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The network economy is the emerging economic order within the information society.
A network economy raises important issues with respect to intellectual property.
"It is also a breakthrough of the private service sector - the new networked economy."
Thus, in network economy, "human capacity becomes primary scarce resource".
In the networked economy, our daily lives are predicated on this assumption.
Some aspects of rural life do not adjust so quickly to the rhythm of the network economy.
He conducts research into the network economy.
Mayer-Schönberger's research focuses on the role of information in the networked economy.
What one considers licentious in the networked economy is a matter of personal taste, of course.
"In today's electronically networked economy, being at any major center of economic activity gives you all the connectivity that you should need."
In a networked economy, success begets more success.
Organizations increasingly find that they must rely on effective supply chains, or networks, to compete in the global market and networked economy.
The network economy stresses that businesses will work collectively in webs or as part of business ecosystems rather than as stand-alone units.
Enthusiasts for the network economy like to invoke "Metcalfe's law," named after the inventor of the Ethernet.
Information Rules: A Strategic Guide to the Network Economy.
Although today's meeting was called the Networked Economy Conference, leaders of the local and long-distance companies seemed anything but linked as they argued about the legislation's merits.
Self-provision - based upon the network economies of very large user communities providing information as a gift or at near zero cost (e.g. social networking applications).
Warning readers of the potential threats to individual freedom in a network economy, Baumard described how "seeing without being seen" would become an inescapable engine of growth.
Don Tapscott, Creating Value in the Network Economy, Harvard Business Press, 1999.
Welcome to the Wired World: The New Networked Economy; Anne C. Leer, 1999.
Key concept: The network economy, the acceleration of technological innovation and rampant globalization are setting the stage for a 20- to 30-year period of global prosperity with new economic rules.
The network economy may be viewed from a number of perspectives: transition from the industrial economy, digital and information infrastructure, global scale, value networks, and intellectual property rights.
The BRM concept is an outgrowth of observation and analysis of the transformational effects of certain features of the emerging network economy, including:
The curriculum of the course is uniquely designed to impart knowledge and develop skill sets in future managers which are essential for their survival in a globally networked economy.
The ITAA E-LETTER covers the issues of the networked economy.