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1

Coradeschi, Sergio. Mobili: Sel secoli di stili. Milano: Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, 1988.

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2

Wilmott, Clancy. Mobile Mapping. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789462984530.

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This book argues for a theory of mobile mapping, a situated and spatial approach towards researching how everyday digital mobile media practices are bound up in global systems of knowledge and power. Drawing from literature in media studies and geography -- and the work of Michel Foucault and Doreen Massey -- it examines how geographical and historical material, social, and cultural conditions are embedded in the way in which contemporary (digital) cartographies are read, deployed, and engaged. This is explored through seventeen walking interviews in Hong Kong and Sydney, as potent discourses like cartographic reason continue to transform and weave through the world in ways that haunt mobile mapping and bring old conflicts into new media. In doing so, Mobile Mapping offers an interdisciplinary rethinking about how multiple translations of spatial knowledges between rational digital epistemologies and tacit ways of understanding space and experience might be conceptualized and researched.
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3

Leventhal, Joel S. Modern mobile methane measurements in marshes. [Denver, CO]: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1992.

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Leventhal, Joel S. Modern mobile methane measurements in marshes. [Denver, CO]: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1992.

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5

Mobile media in the Asia Pacific: Gender and the art of being mobile. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2008.

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6

Santini, Clara. Mille mobili veneti: L'arredo domestico in Veneto dal sec. XV al sec. XIX. Modena: Artioli, 1999.

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7

The art of iphoneography: A guide to mobile creativity. Asheville: Pixiq, 2012.

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8

Coté, Owen. Mobile targets from under the sea: New submarine missions in the new security environment. Cambridge, MA: MIT Security Studies Program, 1999.

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9

Palmer, Tink. Just one click: Sexual abuse of children and young people through the internet and mobile telephone technology. Ilford: Barnardo's, 2004.

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10

Hannay, Adrian. A field study of wave-current interactions over mobile rippled sand at two sites in the North Sea. Birmingham: University of Birmingham, 1994.

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11

Schleiner, Anne-Marie. Transnational Play. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463728904.

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Transnational Play approaches gameplay as a set of practices and a global industry that includes diverse participation from players and developers located within the global South, in nations outside of the First World. Players experience play in game cafes, through casual games for regional and global causes like environmentalism, through piracy and cheats, via cultural localization, on their mobile phones, and through urban playful art in Latin America. This book offers a reorientation of perspective on the global developers who make games, as well as the players who consume games, while still acknowledging geographically distributed socioeconomic, racial, gender, and other inequities. Over the course of the inquiry, which includes a chapter dedicated to the cartography of the mobile augmented reality game Pokémon Go, the author develops a theoretical line of argument critically informed by gender studies and intersectionality, postcolonialism, geopolitics, and game studies, problematizing play as a diverse and contested transnational domain.
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12

Foreign vessel operations in the U.S. exclusive economic zone: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation of the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, House of Representatives, One Hundred Eleventh Congress, second session, June 17, 2010. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 2010.

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13

Multilingual Digital Marketing. USA: Maria Johnsen, 2013.

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14

Limmer, Ruth. Mobil, flexibel, gebunden. Familie und Beruf in der mobilen Gesellschaft. Campus Fachbuch, 2002.

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15

Stephens, Keri K. Early Mobile Use. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190625504.003.0002.

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For many people, whose first experiences using mobiles were between 2000 and 2010, it’s hard to imagine a time when friends and loved ones didn’t have mobiles or when people didn’t have access to one another after work hours. This chapter opens in California with a story of Los Angeles traffic; it was terrible, even back in 1990. Some companies wanted to make their mobile staff more productive, so they provided them with car phones—permanently mounted, fairly large phones with an antenna attached to the back window. Organizations paid for these “business tools”; and they were company property, just like a computer. During these initial years, some early adopters of new technology started bringing tools, like tablet computers and personal digital assistants, to work. This chapter sets the stage for understanding how and why negotiations for control over mobile communication emerged.
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16

Dougherty, Celius. Mobile Bay (from 5 Sea Chanties). G. Schirmer, Inc., 1995.

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17

Mobil Dining Guide See Mdg. Not Avail, 2004.

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18

Stephens, Keri K. Negotiating Control. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190625504.001.0001.

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In this book, the author shows how employees, organizations, and even friends and family are struggling to understand how the expected norms for mobile-communication connectedness function when people are working. Until the early 2000s workplaces provided most of the computers and portable devices that employees used to do their jobs and communicate with others. Now, people bring their own mobile devices to work, use them to circumvent official organizational channels, and create new norms for how communication occurs. Managers and organizations set policies, enforce rules, and create their own workarounds to navigate the ever-changing mobile-communication environment. This book draws on over two decades of research studies and fieldwork, consisting of 150 distinct interviews and focus groups, representing people in over 35 different types of jobs, to claim that people assume mobile communication is a uniform practice. Instead, the book reveals underlying—often hidden—issues of control and power that shape how people are permitted and expected to use mobiles to communicate while working. The stories and extended examples reveal a wide-ranging account of how these portable tools are used across work environments today. The book develops a grounded theory describing the ongoing negotiation for control when people use their personally owned devices while working. These lifelines integrate information, communication, and data, and they connect people in unexpected and often conflicting ways.
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19

Stephens, Keri K. Meetings as a Site to Negotiate Mobile Control. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190625504.003.0005.

