How long is too long with no contact? How can we tell? At what point does this awful silence become our prison rather than a miraculous cure? These are just some of the questions I'll be attempting to answer with this article, so grab a coffee and make yourself comfortable. But before I weigh the…
Pandora is winning today in the Marketing Department. Their latest video ad has gone viral, and with good reason. It’s common knowledge that the bond between a mother and child is powerful.
Was ist besser? Und wie kann ich mit einer Festlegung des Domainnamens Doppelten Content vermeiden? Das Thema ist schon seit bestehen des World Wide Webs...
There are obvious benefits in making business policies/rules explicit and easily changed via accompanying quick-change processes. The apparent benefits revolve around faster reaction to competitors and markets, as well as quick response to management and collaborative tuning. There are more subtle opportunities to get ahead of the game and anticipate customer demand, thus creating the ability to generate incremental revenue streams that play off of increased demands. Customers may also be enabled to make changes to their individual processes as they interact with an organization. CRM efforts are struggling to have a differentiating customer experience. BPM with explicit rules will allow this experience to evolve and become individualized.
S. Huang, and G. Webb. LNAI State-of-the-Art Survey series, 'Data Mining: Theory, Methodology, Techniques, and Applications', page 64-77. Berlin/Heidelberg, Springer, (2006)An earlier version of this paper was published in S.J. Simoff and G.J. Williams (Eds.), Proceedings of the Third Australasian Data Mining Conference (AusDM04) Cairns, Australia. Sydney: University of Technology, pages 169-182..
G. Webb, and S. Zhang. Proceedings of the First International NAISO Congress on Autonomous Intelligent Systems (ICAIS 2002), Canada/The Netherlands, NAISO Academic Press, (2002)
G. Webb, S. Butler, and D. Newlands. Proceedings of The Ninth ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD-2003), page 256-265. New York, The Association for Computing Machinery, (2003)
G. Webb. Proceedings of the Second Singapore International Conference on Intelligent Systems (SPICIS-94), page B280-B285. Singapore, Asia Computer Weekly, (1994)
G. Webb. Artificial Intelligence: Sowing the Seeds for the Future, Proceedings of Seventh Australian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AI'94), page 60-67. Singapore, World Scientific, (1994)
G. Webb. Proceedings of the Sixth ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD-2000), page 99-107. New York, The Association for Computing Machinery, (2000)
G. Webb. Proceedings of the First Australian Workshop on Knowledge Acquisition for Knowledge-Based Systems (AKAW '91), page 44-52. Sydney, University of Sydney Press., (1991)
G. Webb. Proceedings of the Seventh ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD-2001)short paper, page 383-388. New York, The Association for Computing Machinery, (2001)
G. Webb. Proceedings of the First Japanese Knowledge Acquisition for Knowledge-Based Systems Workshop (JKAW'90), page 219-232. Tokyo, IOS Press, (1990)
G. Webb. Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence Vol. 406: Proceedings of the Second Australian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AI'88), page 225-239. Berlin, Springer-Verlag, (1988)
G. Webb, and S. Zhang. Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol. 2256: Proceedings of the 14th Australian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AI'01), page 605-618. Berlin, Springer, (2001)
G. Webb. Proceedings of the Twelfth ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD-2006), page 434 - 443. New York, The Association for Computing Machinery, (2006)
M. Viswanathan, and G. Webb. Lecture Notes in Computer Science 1398: Proceedings of the Tenth European Conference on Machine Learning (ECML'98), page 149-159. Berlin/Heidelberg, Springer, (1998)