Technology Bundling

Author(s):  
Alexander Y. Yap ◽  
Wonhi Synn

This chapter focuses on the theme of service innovation in the electronic brokerage sector. The discussion will cover the theories of “technology bundling” and how bundling together various technologies creates added value for the end-user. The proliferation of different e-trading systems raises the question of which systems provide better and more comprehensive bundled services to online stock traders. Many online brokers now provide low-cost transactions and financial research capabilities, so where is the next level of innovation? The objective of this chapter is to show that several innovations in broker e-services are critical in the following areas: a) how order processes are efficiently managed in financial e-markets; b) how responsive e-trading systems are in handling trading rules and regulations; c) how different systems address unique niches in financial e-markets; and d) improving systems stability and reliability. Combining different systems and technology features in these areas allow brokers to give much better services to their clients.

2010 ◽  
pp. 989-1009
Author(s):  
Alexander Yap

This chapter focuses on the theme of e-service innovation in financial electronic markets. The discussion will cover the theories of “technology bundling” and how bundling creates value-added in servicing electronic markets. More specifically, this chapter looks at innovations created through e-service bundling for online brokers connected to various financial electronic markets. The proliferation of different e-trading systems raises the question of which systems provide better service to online stock traders. Many online brokers (e-brokers) now provide low-cost transactions and financial research capabilities, so where is the next level of innovation? The objective of this chapter is to show that several innovations in broker e-services are critical in the following areas: (a) how order processes are efficiently managed in financial e-markets; (b) how responsive e-trading systems are in handling trading rules and regulations; (c) how different systems address unique niches in financial e-markets; and (d) improving systems stability and reliability.


2010 ◽  
pp. 166-187 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Yap

This chapter focuses on the theme of e-service innovation in financial electronic markets. The discussion will cover the theories of “technology bundling” and how bundling creates value-added in servicing electronic markets. More specifically, this chapter looks at innovations created through e-service bundling for online brokers connected to various financial electronic markets. The proliferation of different e-trading systems raises the question of which systems provide better service to online stock traders. Many online brokers (e-brokers) now provide low-cost transactions and financial research capabilities, so where is the next level of innovation? The objective of this chapter is to show that several innovations in broker e-services are critical in the following areas: (a) how order processes are efficiently managed in financial e-markets; (b) how responsive e-trading systems are in handling trading rules and regulations; (c) how different systems address unique niches in financial e-markets; and (d) improving systems stability and reliability.


Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 122
Author(s):  
Karina J. Lagos ◽  
Bojan A. Marinkovic ◽  
Alexis Debut ◽  
Karla Vizuete ◽  
Víctor H. Guerrero ◽  
...  

Ecuadorian black mineral sands were used as starting material for the production of iron-titanium oxide nanostructures. For this purpose, two types of mineral processing were carried out, one incorporating a pre-treatment before conducting an alkaline hydrothermal synthesis (NaOH 10 M at 180 °C for 72 h), and the other prescinding this first step. Nanosheet-assembled flowers and nanoparticle agglomerates were obtained from the procedure including the pre-treatment. Conversely, nanobelts and plate-like particles were prepared by the single hydrothermal route. The nanoscale features of the product morphologies were observed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analyses. The ilmenite and hematite molar fractions, within the ilmenite-hematite solid solution, in the as-synthetized samples were estimated by Brown’s approach using the computed values of unit-cell volumes from Le Bail adjustments of X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) patterns. The resulting materials were mainly composed of Fe-rich ilmenite-hematite solid solutions (hematite molar contents ≥0.6). Secondary phases, which possibly belong to lepidocrocite-like or corrugated titanate structures, were also identified. The current study demonstrated the feasibility of employing Ecuadorian mineral resources as low-cost precursors to synthesize high-added-value nanostructures with promising applications in several fields.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (23) ◽  
pp. 7919
Author(s):  
Sjoerd van Ratingen ◽  
Jan Vonk ◽  
Christa Blokhuis ◽  
Joost Wesseling ◽  
Erik Tielemans ◽  
...  

