149,010 research outputs found

    Too far ahead of its time: Barclays, Burroughs and real-time banking

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    The historiography of computing has until now considered real-time computing in banking as predicated on the possibilities of networked ATMs in the 1970s. This article reveals a different story. It exposes the failed bid by Barclays and Burroughs to make real time a reality for British banking in the 1960s

    Structuring information work: Ferranti and Martins Bank, 1952-1968

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    The adoption of large-scale computers by the British retail banks in the 1960s required a first-time dislocation of customer accounting from its confines in the branches, where it had been dealt with by paper-based and mechanized information systems, to a new collective space: the bank computer center. While historians have rightly stressed the continuities between centralized office work, punched-card tabulation and computerization, the shift from decentralized to centralized information work by means of a computer has received little attention. In this article, I examine the case of Ferranti and Martins Bank and employ elements of Anthony Giddens’s structuration theory to highlight the difficulties of transposing old information practices directly onto new computerized information work

    Proposed Federal Discovery Rules for Complex Civil Litigation

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    Influence of the atomic-scale inhomogeneity of the pair interaction on extracted from the STM spectra characteristics of high-TcT_c superconductors

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    The influence of the atomic-scale inhomogeneities of the pairing interaction strength on the superconducting order parameter and the conductance spectra measurable by STM is studied in the framework of weak-coupling BCS-like theory for two-dimensional lattice model. First of all, it is found that the inhomogeneity having the form of atomic-scale regions of enhanced pair interaction increases the ratio of the local low-temperature gap in differential conductance spectra to the local temperature of vanishing the gap 2Δg/Tp2\Delta_g/T_p. Even in the framework of mean-field treatment this ratio is shown to be larger than the one corresponding to the homogeneous case. It is shown that the effect of thermal phase fluctuations of the superconducting order parameter can further increase this ratio. Taking them into account in the framework of a toy model we obtained the ratio 2Δg/Tp2\Delta_g/T_p to be 78\sim 7-8. It is found that the additional atomic-scale hopping element disorder and weak potential scatterers, which can also take place in cuprate materials, have no considerable effect on the statistical properties of the system, including the distribution of the gaps, TpT_p and the ratio 2Δg/Tp2\Delta_g/T_p. The second consequence of the atomic-scale order parameter inhomogeneity is the anticorrelation between the low-temperature gap and the high-temperature zero-bias conductance. The obtained results could bear a relation to recent STM measurements.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figure

    Asylum in Practice: Successes, Failures, and the Challenges Ahead

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    The Workshop on Refugee and Asylum Policy in Practice in Europe and North America was organized to facilitate a transatlantic dialogue aimed at understanding just how well these asylum systems are balancing the dual goals. The Workshop was convened by the Institute for the Study of International Migration (ISIM) of Georgetown University and the Center for the Study of Immigration, Integration and Citizenship Policies (CEPIC) of the Centre Nationale de Recherche Scientifique, with the support of the German Marshall Fund of the United States. It was held on July 1-3, 1999, at Oxford University. The workshop examined key issues as to the workings of the U.S. and European asylum systems: decision making on claims, deterrence of abuse, independent review, return of rejected asylum seekers, scope of the refugee concept, social rights and employment, international cooperation, and data and evaluation. In this opening paper, we explain the significance of these issues and raise central questions about them

    Improved Bounds for rr-Identifying Codes of the Hex Grid

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    For any positive integer rr, an rr-identifying code on a graph GG is a set CV(G)C\subset V(G) such that for every vertex in V(G)V(G), the intersection of the radius-rr closed neighborhood with CC is nonempty and pairwise distinct. For a finite graph, the density of a code is C/V(G)|C|/|V(G)|, which naturally extends to a definition of density in certain infinite graphs which are locally finite. We find a code of density less than 5/(6r)5/(6r), which is sparser than the prior best construction which has density approximately 8/(9r)8/(9r).Comment: 12p
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