01173nam0-22003251i-450-99000183573040332120071018104657.0000183573FED01000183573(Aleph)000183573FED0100018357320030910d1891----km-y0itay50------baitaITy-------001yyConcorso per le uve da tavola bandito dal R. Istituto d'Incoraggiamento di Napoli il 26 giugno 18902. rapportoi concorrenti e le uve della Mostra per le uve da tavola tenutosi in Portici nel settembre 1890relatore Moldo MontanariNapoli[s.n.]189118 p.30 cmEstr. da: Atti del R. Istituto d'Incoraggiamento di Napoli, 1891Uva da tavola634.8Montanari,MoldoReale Istituto d'incoraggiamento259163ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK99000183573040332160 MISC. A 43/4FAGBCFAGBCConcorso per le uve da tavola bandito dal R. Istituto d'Incoraggiamento di Napoli il 26 giugno 1890409563UNINA04630nam 2200733 a 450 991046183110332120200520144314.01-283-12100-X978661312100490-04-20277-310.1163/ej.9789004202764.i-328(CKB)2670000000092674(EBL)717593(OCoLC)727950623(SSID)ssj0000502915(PQKBManifestationID)12232631(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000502915(PQKBWorkID)10527985(PQKB)11227846(MiAaPQ)EBC717593(OCoLC)690904714(nllekb)BRILL9789004202771(PPN)174393199(Au-PeEL)EBL717593(CaPaEBR)ebr10470552(CaONFJC)MIL312100(EXLCZ)99267000000009267420101206d2011 uy 0engurun| uuuuatxtccrThe same but different?[electronic resource] inter-cultural trade and the Sephardim, 1595-1640 /by Jessica Vance RoitmanLeiden Boston : Brill20111 online resource (340 p.)Brill's series in Jewish studies,0926-2261 ;v. 42Description based upon print version of record.90-04-20276-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.Preliminary Material /J. Roitman -- Introduction /J. Roitman -- Chapter One. Inter-Culturality And The Sephardim /J. Roitman -- Chapter Two. Diaspora, Migration, And The Foundations Of Inter-Cultural Trade /J. Roitman -- Chapter Three. Merchants At Work: Opportunity, Integration, And Innovation /J. Roitman -- Chapter Four. Networks In Action /J. Roitman -- Chapter Five. The Importance Of The Occasional /J. Roitman -- Chapter Six. The 1602 Sugar Confiscation—A Case Study In Inter-Cultural Lobbying And Influence /J. Roitman -- Chapter Seven. The Same But Different /J. Roitman -- Conclusion /J. Roitman -- Appendix One. Largest Shippers To The Mediterranean, 1590–1620 /J. Roitman -- Appendix Two. Associates Of Manoel Rodrigues Vega, 1597–1613 /J. Roitman -- Appendix Three. Associates Of Manoel Carvalho, 1602–1636 /J. Roitman -- Appendix Four. Associates Of Bento Osorio, 1610–1640 /J. Roitman -- Appendix Five. Dutch Signatories Of The 1602 Petition To The Burgomasters Of Amsterdam And Their Relationships With Sephardic Merchants /J. Roitman -- Appendix Six. Data Analysis—Methods And Conclusions /J. Roitman -- Bibliography /J. Roitman -- Index /J. Roitman.Using cutting-edge theory regarding trade networks and diaspora, this study challenges the historiographical argument that the Sephardim, and indeed, a variety of religio-ethnic groups, achieved their commercial success by relying on geographically dispersed family members and fellow ethnics. The book’s findings challenge the reigning understanding that commercial success stemmed from endogamous business relationships and socio-cultural insularity. The book demonstrates that the most successful Sephardic merchants of early seventeenth century Amsterdam built their fortunes not thanks to familial or diasporic connections, but through “loose ties,” economic networks comprised of non-Sephardim. Focusing on three of the most prominent Sephardic merchants in Amsterdam, and a random sampling of other Sephardi merchants, the book reveals a multi-ethnic and multi-religious trade network of non-Jewish merchants.Brill's series in Jewish studies ;v. 42.JewsNetherlandsAmsterdamHistory16th centuryJewsNetherlandsAmsterdamHistory17th centurySephardimNetherlandsAmsterdamEconomic conditions16th centurySephardimNetherlandsAmsterdamEconomic conditions17th centuryEuropeCommerceHistory16th centuryEuropeCommerceHistory17th centuryAmsterdam (Netherlands)Ethnic relationsElectronic books.JewsHistoryJewsHistorySephardimEconomic conditionsSephardimEconomic conditions381.089/9240492352Roitman J(Jessica V.)950791MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910461831103321The same but different2149635UNINA05770nam 22007935 450 991048350540332120251226203054.01-280-38797-197866135658913-642-14412-810.1007/978-3-642-14412-7(CKB)2550000000015603(SSID)ssj0000446770(PQKBManifestationID)11267873(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000446770(PQKBWorkID)10497041(PQKB)11582067(DE-He213)978-3-642-14412-7(MiAaPQ)EBC3065559(PPN)149072759(BIP)31291401(EXLCZ)99255000000001560320100717d2010 