Low-cost sensor technology has been available for several years and has the potential to complement official monitoring networks. The current generation of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) sensors suffers from various technical problems. This study explores the added value of calibration models based on (multiple) linear regression including cross terms on the performance of an electrochemical NO2 sensor, the B43F manufactured by Alphasense. Sensor data were collected in duplicate at four reference sites in the Netherlands over a period of one year. It is shown that a calibration, using O3 and temperature in addition to a reference NO2 measurement, improves the prediction in terms of R2 from less than 0.5 to 0.69–0.84. The uncertainty of the calibrated sensors meets the Data Quality Objective for indicative methods specified by the EU directive in some cases and it was verified that the sensor signal itself remains an important predictor in the multilinear regressions. In practice, these sensors are likely to be calibrated over a period (much) shorter than one year. This study shows the dependence of the quality of the calibrated signal on the choice of these short (monthly) calibration and validation periods. This information will be valuable for determining short-period calibration strategies.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sepehr Ghazinoory ◽  
Mehdi Fatemi ◽  
Abolfazl Adab

Abstract Iran has a great advantage in the development of the steel industry due to its access to mineral resources and energy, extensive consumer market, and low-cost labor. In this article, the Iranian steel value chain in 2014-2016 is studied using the value chain analysis and material flow analysis. Accordingly, based on the statistics related to the input and output of each echelon in the chain, the material flow is analyzed throughout the value chain. Then the total added value from the chain, the share of different stages, and the various costs in each echelon are calculated. According to the research findings, weakness in the development of transportation infrastructure and poor geographical distribution of value chain units has led to the deviation of production from nominal capacity and frequent imports/exports throughout the chain. On the other hand, the upstream industries have a permanent advantage that deeply roots in easy access to the minerals and lower costs in transportation and energy. Finally, the pricing of intermediate products based on the ratio of steel ingot prices is criticized, while wage conversion and commodity purification contracts are proposed as possible solutions for the reduction of overhead costs.


2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Πρόδρομος Τσινασλανίδης

Technical analysis (TA) is considered as an “economic” test for the random walk 2 hypothesis and thus for the weak form Efficiency Market Hypothesis (EMH). Advocates of TA assert that it is plausible to forecast future evolutions of financial assets‟ price paths with a bundle of technical tools conditioned on historical prices. Among these tools, we can identify technical patterns, which are specific forms of price paths‟ evolutions which are mainly identified visually. When such pattern is confirmed, a technician expects prices to evolve with a specific way. Although, bibliography on testing the efficacy of TA is massive, only a minor fraction of it deals with technical patterns. Various cognitive biases affecting practitioners‟ trading and investment activities and subjectivity embedded in the pattern‟s recognition process via visual assessment, set significant barriers in any attempt to evaluate the performance of trading strategies including such patterns. In this thesis we propose novel, rule-based, identification mechanisms for a set of well known technical patterns classified in the following three general categories: horizontal, zig-zag and circular patterns. The novelty of the proposed methodologies resides in the manner the identification mechanisms are designed. Core principles of TA, regarding the pattern identification via visual assessment are being quantified and the proposed recognizers outperform already existed ones to the fact that they identify all variations of the examined patterns regardless of their size, in a more objective manner. Thus, we believe that the proposed methodologies can set another basis for the development of more sophisticated automatic trading systems and more comprehensive and robust evaluations of TA in general. Implications for the industry and the finance community are also plausible. Software programs (or packages) of TA can include these recognizers in the bundle of all other technical indicators they provide within their services. Finally, practitioners may include these trading rules within their investment and trading activities, after assessing their performance individually, enhancing them (if necessary), or modifying them according to their idiosyncratic investment profile. We subsequently proceed to the individual and joint evaluation of the examined patterns‟ performance. For this purpose we use a variety of datasets (artificially created, US stocks and worldwide market indices) and assess generated returns with ordinary statistical tests, bootstrapped techniques and artificial neural networks. Our empirical findings are either new or comparable with already existed ones. To our point of view, some of the most significant and interesting are the followings: 1) Technical patterns were successfully identified in stochastically generated price paths. Thus, it is reasonable to expect their appearance in real price series too. 2) For specific patterns, when applied on stochastic price series, frequencies of observations, and returns‟ characteristics were similar with those observed in real price series. 3) Generally, our results are in favour of EMH. 4) Indications of market inefficiencies (if any) were more profound in the earlier sub-periods of examination, but not in recent ones. 5) Indications in favour of TA (if any) were observed when shorter holding periods were used. 6) Technical trading rules may successfully predict trend reversals, trend continuations or the sign of future returns, but they fail to generate systematically, statistically significant excess returns. The latter finding, if combined with a variety of cognitive biases included in investors‟ decision making processes, may reason for the apparent wide-spread implementation of TA within the everyday trading and investment activities of practitioners. This thesis is not the first published attempt to quantify such technical patterns and assess the generalised efficacy of TA. However, to our knowledge, the manner we approached the aforementioned issues is new. We believe that the proposed methodologies outperform already existed ones and implications of this thesis to academia and finance industry are significant.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Norsyuhada Ab Razak ◽  
Normawani Kerya ◽  
May Sari Hendrawati ◽  
Syarah Syazana Nordin ◽  
Noor Shakila Abd Rahman ◽  
...  

