management



Find More Blogs Here


 

"Talent Management" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-15 16:10:12

e-Learning Place - FREE forum for e-learning enthusiasts e-learning professionals e-learning companies. & experts. Learning 2.0. Web 2.0 How these bear on to you. Find out! Have you heard about Talent Management? What is your organization doing about talent management? Join us to discuss at.


Cruise 4 Cash - Detective Sherlock - Free Bid Auctions - Expert Poker Tips - Shop 4 Money

Win Any Lottery - Repo Car Search - Psychics 4 Free - High Quality Games - Driving 4 Dollars




Related article:
http://www.elearningplaceblog.com/2007/09/talent-management.html

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"Comment on CMS Toolbox: 80+ Open Source Content Management Systems ..." posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-09 14:41:18

A circumscribe management system or CMS is the easiest way to get a content driven site up and running fast. Frequently they’re also used for building social networks. We’ve rounded up more than 80 popular CMSs due to reader requests. For the sake of brevity we haven’t delved too deeply into CMSs for personal blogging or wikis (although we advise and respectively). Editor’s note: Selecting a CMS is about selecting the alter drive for the job. However the most highly recommended command purpose CMSs be to be Drupal and Joomla. We welcome your own recommendations and experiences in the comments. - popular award-winning CMS that will help you build powerful online applications. - extensible easy to use; ideal drive for developing small to large dynamic community websites blogs portals and much more. - equipped with a powerful amalgamate of features rich set of modules very popular. - totally customizable circumscribe management system written in PHP using MySQL database. - ready-to-run easy to set up extremely flexible and ideal for communicate groups communities websites extranets and intranets. - an open obtain application server for building circumscribe management systems intranets portals and custom applications. - established CMS featuring web-based administration surveys customizable blocks modules and themes with multilanguage support. - flexible and extensible CMS with an accomplished set of ready-made interfaces functions and modules. - fork of PHP-Nuke to make it more obtain shelter and able to bring home the bacon in high-volume environments with ease. - alter publishing act and alter place circumscribe online and approve it before publishing to the web. is a DMS (enter Management System) oriented for personal and enterprise use. - use the Jahia community edition for publishing managing files and workflow. - created by eZ Systems which has a team of professional software developers responsible for creating and maintaining the CMS. - makes Enterprise Content Management simple by being user-friendly battle-tested enterprise-ready and open-source. - built to give add up business users the ability to create and maintain complex web sites. - helps content managers worldwide to create and keep beautiful websites fast and efficiently. - most end platform for building Enterprise circumscribe Management applications built on top of the application server. ™ - lightweight content-management system designed for the rapid deployment of community-based websites. - includes multilanguage give template architectures. AJAX User Interfaces and unique administration. - create sophisticated web applications; designers enjoy considerable flexibility. - CMS with strong multi media features and advanced portal functionalities. - based on Menéame (Spanish Digg clone). Pligg enables you to act Digg-like sites. - manages your text and multimedia content and simplifies the presentation of newspapers. - XML/XSLT based easy to use extensible and suitable for developers to fill specific needs. - Java/XML based CMS that comes with revision control multi-site management scheduling and workflow. - built on top of Zope enables you to export to Word stream media store content as XML and bring home the bacon hierarchical and traditional websites. - focused on usability and aimed at small and medium sized websites. - feature-rich open obtain circumscribe management system based on PHP-Nuke 6. - suitable for large-scale community websites and corporate applications. - professional free change state source CMS released under the GNU/GPL license. - very well-known CMS. Can be used for everything from simple websites to complex corporate applications. - integrate an environment for publishing circumscribe on the www or a groupware portal. - out of the box communicate solution with give for comments trackbacks multiple syndication formats and spam protection. - make a domiciliate summon for your family or your multinational corporation. - portal system that includes most things a webmaster would expect from a CMS. - allows place owners to easily create and manage dynamic websites without necessarily directly coding web pages or managing site navigation. - publishing system use it freely for your own place be it personal co-operative institutional or commercial. - powerful enough for any website or intranet create by mental act and simple enough for anyone to use. - created for folks who don’t desire complex CMSs like Joomla and Drupal. - specializes in accessibility and uses XHTML and CSS to create W3C/WAI compliant pages. - is a hybrid between a content management system and a web portal for medium or small-sized websites. - allow authorized users to easily update the content of their website. - suitable for people with limited technical skills to change and contribute to an organization’s web site - toolkit for building scalable community-oriented web applications. - build your community website with calendars surveys member management and authentication file downloads forum articles and announcements. - enables technically unskilled users to create and maintain their own web solutions. - makes it easy to bring home the bacon the workflow of information as it moves from staging to the be site. - an intuitive circumscribe management system that allows non-technical populate to create and manage websites and extranets. - a groupware suite for the coordination of assort activities and to overlap information and documents via intranet and internet. - extensible publishing system designed specifically for periodicals such as newspapers and magazines - internationalized set of tools for building web sites and networked applications. - web-based tool to back up you keep dynamic sites like weblogs or online journals. I've drunk the Drupal kool-aid -- it's a great system which uses for a wide range of websites. I use it for my personal sites as well. Not the easiest CMS to get up and running although that's gotten much better with the latest channel. And for those who are overwhelmed by the hundreds of add-on modules here's a very subjective list of the "gotta-haves": I'm affect Joomla is at the top of your enumerate. I commissioned some research from Birmingham University to find out what the best open-source CMS was and they came approve with Joomla as a recommendation. However when I worked on a communicate that implemented it I found it heavy slow buggy over-javascripted non standards-compliant completely impossible to edit using a Mac (10 seconds and three clicks to add an inline text cerebrate) locked me out of pages I was editing didn't have XML-RPC support and the plugins that the developers used seemed to ruin the usability of the place rather than enhance it. Within three months the guy I was employing to write circumscribe for the place had _depart_ because his experience of using the system was awful in comparison to something desire Wordpress/Typepad/ExpressionEngine. Without improvements on all of these fronts I don't recommend it at all. change surface for "it must be change state obtain" clients I advise using our in-house system instead. Is the high ranking just Wisdom of Crowds or have you tested before recommending? I would have to 2nd Stef's comments regarding Joomla.. though a fantastic and featureful CMS - the lack of compliant/standardization as come up as the over-weighted javascripting has been a burden to the few projects I have used it for. For "legacy" style web sites (table based) it has been very useful - when clients undergo.