u| 0engurnn#008mamaatxtccrSelf-Organizing Architectures First International Workshop, SOAR 2009, Cambridge, UK, September 14, 2009, Revised Selected and Invited Papers /edited by Danny Weyns, Sam Malek, Rogério de Lemos, Jesper Andersson1st ed. 2010.Berlin, Heidelberg :Springer Berlin Heidelberg :Imprint: Springer,2010.1 online resource (X, 301 p. 110 illus.)Lecture Notes in Computer Science,1611-3349 ;6090"SOAR 2009 was organized in conjunction with the Working IEEE/IFIP Conference on Software Architecture (WICSA) and the European Conference on Softward Architecture (ECSA), Cambridge, UK, September 14, 2009"--P. [vii].3-642-14411-X Includes bibliographical references and index.Self-adaptive Approaches -- Elements of Self-adaptive Systems – A Decentralized Architectural Perspective -- Improving Architecture-Based Self-adaptation Using Preemption -- Weaving the Fabric of the Control Loop through Aspects -- Self-organizing Approaches -- Self-organisation for Survival in Complex Computer Architectures -- Self-organising Sensors for Wide Area Surveillance Using the Max-sum Algorithm -- Multi-policy Optimization in Self-organizing Systems -- A Bio-inspired Algorithm for Energy Optimization in a Self-organizing Data Center -- Towards a Pervasive Infrastructure for Chemical-Inspired Self-organising Services -- Hybrid Approaches -- Self-adaptive Architectures for Autonomic Computational Science -- Modelling the Asynchronous Dynamic Evolution of Architectural Types -- A Self-organizing Architecture for Traffic Management -- On the Modeling, Refinement and Integration of Decentralized Agent Coordination -- A Self-organizing Architecture for Pervasive Ecosystems.Self-adaptability has been proposed as an e'ective approach to automate the complexity associated with the management of modern-day software systems. Self-adaptability endows a software system with the capability to adapt itself at runtime to deal with changing operating conditions or user requirements. Researchersinself-adaptivesystemsmostlytakeanarchitecture-centricfocus on developing top-down solutions. In this approach, the system is monitored to maintain an explicit (architectural) representation of the system and based on a set of (possibly dynamic) goals, the system's structure or behavior is adapted. Researchersofself-organizingsystemsmostlytakeanalgorithmic/organizational focus on developing bottom-up solutions. In this approach, the system com- nentsadapttheir localbehaviororpatternsofinteractiontochangingconditions and cooperatively realize system adaptation. Self-organizing approaches are - ten inspired by biological or natural phenomena. With the term "self-organizing architectures" (SOAR) we refer to an engineering approachfor self-adaptive s- tems that combinesarchitecturalapproachesforself-adaptability withprinciples and techniques from self-organization. Whereas both lines of research have been successful at alleviating some of the associated challenges of constructing self-adaptive systems, persistent ch- lenges remain, in particular for building complex distributed self-adaptive s- tems. Among the hard challenges in the architectural-centric approach are h- dling uncertainty and providing decentralized scalable solutions. Some of the hard challenges in the self-organizing approach are connecting local interactions with global system behavior, and accommodating a disciplined engineering - proach. The awarenessgrows that for building complex distributed self-adaptive systems, principles from both self-adaptive systems and self-organizing systems have to be combined.Lecture Notes in Computer Science,1611-3349 ;6090Software engineeringComputer networksComputer programmingArtificial intelligenceApplication softwareSoftware EngineeringComputer Communication NetworksProgramming TechniquesArtificial IntelligenceComputer and Information Systems ApplicationsSoftware engineering.Computer networks.Computer programming.Artificial intelligence.Application software.Software Engineering.Computer Communication Networks.Programming Techniques.Artificial Intelligence.Computer and Information Systems Applications.003.7Weyns Danny867840WICSA/ECSA 2009(2009 :University of Cambridge)MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910483505403321Self-organizing architectures4192047UNINA