Abstract Objectives/Scope Field A is a brownfield that has been produced for 52 years under natural depletion via a total of 207 strings. The field comprises 7000 ft of reservoir section, multiple fault blocks and over 200 separate reservoir units has been produced to date. Despite the long period of production, the field recovery factor (RF) to date is only 29%. To improve the RF, a strategic assest value framing exercise was carried out to identify the additional subsurface opportunities i.e. infill well drilling, secondary recovery, late field life appraisal in underdeveloped fault blocks as well as adopting standardized low well concepts and the design one build many facility design concept to reduce cost and accelerate development. The main purpose of the exercise was to capture the overall opportunities for the field, outline the roadmap and phase out the project with suitable wells and facilities design to bring down the cost for project commerciality. Methods, Procedures, Process The integrated workflow of the exercise involved subsurface, drilling, facilities, operations and economist and took a total of 3 months to complete. The process started off with a RF benchmarking exercise utilizing a newly developed inhouse RF benchmarking tool to compare the current attained vs the attainable RF(EUR) and identify incremental reserves. The number of new wells required to develop the incremental reserves was estimated by analyzing EUR per well trends over time. This analysis indicated that on a campaign basis the current realistic average EUR per well is in the order of 0.7-1.0 MMstb per well. The preliminary well placements are guided by bubble maps of all reservoirs, in a top to bottom & block by block approach, to identify underdeveloped areas and combining these areas into stacks of reservoirs that can be combined and developed with simpler wells from existing or future facilities. The drilling team has designed a few simple trajectories to penetrate shallower to deeper reservoirs and proposed the drilling center within a radius of 2 km from the targets. This approach differs from the object-based approach where individual high EUR targets are chased with more complex wells drilled from a specific location during a platform campaign. Result, Observations, Conclusions Potential additional reserves and 6 new projects have been identified which would result in a field recovery factor increase of 11%, of which 2 projects are being accelerated to realize early first oil. Timelines for all the projects have been mapped out with the aim of completing all within the next 10 years. A dedicated project management team has been formed to support the project from the initial stage. Detail Full Field Review study will be conducted to mature all the opportunities up to development stage. The listed projects will follow the low cost well guideline established in the framing as well as fast track facility design concept. Novel/added value The strategic value framing exercise is a systematic approach that provide a total picture of the future opportunities to optimize field production/EUR and maximize commercial value of brownfield redevelopment.


Author(s):  
Niels Boye

Pervasive healthcare is a vision for the future of healthcare. Healthcare provisions can be delivered with high quality at low cost along with higher patient-experienced quality and satisfaction as a service on top of a pervasive computing infrastructure, which can be built by integrating communicating computerpower into industrial products and fixed structures in urban and rural spaces. For pervasive healthcare, integration with on body networks sensors and actuators may also be needed. This chapter discusses the prerequisites of this vision from a point of a healthcare professional. A number of parallel advances in concepts have to take place before pervasive healthcare (PH) is matured into a general method for delivering healthcare provisions. The contemporary, most widespread model of healthcare provisions as industrial products with consumer-goods characteristics has to mature into the concepts of welfare economics. New market models have to be developed for PH to pervade society and add value to the health aspects of an individual’s life. Ethical and legal aspects must also be further matured. Maturation of technology is needed. This includes all the components of the “pervasive loop” from sensors to the central intelligence back to the actuators. The “virtual patient/healthy human” as an operational digital representation of the “object/subject of care” also has to be developed. Pervasive healthcare (or the European Union term: ambient assisted living) is a promising field, that has potential to integrate health considerations and health promoting activities for patients and non-patients in their everyday conduct and provide added value to life quality for individuals.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (3.27) ◽  
pp. 318
Author(s):  
K Kalaiselvi ◽  
N Jayashri ◽  
G Saraswathi

Cloud computing providing confidentiality over the insensitive data was the major issue related to security. It verifies the data owned by the server through linear computations. The proposed work enables security and efficiency using the cryptographic techniques of hybrid algorithms, securing the sensitive information that is present in the cloud. In the hybrid algorithm, it is the combination of problem encryption, key generation, result decryption and proof generation. It also validates the results which are being computed and also provides end-to-end confidentiality over the data to both the end user. The uses of hybrid algorithm results in a random key generation, encrypt/decrypt, and validate the satisfied results. This will provide a low cost to both server and client.  


Data in Brief ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 255-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruna Soares Fernandes ◽  
Márcia Cristina Fernandes Messias ◽  
Patrícia de Oliveira Carvalho ◽  
Marcelo Zaiat ◽  
José Geraldo da Cruz Pradella

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