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| Ernest L. Hughes (“Ernie” or “Lincoln”) is a senior transformation consultant, and trainer with HughesGlobal, LLC, and the chief innovation officer of HughesGlobal Network, his consulting and education network focused on helping individuals, teams, organizations, and value chains realize their potential and flourish through organization and leadership development, innovation and change management, and supply chain management utilizing systems approaches. He is also an associate professor of transportation and logistics with American Public University, and a part-time lecturer with the School of Business of the University of Washington Bothell. Prior to launching his consulting and education practice network, Hughes enjoyed broad leadership responsibility in a range of organizations for more than 30 years. He was most recently the director of technical services for Recreational Equipment, Incorporated (REI). Before joining REI, Hughes was co-founder and chief information officer for Cascadia Community College after a 15-year technology career with Boeing. At Boeing, he managed business applications, systems engineering, software process improvement, software cost management, software engineering education, and merger integration function and change programs. He also held systems analysis and software development positions with Tenneco and Getty Oil. Hughes earned an MS in Global Supply Chain Management from the University of Alaska Anchorage, a Doctorate in Educational Leadership and a Master's in Software Engineering from Seattle University, and an MBA in Organizational Behavior at California State University, Bakersfield. He has training and certifications in a number of specialties, including: Global Competencies Inventory & Intercultural Effectiveness Scale (ICI); Crowdsourcing and Innovation Management Best Practices (Ideascale); Change Management Process, Methodologies, and Tools (Prosci); Leadership & Customer Service Trainer (Achieve Global); Manager of Quality/Operational Excellence (ASQ); Supply Management Training (ISM CPSM T3 Trainer); Fastrac Entrepreneurship (Kauffman Foundation); Organization Workshop (Power & Systems); Materials Handling Training (CICMHE MHTI); Competency Development (CYGNUS); Risk Communication (Cultural Effect); and Precise Communication (Vervago). He has been a reviewer for Computing Reviews since 1988, and has written over 60 reviews. |
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IoT for sustainable smart cities and society Rodrigues J., Agarwal P., Khanna K., Springer International Publishing, Cham, Switzerland, 2022. 338 pp. Type: Book (303089553X) Before reading this review, take two minutes to reflect upon the following questions:...
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Feb 28 2023 |
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A beginner’s guide to learning analytics K G S., Kurni M., Springer International Publishing, New York, NY, 2021. 339 pp. Type: Book (978-3-030702-57-1) The advice I got when I first started teaching was “make sure your zipper is up and don’t get any chalk on your butt.” No mention of student success. The advice I got when I worked as a database administrator was “anticipat...
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Feb 1 2022 |
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Demystifying smart cities: practical perspectives on how cities can leverage the potential of new technologies Lisdorf A., Apress, New York, NY, 2020. 232 pp. Type: Book (978-1-484253-76-2)
How do cities work and evolve? How can technology improve the services provided by a city government to its citizens? What technologies can providers utilize, develop, and integrate to enable cities to do so? This book answers these qu...
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May 19 2021 |
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Introducing surprise and opposition by design in recommender systems Bauer C., Schedl M. UMAP 2017 (Proceedings of the 25th Conference on User Modeling, Adaptation and Personalization, Bratislava, Slovakia, Jul 9-12, 2017) 350-353, 2017. Type: Proceedings
Christine Bauer and Markus Schedl, researchers at the Department of Computational Perception, Johannes Kepler University Linz, propose an approach to expanding the utility of recommender systems by developing capabilities to incorporat...
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Jul 26 2018 |
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The incremental commitment spiral model: principles and practices for successful systems and software Boehm B., Lane J., Koolmanojwong S., Turner R., Addison-Wesley Professional, Upper Saddle River, NJ, 2014. 336 pp. Type: Book (978-0-321808-22-6)
This book is chock-full of accumulated knowledge, collective wisdom, and engineering best practices about what makes systems development successful. The incremental commitment spiral model (ICSM) extends and uses Boehm’s earl...
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Aug 19 2014 |
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The small project observatory: visualizing software ecosystems Lungu M., Lanza M., Gîrba T., Robbes R. Science of Computer Programming 75(4): 264-275, 2010. Type: Article
In FarmVille (http://farmville.com/), a wildly popular online social networking game, players manage a virtual farm with their friends by planting, growing, and harvesting crops and trees, and raising livestock for both individual and ...
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Jul 21 2010 |
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