable,
and scalable firms. Such firms engender the formation of
self-replicating and mutually enhancing innovation networks and
knowledge clusters (innovation ecosystems), leading toward robust
competitiveness (E.G. Carayannis, International Journal of
Innovation and Regional Development, 1(3), 235-254, 2009).
The unexpected and premature passing away of Professor Ebrahim H.
"Abe" Mamdani on January, 22, 2010, was a big shock to the
scientific community, to all his friends and colleagues around the
world, and to his close relatives. Professor Mamdani was a
remarkable figure in the academic world, as he contributed to so
many areas of science and technology. Of great relevance are his
latest thoughts and ideas on the study of language and its handling
by computers. The fuzzy logic community is particularly indebted to
Abe Mamdani (1941-2010) who, in 1975, in his famous paper An
Experiment in Linguistic Synthesis with a Fuzzy Logic Controller,
jointly written with his student Sedrak Assilian, introduced the
novel idea of fuzzy control. This was an elegant engineering
approach to the modeling and control of complex processes for which
mathematical models were unknown or too difficult to build, yet
they could effectively and efficiently be controlled by human
operators. This ground-breaking idea has found innumerable
applications and can be considered as one of the main factors for
the proliferation and adoption of fuzzy logic technology. Professor
Mamdani's own life and vital experience are illustrative of his
"never surrendering" attitude while facing adversaries, which is
normal for a person proposing any novel solution, and represent a
great example for everybody. His subtle sense of humor, his joy for
life, and his will to critically help people, especially young
people, were characteristics deeply appreciated by all the people
who enjoyed and benefited from his friendship and advice. This book
constitutes a posthumous homage to Abe Mamdani. It is a collection
of original papers related in some way to his works, ideas and
vision, and especially written by researchers directly acquainted
with him or with his work. The underlying goal of this book will be
fulfilled if, in the very spirit of Mamdani's legacy, the papers
will trigger a scientific or philosophical debate on the issues
covered, or contribute to a cross-fertilization of ideas in the
various fields.
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