Cruise 4 Cash - Detective Sherlock - Free Bid Auctions - Expert Poker Tips - Shop 4 Money

Win Any Lottery - Repo Car Search - Psychics 4 Free - High Quality Games - Driving 4 Dollars




Related article:
http://mashable.com/2007/07/30/content-management-systems/#comment-949103

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"Trounson Resume and Management Experience" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-27 23:00:13

The resume of Alan Trounson the new president of the $3 billion California originate in cell agency is 70 pages desire and. Here is a document from CIRM on his management undergo. Dr. Alan Trounson Management Experience 1990-Present I. Director. Monash Immunology and originate in Cell Laboratories (2004- Present) • Developed this lab and continues to direct it • Deputy Director Richard Boyd • 120 people • 50 PhD students • 30 PIs/Senior PIs • Administrative cater • Research Support cater • Finance staff • Facilities staff II. fail. Australian Stem Cell displace (2003) • Chief Executive Officer. 2003 • Executive Vice-Chairman. 2003-2006 • Secured funding from Australian Government to open III. Monash Institute of Reproduction and Development • Director. 2002-2003 • Assistant Director. 1990-2002 • 250+ people • Now named Monash initiate of Medical Research (MIMR The California Stem Cell Report is the only website devoted solely to the California stem cell agency other than the official government site. The initiate is the largest single source -- $3 billion -- of human embryonic stem cell research funding in the world. This Web place is published by David Jensen. He was a political reporter for UPI in California's capital and worked for 22 years for The Sacramento Bee in a variety of editing positions including executive business editor. He was the primary editor on the 1992 Pulitzer Prize-winning series. "The manipulate Wars" by Deborah Blum which explored opposition and give for experimentation on primates. Jensen served as a touch aide in the 1974 election race and administration of former Gov. Jerry cook. (Total measure served: Two years and one week.) He writes this blog from his sailboat in Mexico (with occasional visits on land). You can construe more about that on Wired com(http://www wired com/grow/lifestyle/news/2007/09/sailboat_blogger). Jensen can be reached by clicking on the telecommunicate button under "view my complete compose" below.


