Search (5 results, page 1 of 1)

  • × classification_ss:"85.20 / Betriebliche Information und Kommunikation"
  1. Maßun, M.: Collaborative information management in enterprises (2009) 0.01
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    Imprint
    Boizenburg : VWH, Verl. W. Hülsbusch
  2. Knowledge management in practice : connections and context. (2008) 0.01
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    Classification
    658.4/038 22
    Date
    22. 3.2009 18:43:51
    DDC
    658.4/038 22
  3. Content Management Handbuch : Strategien, Theorien und Systeme für erfolgreiches Content Management (2003) 0.01
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    Editor
    Stahl, F. u. W. Maass
  4. Spitta, T.: Informationswirtschaft : eine Einführung (2006) 0.00
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    Footnote
    Rez. in IWP 58(2007) H.5/6, S.382 (W. Ratzek): "Bereits im Vorwort betont Thorsten Spitta - mit Bezug auf Heinen: "Es scheint an der Zeit, den Produktionsfaktor Information als Grundlage wieder in die Betriebswirtschaftslehre aufzunehmen (...)". Dieser Bezug, so Spitta, fehle in fast allen betrieblichen Einführungen. Die Konsequenz darauf sei, dass "Information" keine Basis mehr habe. Dieses Vorhaben weckt natürlich auch das Interesse von BID-Studierenden und -Professional, da offenbar beide Professionen (BID und BWL) das Arbeitsgebiet "Informationswirtschaft" bearbeiten. Ebenfalls im Vorwort stellt Spitta die Rolle von Software und Daten heraus: "Während Software sich mit der Zeit verändert oder ausgetauscht wird, sind die Daten eine langfristig zu pflegende Ressource jedes Unternehmens." Die Qualität der Datenbasis ist, nach Spitta, ein wichtiger Baustein, um ein Unternehmen erfolgreich zu führen. Somit wird das Qualitätsniveau dieser Ressource - ob nun Daten oder Information genannt - zu einem Produktionsfaktor. Etwas, so Spitta, was man nicht kaufen könne wie z.B. Software. Für den BID-Interessierten sollte nun die Frage nach dem Unterschied von Daten und Information folgen. In den Kapiteln 3 "Daten" und 4 "Kommunikation, Information und Wissen" geht Spitta dieser Frage nach. "Daten" werden, wie in der Informatik üblich und durchaus sinnvoll, als Alphabet definiert, das heißt als ein Zeichenvorrat, für den eine Verarbeitungsvorschrift definiert ist. (S. 25-28) Kommunikation ist, vereinfacht dargestellt, dann das Senden und Empfangen von Nachrichten (basierend auf einem mehr oder weniger deckungsgleichen Zeichenvorrat). Die in der betriebswirtschaftlichen Praxis gängige Definition von W. Wittmann, dass Information "zweckorientiertes Wissen" sei, lehnt Spitta ab, "da sie einen unscharfen Begriff durch einen anderen erklärt, der noch unschärfer ist" (S. 45).
  5. Stahl, G.: Group cognition : computer support for building collaborative knowledge (2006) 0.00
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: JASIST 59(2008) no.9, S.1531. (C. Caldeira): "Successful, real-world organizations employ groups to get work done. Despite the large number of years of collaborative models in work-group paradigm, it is a little surprising that there are very few books about the subject. Furthermore, most of those studies are mainly focused on work group performance management and work productivity. This text belongs to the advanced type, and is a valuable resource for graduate students in a wide range of courses and for a large spectrum of professionals interested in collaborative work. Due to its advanced level, some topics are relatively difficult to understand if the reader does not have some background in collaborative work and group cognition. Students who use this book will rapidly understand the most important topics of the science of collaboration for computer-supported cooperative work and computer-supported collaborative learning, and their relation to the business world of our days. The main concern and fundamental idea of this book is to set its focus primarily on work group, and not on individuals. Stahl's baseline is to use the science of collaboration for computer-supported cooperative work and computer-supported collaborative learning to conduct comparative studies on group interaction, group meaning, group cognition, group discourse, and thinking. The book is divided into three distinct parts. The first one is about the design of computer support for collaborative work and presents eight studies centered on software tools and their particular applications: The first three are AI applications for collaborative computer-supported cooperative work and computer-supported collaborative learning, the fourth and the fifth are about collaborative media, and the last ones are a combination of computational technology and collaborative functions. The second part is focused on the analysis on knowledge building in the collaborative work of small groups. It is developed with support on five essays published by Stahl from 2000 to 2004. In the first of those chapters, he describes a model of collaborative knowledge building and how to share knowledge production. The second criticizes some cooperative work and collaborative learning research methodologies that make the collaborative phenomena hard to perceive. The remaining chapters mostly provide mechanisms to understand in new and better ways collaborative processes. The third part contains the theoretical corpus of the book. Chapters 14 through 21 contain the most recent of Stahl's contributions to the theoretical foundations of computer-supported cooperative work and computer-supported collaborative learning. Chapters 16 to 18 provide much material about topics directly related to group cognition research and collaborative work in modern organizations. Finally, the last part of the book contains an exhaustive list of references that will be of great value to all interested in the multiple aspects and fields of cooperative work and collaborative learning."