luni, 21 iulie 2014

Construction management method

Construction management method

Construction management method is a coherent and rigorous management that incorporates phase components vague outline rules through which it exerts a small trial processes or relationships within an organization, with effects usually localized to a small number of managers and departments organization. The efficiency of such methods are: diagnosis management, delegation, dashboard, SWOT, Gantt chart, the business plan.
Technology management is a relatively simple construction management through or exercising is a task management, impact limited to the level of a manager. Among the best known are management techniques include: weekly chart of the manager, the program manager's daily activities, job analysis. Management systems management methods differ in the scope and degree of complexity. The management system refers to the company as a whole and its components, while management method with the implementation of managerial tasks incumbent of one or more managers. In practice, there is a concrete distinction between management techniques and methods. This is difficult because of the many options that they wear.
B. methodological elements that are the equivalent managerial methods and techniques of other sciences (economics, mathematics, law, statistics, computer science, sociology), which is used by managers, but without directly affecting the content and form of manifestation of the processes and management relations. Usually, these methods are taken eficacitǎţii Due to their high cǎtre managers. Among these methods include: brainstorming, Monte Carlo, value analysis, correlation analysis. The design and performance management processes in the organization are apeleazǎ simultaneously at a wide range of systems, methods and management techniques Management or similar, depending on the specific needs and especially the vision and competence of managers involved.

duminică, 13 iulie 2014

Collection Overview

Collection Overview

Browse this Collection - View list of URLs
Citing Resources - Copyright Information
Scope: The September 11, 2001, Web Archive preserves the web expressions of individuals, groups, the press and institutions in the United States and from around the world in the aftermath of the attacks in the United States on September 11, 2001. The selected web sites are comprised broadly of United States and non-United States government sites; press, corporate/business, portal, charity/civic, advocacy/interest, religious, school/educational, individual/volunteer, professional organizations sites; and other sites.
This collection is part of a continuing effort by the Library of Congress to evaluate, select, collect, catalog, provide access to, and preserve digital materials for future generations of researchers.
Collection Period: September 11, 2001- December 1, 2001
Number of Sites: 2,313 (in browse collection)
An additional 30,000 (approximate) Web sites on this topic are accessible via a list of URLs. The list is over 2 megabytes and may take time to fully load.

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Citing Resources in the Web Archive

Citations should indicate: Archived in the Library of Congress Web Archives at www.loc.gov. When citing a particular Web site include the archived Web site's Citation ID (e.g., http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.natlib/mrva1234.1234). Researchers are advised to follow standard citation guidelines for Web sites, pages, and articles. Researchers are reminded that many of the materials in this Web archive are copyrighted and that citations must credit the authors/creators and publishers of the works.

Copyright Information

Many, if not all, of the Web sites in the collection and elements incorporated into the Web sites (e.g., photographs, articles, graphical representations) are protected by copyright. The materials may also be subject to publicity rights, privacy rights, or other legal interests.
Responsibility for making an independent legal assessment of an item and securing any necessary permissions ultimately rests with the person desiring to use the item. You will need permission from the copyright owners or rights holders for reproduction, distribution, or other use of protected items beyond that allowed by fair use or other statutory exemptions. Researchers should consult the sites themselves for information about rights, contacts, and permissions. The catalog record for each archived Web site contains the specific information about the site known to the Library. See Library of Congress Legal Notices page for additional information and restrictions.
The Library of Congress would like to hear from any copyright owners who are not properly identified on this Web site so that we may make the necessary corrections. In addition, if you are a copyright owner or otherwise have exclusive control over materials presently available through this collection and do not wish your materials to be available through this Web site, please let us know. To make a takedown request, please fill out this form.

Collection Overview

Browse this Collection


Citing Resources - Copyright Information
Scope: The Election 2002 Web Archive includes Web sites associated with United States 2002 mid-term Congressional elections, gubernatorial elections, and mayoral elections in 15 major United States cities (including Washington, DC). The following categories were included in the capture: selected primary races including the House, Senate, gubernatorial, and major mayoral; election related Web sites published by individual citizens; Web sites for financial contributors registered with the Federal Election Commission and national partisan groups; government sites including federal, state and territorial, and election boards; political party sites at the national level (all registered parties) and Democratic and Republican party sites at the state level; press sites including national and major metropolitan newspapers in each state, selective alternative press, specialized press, and political portals; public opinion sites such as Gallup.com and Harrisinteractive.com; and other miscellaneous related sites.
The election was held November 5, 2002. This was the first election following the tragic events of September 11, 2001, and there was a heightened focus on the ecomomy, terrorism, and potential war in Iraq.
The Library of Congress, in collaboration with WebArchivist.org of the State University of New York Institute of Technology and the Internet Archive, created the Election 2002 Web Archive with additional funding from The Pew Charitable Trusts through the University of Washington Center for Communication and Civic Engagement.
This collection is part of a continuing effort by the Library of Congress to evaluate, select, collect, catalog, provide access to, and preserve digital materials for future generations of researchers.
Collection Period: July 1, 2002 - December 1, 2002
Number of Sites: Nearly 4,000
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Citing Resources in the Web Archive

Citations should indicate: Archived in the Library of Congress Web Archives at www.loc.gov. When citing a particular Web site include the archived Web site's Citation ID (e.g., http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.natlib/mrva1234.1234). Researchers are advised to follow standard citation guidelines for Web sites, pages, and articles. Researchers are reminded that many of the materials in this Web archive are copyrighted and that citations must credit the authors/creators and publishers of the works.

Copyright Information

Many, if not all, of the Web sites in the collection and elements incorporated into the Web sites (e.g., photographs, articles, graphical representations) are protected by copyright. The materials may also be subject to publicity rights, privacy rights, or other legal interests.
Responsibility for making an independent legal assessment of an item and securing any necessary permissions ultimately rests with the person desiring to use the item. You will need permission from the copyright owners or rights holders for reproduction, distribution, or other use of protected items beyond that allowed by fair use or other statutory exemptions. Researchers should consult the sites themselves for information about rights, contacts, and permissions. The catalog record for each archived Web site contains the specific information about the site known to the Library. See Library of Congress Legal Notices page for additional information and restrictions.

The Library of Congress would like to hear from any copyright owners who are not properly identified on this Web site so that we may make the necessary corrections. In addition, if you are a copyright owner or otherwise have exclusive control over materials presently available through this collection and do not wish your materials to be available through this Web site, please let us know. To make a takedown request, please fill out this form.

Web Archiving Services

Visit www.archive-it.org
Visit www.archive-it.org

Archive-It allows institutions to build and preserve their own web archive of digital content, through a user friendly web application, without requiring any technical expertise or hosting facilities. Subscribers can harvest, catalog, and archive their collections, and then search and browse the collections when complete. Collections are hosted at the Internet Archive data center, and accessible to the public with full text search.

Archive-It is designed to fit the needs of many types of organizations and individuals. The over 200 partners include: state archives, university libraries, federal institutions, state libraries, non government non profits, museums, historians, and independent researchers.

The 1,700 Collections captured by Archive-It range from subject matters as diverse as "Political parties in Latin America" to the "Matthew Shepard Web Archive"  to  the "2008 Beijing Olympic Games" to "Iranian Blogs" to "North Carolina State Government Web Site Archive".
Contact the Archive-It team for more details about subscribing to this service.