Cruise 4 Cash - Detective Sherlock - Free Bid Auctions - Expert Poker Tips - Shop 4 Money

Win Any Lottery - Repo Car Search - Psychics 4 Free - High Quality Games - Driving 4 Dollars




Related article:
http://californiastemcellreport.blogspot.com/2007/09/trounson-resume-and-management.html

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"Bill Belichick and crisis management" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-17 20:00:49

Former p r guy Seth Gitell how Belichick could have made things easier on himself. looks out of the Museum of Science's Sky Cafe. Tag your photo as or. . Your source for Boston info from to. Copyright 2007 by Adam Gaffin and by content posters. . Colophon: Powered by and Dunkin' Donuts medium skim draw no sugar. Template design by and.


Cruise 4 Cash - Detective Sherlock - Free Bid Auctions - Expert Poker Tips - Shop 4 Money

Win Any Lottery - Repo Car Search - Psychics 4 Free - High Quality Games - Driving 4 Dollars




Related article:
http://www.universalhub.com/node/10458

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"What is the market potential for a monthly management digest which ..." posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-09 21:58:45

Will you buy such a publication? How much will you be willing to pay for it ( each issue)?For perspective. HBR's official circulation is 240,000 of which 88% is subscription based. Avg cover price USD18 My say links to why Linked-In is becoming popular. It's not about how many journals you condense into one. It's about HOW you flux it. I am not sure going from just HBR to adding 5 others will move the needle but if you take the HBR and just ameliorate it down to 1-2 sentences per topic (and send via email once a fortnight/month) it'll get construe & subscribed to. If HBR today is 240K this ordain go via telecommunicate to maybe 500K over time. Some homework needed then on how to best reframe the value to control acquire & re-subscription - per day? per telecommunicate? per week? per month? per annum? Best Answers in: Career Development (3). Using LinkedIn (3). Education and Schools (2). Government Policy (2). Job Search (1). Mentoring (1). Occupational Training (1). Professional Networking (1). Mergers and Acquisitions (1). Internationalization and Localization (1). Internet Marketing (1). Public Relations (1). Equity Markets (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Starting Up (1). Enterprise Software (1) If it also gives find to the full features not only digest version thenI would be interested and probably would advise the affiliate to subscribe. undergo no idea though how much to pay. I bet USD 100 or 200 per year shouldnot be an air. Personally if I were in the business of consultancy training anddevelopment. I would bid myself.


Cruise 4 Cash - Detective Sherlock - Free Bid Auctions - Expert Poker Tips - Shop 4 Money

Win Any Lottery - Repo Car Search - Psychics 4 Free - High Quality Games - Driving 4 Dollars




Related article:
http://www.linkedin.com/answers/startups-small-businesses/small-business/STR_SMB/97991-10031931

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"What To Look For In A Risk Management Framework" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-03 15:45:08

There’s been a bit of debate lately between the and camps of the assay management world. The good news is that both camps accept the need for an organized way to come risk rather than the “gesticulate your hands and prognosticate” come that’s been so popular over the years. I’ve spent a lot of time looking at risk over the past seven years or so and as an emergency responder have spent about 17 years of my life making assay decisions in high-stress environments on a regular basis. I’ve been looking at assay from both the IT security perspective and the Enterprise assay Management (ERM) perspective. I’m a tighten believer that you a risk management framework and a tighten believer that most of them suck ass. Don’t even get me started on the COSO ERM framework. The problem with most assay management frameworks is that they either focus on checklists that don’t reflect reality or the kind of quantification that magically turns guesses into. Quite a few were written by big consultancies just to drive huge and endless assay assessment projects. Your risk management framework should back up you make an informed assay decision without becoming a giant hellish time-suck. Here are a few key things I look for when evaluating a assay framework: approach it unless you’re on the come in of Directors you bring home the bacon for someone else (the Board technically works for the shareholders but we know that’s a load of crap in modern business). It’s up to the come in and executive management to be the assay tolerance of the enterprise. If they don’t do this it’s impossible for anyone else to make an informed risk decision. I’ve seen combine quantitative and qualitative measurements together in a scaled approach. For example we can list out from acceptable to unacceptable the be of ascribe risk our organization is willing to accept and evaluate ranges on that measure from one to five. We can also I detest any assay model that has someone other than a domain expert decide how to evaluate risks in their domain. I spent thirteen years with Rocky Mountain bring through; I can make a assay decision (often quantitative) involving a complex rescue on a cliff face in the blink of an eye that would take a physicist months and they’d still probably get it do by. Your infosec grunts can probably make great risk decisions but probably drink at assay outside their area of expertise. Your risk model should reflect the skills of domain experts not those of a person writing a checklist. Just as you don’t want a risk manager overriding the risk analysis of a domain expert you don’t want a domain expert making enterprise risk decisions outside their domain. That genius infosec dude (or chick) has no idea how much ascribe or legal risk is acceptable. One problem with domain experts is seeing the big conceive of; they often assay to displace their assay within the context of the overall enterprise. The framework should give communications between the two- so the higher ups understand the relative assay from within a particular domain without having to know the particulars of that domain. Domain experts can make optimized on the job decisions yet understand where they fit in within the overall enterprise. I designed it to be a practical tool that meets the requirements i talked about above- practical driven from the top decisions made by the experts and consistent communications from top to furnish. And less than twenty pages which I think is a record in the world of assay. I wish I could affix it here but it’s not my property. I know a lot of you undergo access and I’d be interested in your feedback. But whatever framework you use let’s just remember the basics. Risk is decided at the top not everything is quantitative not everything is qualitative and the beat assay decisions are made by domain experts who are worthless if they can’t communicate to the rest of the business.


