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(Die Seite wurde neu angelegt: „{{Veranstaltung |Titel DE=Prof. Dr. Gio Wiederhold |Titel EN=Prof. Dr. Gio Wiederhold |Beschreibung DE=folgt |Beschreibung EN=folgt |Veranstaltungsart=Kolloquium …“)
 
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{{Veranstaltung
 
{{Veranstaltung
|Titel DE=Prof. Dr. Gio Wiederhold
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|Titel DE=Intellectual Capital: Software innovation and its role in national economies
|Titel EN=Prof. Dr. Gio Wiederhold
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|Titel EN=Intellectual Capital: Software innovation and its role in national economies
|Beschreibung DE=folgt
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|Beschreibung DE=Software has invaded all aspects of our world. It can no longer just be viewed as a fascinating tech-nology. Software, and the products that depend on it, from watches to aircraft, social interactions, and sharing services, comprise a large fraction of modern commerce. The creators and the intel-lectual property they generate, exploit, and maintain comprise the intellectual capital, an asset that competes with the financial capital that traditional manufacturing industries rely on.
|Beschreibung EN=folgt
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I will present the flow of innovation into our national economics.  Rights to profit from intellectual property are poorly documented and are easily transferred among countries. The importance of our intellectual capital is underestimated by economists and planners because the `Big Data’ they ac-cess is primarily from financial-oriented sources. As result, governmental policies to improve eco-nomic activity and the welfare of its people are often naïve and sometimes wrong. In this world computing experts have roles beyond the base technology.
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Biography: Gio Wiederhold was born in Italy, educated in Germany and the Netherlands, moving to the US in 1958.  He obtained a PhD from the Univ. of California, San Francisco and became a professor at Stanford University in 1976. During a three-year assignment at DARPA (1991-1994) he initiated the Digital Library pro-gram, funding research that led, among others, to Google. After his formal retirement in 2001 he is serving as a government consultant on issues of software exports and their value. In 2011 Gio received an honorary DSc from the National University of Ireland in Galway. He stopped offering courses at Stanford in 2014. He has authored and coauthored 6 books and over 300 reports and papers on diverse topics and supervised 36 PhD theses. Many more details are at http://i.stanford.edu/~gio
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|Veranstaltungsart=Kolloquium Angewandte Informatik
 
|Veranstaltungsart=Kolloquium Angewandte Informatik
 
|Start=2016/06/23 14:00:00
 
|Start=2016/06/23 14:00:00
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|Raum=231
 
|Raum=231
 
|Eingeladen durch=Rudi Studer
 
|Eingeladen durch=Rudi Studer
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|PDF=Wiederhold 23-06-2016.pdf
 
|Forschungsgruppe=Web Science und Wissensmanagement
 
|Forschungsgruppe=Web Science und Wissensmanagement
 
|In News anzeigen=True
 
|In News anzeigen=True
 
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Version vom 23. Mai 2016, 09:06 Uhr

Intellectual Capital: Software innovation and its role in national economies

Veranstaltungsart:
Kolloquium Angewandte Informatik




Software has invaded all aspects of our world. It can no longer just be viewed as a fascinating tech-nology. Software, and the products that depend on it, from watches to aircraft, social interactions, and sharing services, comprise a large fraction of modern commerce. The creators and the intel-lectual property they generate, exploit, and maintain comprise the intellectual capital, an asset that competes with the financial capital that traditional manufacturing industries rely on. I will present the flow of innovation into our national economics. Rights to profit from intellectual property are poorly documented and are easily transferred among countries. The importance of our intellectual capital is underestimated by economists and planners because the `Big Data’ they ac-cess is primarily from financial-oriented sources. As result, governmental policies to improve eco-nomic activity and the welfare of its people are often naïve and sometimes wrong. In this world computing experts have roles beyond the base technology. Biography: Gio Wiederhold was born in Italy, educated in Germany and the Netherlands, moving to the US in 1958. He obtained a PhD from the Univ. of California, San Francisco and became a professor at Stanford University in 1976. During a three-year assignment at DARPA (1991-1994) he initiated the Digital Library pro-gram, funding research that led, among others, to Google. After his formal retirement in 2001 he is serving as a government consultant on issues of software exports and their value. In 2011 Gio received an honorary DSc from the National University of Ireland in Galway. He stopped offering courses at Stanford in 2014. He has authored and coauthored 6 books and over 300 reports and papers on diverse topics and supervised 36 PhD theses. Many more details are at http://i.stanford.edu/~gio




Start: 23. Juni 2016 um 14:00
Ende: 23. Juni 2016 um 15:00


Im Gebäude 11.40, Raum: 231

Veranstaltung vormerken: (iCal)


Veranstalter: Forschungsgruppe(n) Web Science und Wissensmanagement
Information: Media:Wiederhold 23-06-2016.pdf