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Table 2 Most Widely Adopted Mobile Commerce Services

in Adoption of mobile Internet services: An exploratory study of mobile commerce early adopters
by Per E. Pedersen 2005
"... In PAGE 10: ... We asked the participants to indicate if they had used any of these services and if they intended to use any of these services within the next 6 months. In Table2 , the five most widely adopted services are shown along with the five services with the highest usage intentions, illustrating that the most frequently indicated services were mainly personal mobile commerce services. Thus, the stimulus context of the study was not focusing particularly on services for personal or professional use, but most participants seemed to self- interpret the context as a setting of personal mobile commerce service use.... In PAGE 11: ... 4. RESULTS From Table2 , we find that the mobile commerce services most frequently adopted are simple services such as direct download of services to the mobile terminal and search and alert services. Most likely, these services have been implemented using short messaging service (SMS)-based platforms.... ..."
Cited by 8

TABLE I COMPARISON OF DIFFERENT NETWORK TYPES WITH RESPECT TO SECURITY PROBLEMS. IT SHOULD BE NOTED HERE THAT THERE EXIST SEVERAL MECHANISMS PROPOSED FOR SOME NETWORK TYPES, BUT WE CONSIDER THE MOST WIDELY ADOPTED OF THESE. THUS, FOR EXAMPLE, WE TOOK PRETTY GOOD PRIVACY (PGP) AS A REPRESENTATIVE EXAMPLE OF PEER-TO-PEER (P2P) SECURITY IN THE INTERNET.

in Securing Vehicular Communications
by Maxim Raya, Panos Papadimitratos, Jean-Pierre Hubaux 2006
Cited by 12

Table 5.2 I reclassified the aforementioned industries into bigger categories. This classification was made based on finding common functional characteristics among the smaller ones. Examples, The companies, which produce tangible products, are classified under production industry. The sorting facilitates analyzing the industries and supports the identification of industries which widely or narrowly adopt data warehouse, as shown in the figure below.

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Table 4. Survey evidence of ABC adoption

in Variations In National Management Accounting Approaches
by Oriol Amat, John Blake, Ester Oliveras
"... In PAGE 12: ... Table4 shows survey evidence of the extent of ABC adoption for seven countries. Differences in types of companies surveyed, sample sizes, and industry coverage necessarily limit the comparability of these surveys.... ..."

Table 3. Different approaches to the world wide web

in TECHNOLOGY SHIFT AND BUSINESS OPERATION INTERDEPENDENCE: THE CASE OF INTERNET IN SECURITIES TRADING
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 9: ... Instead of communicating with their customers over phones or at branch offices (Gamma), the world wide web is used a the main means of communication. Analyzing Table3 it can be concluded that: Lambda was already a technology provider but chose not to adopt the disruptive web technology. Delta was not a technology provider and chose to adopt where sustaining but not where disruptive.... ..."

Table 4: Standards adopted for IMT-2000

in
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 4: ...tandardisation bodies, i.e. 3GPP and 3GPP2. When the ITU-R group met at the beginning of November 1999 to formally adopt its family of IMT-2000 standards, the ten original proposals had been reduced to six, grouped into five modes ( Table4 ). However, it seems clear that the G3G concept encompassing three of these modes is set to become the dominant world-wide 3G standard.... ..."

Table 7 illustrates the wide range of issues that could

in An Economic Perspective
by United States, Margriet F. Caswell, Keith O. Fuglie, Cassandra A. Klotz, Keith O. Fuglie, Ra A. Klotz Resources 1998
"... In PAGE 45: ... Greater adoption would increase production and reduce prices of pork. Buhr estimated that hog prices could fall by 0-5 per- cent for adopters and by 10-15 percent for Table7 -Goals and issues for technology assessment nonadopters. Higher prices received by adopters would be due to higher quality (leaner) hogs.... ..."

Table 5.6 As observed from the table, the larger companies in the sample have installed SAP data warehousing solutions (which are considered the biggest software provider for companies around the globe). The possible reasons, for this high demand, are the wide range of functionalities and adoption of the so-called, best practices, of doing the core work of data warehousing, provided by SAP data warehouse solutions (Hashmi, 2000). In the forth classification two companies have installed their data warehouse technology from different IT providers. On one hand, this technique is better for companies to meet their needs and requirements. On the other hand, this technique demands many resources and much experience to interface the different software with one another and to apply the future modifications (next versions) to them.

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Table 1. Technology Adoption Model: Variable Names, Expected Signs and Definitions

in New Technology Adoption in West Virginia: Implications for Manufacturing Modernization Policies
by Philip Shapira, Terance Rephann
"... In PAGE 10: ... These techniques are used to improve quality, reduce scrap and inventories, and improve labor participation and efficiency. The survey found that the current adoption rates for both hard and soft technologies varied widely, with the highest levels found for personal computers used off the shop floor and for production, planning, and inventory control software and the lowest levels for flexible manufacturing systems and robotics ( Table1 ). A full description of the survey and tabulated responses to other questions can be found in Rephann and Shapira (1994).... In PAGE 10: ... This plant technology adoption index was selected after experimenting with several alternatives. 4 The independent variables, shown in Table1 with their names and hypothesized coefficient signs, were divided into categories representing plant -level, industry, regional, and policy influences. Plant -level variables were represented by employment size (EMPLOY), prior job growth (GROW), age of plant (AGE), organizational status (BRANCH), employee unionization (UNION), employee training (TRAIN), and whether the plant had capabilities to conduct manufacturing process engineering (MFGPROC).... In PAGE 22: ...20 - Table1... ..."

Table 1. Heterogeneity in land use codes

in Extending XML Web Querying to Heterogeneous Geospatial Information
by Nancy Wiegand, Naijun Zhou, Stephen Ventura, Isabel Cruz
"... In PAGE 2: ... However, to date, it has not been widely adopted. Table1 shows example land use codes used in Wisconsin. A query to find all cropland over a watershed that spans several counties is problematic because the meanings of codes vary in each jurisdiction.... ..."
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