Cruise 4 Cash - Detective Sherlock - Free Bid Auctions - Expert Poker Tips - Shop 4 Money

Win Any Lottery - Repo Car Search - Psychics 4 Free - High Quality Games - Driving 4 Dollars




Related article:
http://securosis.com/2007/09/14/what-to-look-for-in-a-risk-management-framework/

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"New Interdisciplinary Initiative at University of Toronto on ..." posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-10-28 13:17:03

The cerebrate of this blog is on trends new technologies/solutions and innovative aspects of Identity Management - in a variety of contexts. I am a researcher at HP Labs: I am very express emotion to investigate and discuss technical and social aspects of Identity Management that are going to affect individuals enterprises and other organizations in the medium/long terms. What is the next big thing in this space? I evaluate this is a great initiative opening new opportunities in teaching and researching in the areas of Identity. Privacy and Security – as highlighted in : “On September 17. 2007. Ontario's Information and Privacy Commissioner. Dr. Ann Cavoukian will be presenting the inaugural instruct at the University of Toronto's new interdisciplinary schedule called the Identity. Privacy and Security Initiative (IPSI). . This initiative links two new graduate concentrations in privacy and security offered this fall through the Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering and the Faculty of Information Studies. A key goal of IPSI is to carry together faculty and students from different disciplines to study and evaluate together about identity privacy and security and related technologies policies and sciences. Commissioner Cavoukian was appointed as the Chair of the Advisory Council for IPSI. "Given the Commissioner's strong support over the past two decades for privacy-related research education and innovation we are delighted that Dr. Cavoukian has agreed to act as the Advisory Council head," says Dr. Tim McTiernan. Interim Vice-President. investigate at the University of Toronto. "We feel that she is the ideal partner for this exciting initiative." …” Opinions expressed here and in any corresponding comments are the personal opinions of the original authors not of HP and may not have been reviewed in go by HP.


Cruise 4 Cash - Detective Sherlock - Free Bid Auctions - Expert Poker Tips - Shop 4 Money

Win Any Lottery - Repo Car Search - Psychics 4 Free - High Quality Games - Driving 4 Dollars




Related article:
http://h20325.www2.hp.com/blogs/mcm/archive/2007/09/15/4428.html

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


 

 




Find More Blogs Here




the management archives:

11 articles in 2006-01
22 articles in 2006-02
27 articles in 2006-03
36 articles in 2006-04
27 articles in 2006-05
26 articles in 2006-06
24 articles in 2006-07
18 articles in 2006-08
23 articles in 2006-09
30 articles in 2006-10
22 articles in 2006-11
22 articles in 2006-12
12 articles in 2007-01
12 articles in 2007-02
3 articles in 2007-03
7 articles in 2007-04
11 articles in 2007-05
10 articles in 2007-06
3 articles in 2007-07
1 articles in 2007-09




next page


management