scholarly journals SISTEM INFORMASI GEOGRAFIS COFFEE SHOP DI KOTA SAMARINDA BERBASIS WEB

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rofikhotul Khoeriyah ◽  
Nia Kurniadin
Keyword(s):  
Web Data ◽  

Coffee Shop merupakan tempat yang banyak diminati oleh masyarakat Kota Samarinda. Terdapat beberapa perbedaan antara Coffee Shop dengan kedai kopi atau warung kopi, antara lain dari segi konsep, desain interior, sarana dan prasarana, menu dan segmen pasar. Akan tetapi masyarakat dihadapkan dengan permasalahan dalam mengetahui lokasi serta informasi yang ada pada Coffee Shop. Dengan demikian diperlukan sarana informasi yang dapat diakses oleh umum, salah satu cara dengan pembuatan peta informasi berbasis Web yaitu WebGIS. Tujuan dari kegiatan penelitian ini yaitu untuk memberikan informasi lokasi dan informasi lainnya tentang Coffee Shop yang ada di Samarinda, serta penyajiannya dalam bentuk peta informasi berbasis Web. Data yang dikumpulkan berupa nilai titik koordinat dari hasil pengamatan di lapangan, serta beberapa informasi mengenai Coffee Shop dari media sosial masing-masing Coffee Shop, yang kemudian diolah menggunakan perangkat lunak Quantum GIS menjadi peta informasi berbasis Web. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa terdapat 49 Coffee Shop yang tersebar di Kota Samarinda dan data tersebut disajikan dalam bentuk WebGIS yang disertai informasi yang ada pada masing-masing Coffee Shop tersebut.

2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 219-239
Author(s):  
Olgu Karan

This paper proposes a new conceptual framework in understanding the dynamics within the Kurdish and Turkish (KT) owned firms in London by utilising Charles Tilly’s work concerning collective resource mobilisation. Drawing on 60 in-depth interviews with restaurant, off-licence, kebab-shop, coffee-shop, supermarket, wholesaler owners and various community organisations, the paper sheds light upon the questions of why and how the KT communities in London moved into, and are over represented and why Turkish Cypriots are absent in small business ownership. The re-search illustrates that members of the KT communities aligned in their interests to become small business owners after the demise of textile industry in the midst of 1990s in London. The interest alignment in small business ownership required activation of various forms of capital and transposition of social, cultural and economic capital into one another.


Author(s):  
Adam Stankevič

The article analyses some episodes from biography and the daily life of elder of Merkinė, vogt and colonel of a petyhorcy unit of the armed forces of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Mateusz Ogiński (1738–1786). On the basis of the documents preserved in the Ogiński foundation of the Lithuanian State history archive (F. 1177), the article argues that Mateusz Ogiński was mainly occupied with the maintenance of his properties and litigation in courts, not actually seeking any political or public career. He personally issued directions to the stewards of his properties and controlled execution of his orders. Somewhere close to the First Partition of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1772) he was known for the detailed regulation of his economic activities. He put effort to concentrate in his hands some real estate (by buying plots and houses in Merkinė), invested and developed various businesses (renting a windmill and a pub, operating a coffee shop, building a sawmill and a brickyard, fishing, shipping timber to Konigsberg, renovating Merkinė’s town hall, etc.). Later M. Ogiński was often renting out his properties to other individuals, but that had a negative influence on his possessions. Lifestyle that disregarded the income made M. Ogiński drown in debt early, and he entered a loop of having to start borrowing to pay debts. Elder of Merkinė Ogiński would borrow and spend large sums of money to make purchases of various items of luxury abroad and in Lithuania (clothes, jewellery, alcohol, species, fruits, etc.), and to maintain his manor and even a folk music group. M. Ogiński litigated in many Lithuanian courts and, judging from his letters (and quite many of them survived), he would have inhabited these litigation processes, taking interest in legal nuances and using different opportunities to influence court processes to his advantage (making acquaintance with judges, looking for third party interceders, writing letters to judges, and personally participating in court proceedings). Most common lawsuits against him were about unpaid debts, yet his own claims were against stewards of his properties, and real estate rights. Keywords: eldership of Merkinė, the Ogiński, daily routine, economics, courts.


2009 ◽  
Vol 20 (11) ◽  
pp. 2950-2964 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao-Yong DU ◽  
Yan WANG ◽  
Bin LÜ

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