Managing Digital Open Innovation
Автор: Группа авторов
Год издания: 0000
Recent developments of Internet-based digital technologies have revealed a huge potential of developing open, collaborative and network-centred innovation. However, firms face major challenges in using new technologies for rapid prototyping, data-mining, simulation, visualization, etc. to support their Open Innovation strategies.Responding to the need for further conceptual and empirical research on technology-enhanced open innovation, this book provides fresh and topical insights on how firms from different sectors have successfully implemented digital technologies for Open Innovation. Based on rich empirical data, this book discusses the benefits and drawbacks, the processes, the characteristics and the management practices of ICT-driven Open Innovation in private as well as public organizations.<b>Contents:</b> <ul><li>The Interplay of Digital Technologies and the Open Innovation Process: Benefits and Challenges <i>(Pierre-Jean Barlatier, Anne-Laure Mention and Avni Misra)</i></li><li>Innovation in Digital Business Models <i>(Dagfinn Wåge and Gunnar E Crawford)</i></li><li>Managing Digital Disruption of Business Models in Industry 4.0 <i>(Julian M Müller, Jana Traub, Peter Gantner and Kai-Ingo Voigt)</i></li><li>From Open Design to Open Strategy: Managing the Evolution of Crowdsourcing-Based Business Models <i>(Thierry Burger-Helmchen and Erica J Siegel)</i></li><li>Modular Crowd Workflows for Open Innovation <i>(Ioanna Lykourentzou, Nikolaos Thomos and Zoltán Szlávik)</i></li><li>Profiting from Innovation in the Digital Era: Evidence from the Swedish Videogames Industry <i>(Vicky Long)</i></li><li>Network Orchestration and System Dynamics Modeling in Developing Innovative Decision Support Systems for Policy Makers <i>(Minna Pikkarainen, Julius Francis Gomes, Jukka Ranta, Peter Ylén, Marika Iivari and Piia Hurmelinna-Laukkanen)</i></li><li>Open Science for Innovation: A Knowledge and Policy Perspective <i>(Erich Prem)</i></li><li>Innovating New B2B Business through Big Data — Key Challenges Faced <i>(Tuija Rantala, Katariina Palom?ki and Katri Valkokari)</i></li><li>Planning a Smart Service Business Integrating External Partners <i>(Christian Koldewey, Jannik Reinhold and Roman Dumitrescu)</i></li><li>Organizational Impact of Digital Open Innovation in Retail Banks: Managing External and Internal Pressure <i>(Clarice Bertin and Véronique Schaeffer)</i></li><li>From Knowledge Capture to Knowledge Integration, the Key Role of Integrative Actions in Crowdsourcing for Innovation <i>(Émilie Ruiz, Sébastien Brion and Guy Parmentier)</i></li><li>The Rise of Data-Driven Business Models in the Berlin Start-up Scene <i>(Romy Hilbig, Stefanie Hecht and Bennet Etsiwah)</i></li><li>Competences for the In-house Development of Digital Innovations in German Mechanical Engineering Companies <i>(Steffen Kinkel, Johanna Rahn and Bernhard Rieder)</i></li><li>Blockchain and the Future of Open Innovation Intermediaries: The Case of Crowdsourcing Platforms <i>(Eric Schenk, Véronique Schaeffer and Julien Pénin)</i></li><li>Playful Design Manifesto for Creative Blockchain Ecosystems <i>(Bronwin Patrickson and Michael Pierre Johnson)</i></li><li>What is the Role of Social Media in (Open) Innovation Strategies? <i>(Sharan Kaur Garib Singh)</i></li><li>Leveraging Open Innovation through Social Media: A Study on Geneva-based SMEs <i>(Angela Bacchetta Beckh, Mathias Beck and Patrick-Yves Badillo)</i></li><li>Social Media and New Service Development: An Exploratory Study within a Consulting Firm <i>(Michaël Bénédic)</i></li></ul><br><b>Readership:</b> The target audience of this book is composed of researchers, university lecturers and faculty members, university students and institutions, as well as thought leaders, managers and policy-makers whose goals include the understanding and appreciation of the role of digital technologies, and how these are intertwined with open and collaborative innovation strategies and practices.Open Innovation;Digital Disruption;Industry 4.0;Data-Driven Decision;Value Networks;Organizational Agility;Digital Design;Collaboration;Innovation Policy;Social Media;Open Strategy0<b>Key Features:</b><ul><li>Industry 4.0 and open innovation are no longer just buzz words. Their implications are pervasive in daily operations of businesses, both small and large. However, firms face major challenges in using new technologies for rapid prototyping, data-mining, simulation, visualization, etc. to support their Open Innovation strategies. The principles, structures, processes, models and mechanics of how to create and capture value from digital open innovation are up for debate and discussion. In examining the state-of-the-art through conceptual and empirical research, this book extends the discourse on linking digitalization and digitization with open innovation practice. Thus, the book explores not only the implications for digital innovation and capacity building but also that for digital disruption of business models, open strategy, profiting from innovation, innovation system dynamics and open knowledge policy. Researchers from multiple disciplines have shared their latest empirical research findings to unveil lessons and strategies of how digital technologies might be used and managed to support open innovation strategies.</li></ul>
Digital Video and HDTV. Algorithms and Interfaces
Автор: Poynton Charles
Год издания:
Данная книга позволяет разобраться в понятиях, связанных с цифровым видео и телевидинием высокой чёткости.
Digital Photo & Video Camera №9 (сентябрь 2009)
Автор: Коллектив авторов
Год издания:
Журнал - самоучитель по цифровой фотографии. Фотомастера разных стран дают свои советы, благодаря которым читатели без проблем могут делать собственные выразительные снимки.
Photoshop CS2 Raw: Using Adobe Camera Raw, Bridge, and Photoshop to Get the Most Out of Your Digital Camera
Автор: Aaland Mikkel
Год издания:
The RAW file format is the uncompressed data file captured by a digital camera's electronic sensor. When your camera saves an image in RAW format, settings like white balance, sharpening, contrast and saturation are not applied to the image but are saved instead in a separate header. Because RAW files remain virtually untouched by in-camera processing, they are essentially the digital equivalent to exposed but undeveloped film.
This makes RAW an increasingly popular format with amateur and professional digital photographers, because it affords greater flexibility and control during the editing process-if you know how to work with RAW files.
Most digital camera manufacturers supply their own software for converting RAW data, as do some third party vendors. Increasingly, however, the RAW converter of choice is a plug-in included in the latest version of Adobe Photoshop, the most popular and widely-used digital image editing tool in the world. Adobe Photoshop CS2 is emerging as the best place to edit RAW images, and the best way to master this new format is with Photoshop CS2 RAW.
An important book dedicated to working with RAW in Photoshop, this comprehensive guide features a unique design that helps readers grasp the subject through visual instruction and prompts. The entire RAW process is explored, from shooting to using the Adobe plug-in converter and new Bridge navigation software. The primary focus of Photoshop RAW is, as the title suggests, Photoshop editing technique: automating RAW workflow, correcting exposures, extending exposure range, manipulating grayscale and working with the new DNG (Digital Negative) open standard that Adobe supports.
Presented by photographer Mikkel Aaland, a pioneer of digital photography and author of eight books, including O"Reilly"s Photoshop for the Web and the award-winning Shooting Digital, Photoshop CS2 RAW investigates and instructs in an accessible visual style. Required reading for professionals and dedicated photo hobbyists alike.