Kirjojen hintavertailu. Mukana 11 699 587 kirjaa ja 12 kauppaa.

Kirjahaku

Etsi kirjoja tekijän nimen, kirjan nimen tai ISBN:n perusteella.

18 kirjaa tekijältä Dan Remenyi

Stop IT Project Failures

Stop IT Project Failures

Dan Remenyi

Butterworth-Heinemann Ltd
1999
sidottu
This book is about information systems development failures and how to avoid them. It considers what goes wrong with information systems development projects and what actions may be taken to avoid potential difficulties.The reduction of the impact,or even the elimination of the problems,is discussed in terms of an information systems risk management programme. Stop I.T.Project failure helps to ensure that IS project managers are successful in helping to deliver application systems. However, IS development risk can never be entirely eliminated and consequently the practitioner needs to bear in mind that an IS development project is never without risk, and hence there is a continuing potential for something to go wrong. The book covers the key issues and variables and makes specific practical suggestions about the good management practice that is required to implement IS project risk processes. Dr. Dan Remenyi has spent more than 25 years working in the field of corporate computers and information systems. He has worked with computers as an IS professional, business consultant and user. In all these capacities he has been primarily concerned with benefit realisation and obtaining the maximum value for money from the organisations' information systems investment and effort. He has worked extensively in the field of information systems project management, specialising in the area of project risk identification and management. He has written a number of books and papers in the field of IT management and regularly conducts courses and seminars as well as working as a consultant in this area. Dr.Dan Remenyi holds a B.Soc.Sc., an MBA and a PhD. He is a Visiting Professor at Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenberg, Sweden and an associate member of faculty at Henley Management College in the United Kingdom.
Blood on the Book

Blood on the Book

Dan Remenyi

Acpil
2018
pokkari
Driven by good intentions and with a little help from an obscure Order of Monks in Italy, Professor Finn Kelly, Ireland's leading mediaevalist finds a way of making easy money for his favourite charity in Dublin. This involves him "discovering" a long lost manuscript which is reputed to be an early Oscar Wilde play. Finn is surgical in his execution of this caper, but he needs his friend's help who is not so meticulous. As Finn should have known, easy money always has consequences, and before long O'Connell College is shocked to the core by the murder of the College Bursar in his office. At the same time a mysterious man appears in Dublin inviting Professor Kelly to help promote US-Irish relations in Boston. Whilst on a consultancy assignment at the Vatican Finn meets Maria, the beautiful green eyed Director in charge of facilitating the stay of visiting academics.Then there is a burglary, the discovery of a body in the Grand Canal and the disappearance of a long standing friend. Finn Kelly realises that he is in imminent danger but the Garda SIochAna are not convinced these events are anything more than a string of coincidences. There is a double murder at University Church on St Stephen's Green. And when the Garda SIochAna finally become fully engaged it is Inspector Shamus Quinn who arranges a suitable trap which leads to a kind of justice.
A Dictionary of Research Concepts and Issues - 2nd Ed
One of the most interesting aspects of research methodology is that there is a constant flow of new ideas and thus new concepts and new terminology. This second edition is an attempt to keep up with such changes and thus 200 new entries have been added to the Dictionary. However, it is well known that no sooner than the ink is dry a new concept and new jargon appears.
Griefbots and Memorybots

Griefbots and Memorybots

Dan Remenyi

Academic Conferences Publishing International Ltd
2025
pokkari
The computer age effectively began in 1950. In the 75 years since, both hardware and software have developed at a staggering pace, transforming computing from a niche field into a central pillar of modern life. What is truly remarkable is not just the technological evolution itself, but the way these innovations have woven themselves into the fabric of daily existence. In developed nations today, computer-based technology provides us with solutions for nearly every conceivable challenge or opportunity concerning work, health and leisure time. The range and depth of these applications are not just impressive; they are ever-increasing, constantly pushing the boundaries of what is possible. In recent years, however, computer technology in the form of AI has begun to address aspects of people's lives that have traditionally been reserved for only human interaction. We've seen the rise of digital therapy apps, virtual health assistants, and social robots designed to combat loneliness. One of the latest and perhaps most profound trends in this respect is the development of systems aimed at assisting with the grieving process, and the term digital mourning has been coined. These systems, sometimes called Griefbots, Legacybots, Deadbots, etc., or memory reservoirs, represent a new frontier in human-computer interaction. They function by creating a so-called digital replica of an individual, often using data from a deceased person's social media accounts, text messages, and other parts of their digital footprints. The goal is to provide a form of continued post-mortem connection, i.e. a voice from beyond the grave, a way for bereaved individuals to interact with a digital avatar of their departed loved one, with the purpose of helping to soften the profound impact of their loss. And the use of AI in this way is being referred to as Digital Immortality. Thus, Digital Immortality through the use of a Griefbot is a completely new frontier for AI technology which is based on the fact that an LLM can simulate a conversation on a wide range of subjects in a non-offensive way and with an appropriate data set produce an acceptable imitation of how an individual would think and react in such a conversation. This adventure into prosopopoeia 1] is a highly specialised application of AI for which there is not yet much awareness in the market. Although Griefbots are primarily designed to preserve and access memories in a post-mortem context, the same technology can also be adapted to assist individuals living with reduced cognitive capability such as dementia. In this case, the technology may be used with the help of appropriate professionals to support those whose cognitive abilities have declined due to illness, helping them to reconnect with their own memories and identity. In such a case the term Memorybot is more appropriate than Griefbot. This book delves into this complex and emerging technology. It explores the concept of Griefbots and the data they rely on, and the potential they hold for future development. But more importantly, the book will examine the significant opportunity and challenge these systems present. While they may offer a unique form of comfort, they also raise profound theoretical, practical, and ethical dilemmas. It will ask difficult questions about the nature of memory and identity in this digital age: What does it mean to have a digital copy of a person? How do these systems impact the natural human process of grief and acceptance? And what are the ethical lines that should be drawn when technology seeks to fill a void that has always been the domain of human relationships? This book is a guide through this new landscape, exploring both the promises and the perils. 1] A figure of speech in which an imagined, absent, or dead person or thing is represented as speaking.