Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Working Paper (19) (remove)
Language
- German (14)
- English (4)
- Multiple languages (1)
Keywords
- Digitalisierung (2)
- Ruhrgebiet (2)
- Smart City (2)
- Strukturwandel (2)
- Sustainable City (2)
- social innovation (2)
- Aufenthaltsqualität der Innenstadt (1)
- Avatar (1)
- Codegenerierung (1)
- Digitale Dienstleistungen (1)
- Digitale Güter (1)
- Digitale Revolution (1)
- Einzelhandel (1)
- Enterprise JavaBeans (1)
- Innenstadt (1)
- Kundenorientierung (1)
- Learning City (1)
- Mathematische Ausdrücke (1)
- Middle-range Theory (1)
- New Public Governance (1)
- New Public Management (1)
- Object-relational Mapping (1)
- Persistenz <Informatik> (1)
- Sichtbarkeit des stationären Handels (1)
- Smart Mirror (1)
- Stationärer Handel (1)
- Technologie (1)
- Value Proposition Model (1)
- mathematical expressions (1)
- policymakers (1)
- public policy (1)
- theorising (1)
Institute
An EJB container can host three types of beans: Session beans to model business processes, entity beans to represent business objects and message-driven beans to provide for asynchronous method calls. This paper addresses entity beans and their mapping to persistent storage, especially relational and object-relational databases. A tool named BeanMaker is presented which can do object mapping either automatically by metadata analysis of a database schema or manually based on intrinsic real world semantics supplied by the user. BeanMaker is a running prototype system with an intuitive GUI interface. This paper looks what's behind the scenes and focuses on design issues and concepts of code generation.
Balanceakt Innovation, Erfolgsfaktoren im Innovationsmanagement kleiner und mittlerer Unternehmen
(2006)
Social innovations «meet social needs», are «good for society» and «enhance society’s capacity to act». But what does their rising importance tell us about the current state of public policy in Europe and its effectiveness in achieving social and economic goals? Some might see social innovation as a critique of public intervention, filling the gaps left by years of policy failure. Others emphasise the innovative potential of cross-boundary collaboration between the public sector, the private sector, the third sector and the household.
This paper explores the conditions under which the state either enables or constrains effective social innovation by transcending the boundaries between different actors. We argue that social innovation is closely linked to public sector innovation, particularly in relation to new modes of policy production and implementation, and to new forms of organisation within the state that challenge functional demarcations and role definitions.