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E-strategy in the UK retail grocery sector
After a decade of Internet trading, retailers in the UK have experienced mixed fortunes with their Internet-based ventures. Online shopping success stories include; Tesco’s, which has positioned itself as a world leader in online grocery retailing by providing an Internet-based home delivery of over 40,000 products and making the service available to almost 95 per cent of UK residents. Similarly, Sainsbury’s offers 71% per cent of UK residents the opportunity to shop online however the company does not have the same international recognition. Waitrose too has expanded its Internet-based shopping services, aided by its acquisitions in OCADO. By contrast, Somerfield, and more recently Iceland have stopped their Internet shopping operations due to poor trading results and economic difficulties, despite the fact that Iceland was the first grocery retailer to offer online shopping to the majority of the UK mainland. The key aims of this paper are to explore how major grocery retailers coming to the one line market; to consider why some are more successful than others and to develop an understanding of the role of strategic thinking in online retailing. More specifically, the paper will initially, investigate the strategic options open to retailers developing activities online and finally, discuss the extent to which e-strategies represent a long-term approach to planning. The paper presents a literature review, which provides the conceptual foundations for investigation of the significance of e-strategy development within retailing. This model is then compared with evidence from secondary data sources and business results from leading UK grocery retailers in order to debate and analyse the likely importance of e-strategies in the success of online grocery retailing in the UK
Late Quaternary micropalaeontological record of a semi-enclosed marine basin, North Evoikos, central Aegean Sea
North Evoikos Gulf constitutes a deep (450 m) semi-enclosed basin in east-central Greece connected to the Aegean Sea via a 42-m sill to the north and a 40-m wide, 8-m deep channel to the south. Six gravity cores retrieved from different physiographic settings of the Gulf were analyzed for their benthic foraminiferal content, in order to reconstruct the local and regional palaeoenvironmental changes. Species Correspondence Analysis separates the foraminifera into 4 clusters: Cluster 1 is composed of Agglutinated species, Elphidium spp. and Ammonia beccarii; Cluster 2 is exclusively composed of Bulimina marginata; Cluster 3 consists of Bolivina spathulata and Bulimina costata and finally Cluster 4 comprises the 10 remaining species: Cibicides lobatulus, Cibicidoides pachyderma, Bulimina aculeata, Cancris oblonga, Melonis barleeanum, Chilostomella oolina, Cassidulina laevigata, Hyalinea balthica and Miliolidae. These clusters represent four distinct foraminiferal biofacies and are interpreted as reflecting different ecological conditions: Biofacies p-H corresponds to the proximal part of the shelf and it is characterised by the absence of foraminifera, skeletal debris and abundant peloids. Its topmost part shows an erosional surface, aged 32.4 ka, characterised by shell debris, and the appearance of few shallow marine benthic
foraminifera. Biofacies Ia and Ib consist of a low-diversity Holocene assemblage which is mainly dominated by Textularia spp. and Elphidium spp., reflecting a low-energy restricted lagoon and the deeper water assemblage of B. marginata and H. balthica (Biofacies Ib) as well as by a mollusc assemblage dominated by Corbula gibba. These biofacies are only present in the mid-shelf setting. Biofacies II (Cluster 3: B. spathulataeB. costata) shows a possible positive correlation with nutrient contents and it exhibits a complementary pattern of distribution with Biofacies III (Cluster 4: B. marginata). Two main palaeoenvironmental settings were recognized: a) In the first setting dominated by Biofacies Ia and Ib, the succession of the benthic faunas is mainly controlled by the ongoing sea level rise; b) in the
second setting, the species typical of shelf environment (C. laevigataeH. balthica) give way to opportunistic species (B. spathulata) and species that are more resistant to bottom water changes (B. marginata). This pattern is attributed to variations in the food chain and oxygenation. North Evoikos Gulf during the Uppermost Quaternary reflects a passive response to a globally fluctuating sea level that was not significantly modified by dramatic tectonic processes. Therefore, its palaeoceanographic evolution is primarily driven by climatic (eustatic) processes and accurately depicts local conditions
Upper Quaternary seismic stratigraphy and sequence development in an ever evolving marginal basin: The North Evoikos Gulf, east-central Aegean Sea
Benthic faunal assemblages from the Holocene middle shelf of the South Evoikos Gulf, central Greece, and their palaeoenvironmental implications
Late Quaternary palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of South Evoikos Gulf (east – central Aegean Sea) by benthic foraminiferal assemblages
The menstruation experience: Attitude dimensions among South African students
This study aimed to investigate the attitudes and experiences regarding menstruation among undergraduate women at a historically disadvantaged South African university. A total of 255 women participated in the study. The majority of participants were black women (coloured = 55%; African = 29 .2%). They responded to the Menstrual Attitudes Questionnaire (MAQ) and a demographic questionnaire. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics and ANOVA with post-hoc tests. The majority of women in the study (78%) had positive attitudes towards menstruation, viewing it as a natural event that can be anticipated and predicted. However, many of the women (51–58%) perceived it as debilitating and bothersome to everyday living. Menstruation was perceived by women as impacting on participation and performance in higher education, suggesting that the provision of tertiary education for previously disadvantaged groups needs to consider the needs of women who experience difficulty managing menstruation. The provision of material resources, education in self-care strategies and distribution of information to normalise menstruation may assist the adverse impact of menstruation on their higher education experience .DHE
Translating between Alloy specifications and UML class diagrams annotated with OCL
Model-driven engineering (MDE) is a software engineering approach based on model transformations at different abstraction levels. It prescribes the development of software by successively transforming the models from abstract (specifications) to more concrete ones (code). Alloy is an increasingly popular lightweight formal specification language that supports automatic verification. Unfortunately, its widespread industrial adoption is hampered by the lack of an ecosystem of MDE tools, namely code generators. This paper presents a model transformation from Alloy to UML class diagrams annotated with OCL (UML+OCL) and shows how an existing transformation from UML+OCL to Alloy can be improved to handle dynamic issues. The proposed bidirectional transformation enables a smooth integration of Alloy in the current MDE contexts, by allowing UML+OCL specifications to be transformed to Alloy for validation and verification, to correct and possibly refine them inside Alloy, and to translate them back to UML+OCL for sharing with stakeholders or to reuse current model-driven architecture tools to refine them toward code.This work was funded by European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through the COMPETE Programme (operational program for competitiveness) and by national funds through the FCT (Fundaaco para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia-portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology) within project FCOMP-01-0124-FEDER-020532. Part of the work was done while the first author was visiting the Software Design Group at CSAIL, MIT, USA, funded by FCT sabbatical grant SFRH/BSAB/1187/2011. The second author was also partially supported by QREN (the portuguese National Strategy Reference Chart) project 1621, while visiting the High-Assurance Software Laboratory at Universidade do Minho, Portugal. Finally, we would also like to thank all anonymous reviewers for the valuable comments and suggestions
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