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When mobile devices entered organizational meetings, there was a flurry of responses that sometimes resulted in misunderstandings. Olivia is a manager who’s trying to adapt to her vice president’s strict rule of “no thumbs under the table.” But her direct boss keeps bugging her while she’s in other meetings. Cedric is a mid-level manager in a global advertising firm who is confident his constant BlackBerry use conveys how productive he is; but the president thinks mobile use in his meetings hinders listening. Four key findings emerge: (1) some managers establish meeting ground rules, while others are not so clear; (2) subordinates using their mobiles in meetings are often oblivious as to how they’re being judged; (3) people often multicommunicate in meetings to essentially be two places at once; and (4) concertive control puts a normative pressure on groups that practically forces them to agree to be always reachable.
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20

Stephens, Keri K. Negotiating Mobile Control. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190625504.003.0003.

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In the late 1990s and early 2000s, mobile use started expanding. From Nokia phones to BlackBerrys, these business tools often were considered status symbols—so it’s natural that control issues emerged. This chapter discusses some cultural-differences data, along with the gut-wrenching decisions that Kjell, a Norwegian entrepreneur, and Matt, a Wall Street Journal executive, had to make concerning whose jobs warranted mobile devices. These managers wrestled with issues of productivity, budgeting, fairness, mooching, and status. The chapter shows what happens when there’s a “boss in your pocket,” as well as the temptation to work all weekend when “sent from my iPhone” appears at the bottom of a message at 6 p.m. on Friday evening. This chapter invites readers to consider issues of hierarchical control and what happens when some workers are accessible 24/7.
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21

Geological Survey (U.S.), ed. Modern mobile methane measurements in marshes. [Denver, CO]: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1992.

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22

Aizura, Aren Z. Mobile subjects: Transnational imaginaries of gender reassignment. Duke University Press Books, 2018.

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23

Aizura, Aren Z. Mobile Subjects: Transnational Imaginaries of Gender Reassignment. Duke University Press, 2018.

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24

Wilson, Keeley. We Were the Only Ones to See It. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198777199.003.0003.

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Nokia’s executives were alone in the industry in perceiving the full potential of mobile phones as a mass consumer product. This chapter describes and analyzes how this perceptive framing emerged over time and why other firms (the leading incumbents) did not develop a comparable framing. Conceptually, the key points are that innovative winning strategies result from clear, lucid, and determined strategic opportunism, not from grand plans or a sudden awakening to a new reality. They evolve and develop incrementally and often iteratively. Nor are the most important innovations necessarily technological: Nokia grew globally very rapidly in that period by understanding the needs of new, recently licensed mobile service operators and how different their business model needs were from traditional incumbent telecoms firms.
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25

A Study of Mobile Trough Genesis Over The Yellow Sea-East China Sea Region. Storming Media, 1997.

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26

Cumiskey, Kathleen M., and Larissa Hjorth. Conclusion. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190634971.003.0008.

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The concluding chapter revisits our major themes and highlights next steps for exploring mobile-emotive practices and loss. We also seek to provide a set of propositions for future areas of study. We explore the limits of funeral decorum through understanding selfies at funerals, virtual veneration, and the challenges of a new kind of public mourning. We discuss further the crux of our book: how the personal nature of mobile devices positions them to uniquely play a role in bereavement. We examine digital legacies and the impact of the increasingly likelihood that we will be co-present at the moment of death for some, thanks to live mobile media broadcasting. We conclude with an analysis of shifting cultural understandings of death and imagine a mobile-emotive afterlife.
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27

Mobile Robots - State of the Art in Land, Sea, Air, and Collaborative Missions. InTech, 2009.

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28

Chen, XiaoQi, Y. Q. Chen, and J. G. Chase, eds. Mobile Robots - State of the Art in Land, Sea, Air, and Collaborative Missions. InTech, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/120.

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29

Stephens, Keri K. Negotiating Mobile Communication in Customer-Facing Work. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190625504.003.0010.

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There appear to be formal and informal rules associated with using mobile devices in view of customers. This chapter examines many types of customer-facing workers including waitstaff, childcare workers, teachers, telephone fundraisers, retail associates, and fast-food staff. Many customer-facing workers have limited reachability during their workday because they’re accessible only during windows of time that correspond to their breaks. Quite often their friends and family don’t understand the limits on their reachability, and this proves so frustrating that some workers quit their jobs. Other employees hide, often in the bathroom, to respond to those necessary text messages. Managers of these workers have a direct connection with them through their mobile devices. Roommates often work for the same company, and if someone is late for work, his managers not only text him but bug his friends as well.
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30

Stephens, Keri K. Theoretical Notions of Control—A Mobile Tug-of-War. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190625504.003.0004.

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Communication, information, and organizational control are tightly entwined; this chapter explores the theoretical literature that elaborates on these concepts. The early years of car phones and cell phones were a time when people used their devices to reach others. But that changed as smartphones—those with Internet access—started diffusing into organizations and throughout society. Now, people with those same devices could access data and share information in addition to communicating. This chapter focuses on a process perspective on organizational control and links the data from Chapters 1 and 2 to the concepts of agentic, hierarchical, and concertive control. Longitudinal data help illustrate how control is fluid and how these changes resemble a tug-of-war. Control is related to power, so it also discusses different types of power. Often organizations control resources, like mobile information and communication technologies, so power and control might work together in mobile communication.
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31

Stephens, Keri K. You Can’t Assume a Spherical Chicken. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190625504.003.0013.

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Much of the research on mobile communication has been cross-sectional, focused on a single organization at one point in time. White-collar workers are the ones most often studied because they pioneered the use of mobile devices. When they first hear about this research, they’re shocked to learn that everyone doesn’t communicate like they do. People from all backgrounds should realize that their own assumptions can blind them to understanding and being compassionate about differences. It might be a violation of others’ hopes for a colleague or friend to be unreachable during work hours, but people must learn how to have conversations that re-set expectations and allow them to take control over their own time. Finally, armed with this information, human resources and information technology professionals can design BYOD policies that provide the training and support to allow all types of workers to use mobile devices productively.
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32

Hong, Yu. Making a Home-Base Strategy. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040917.003.0005.

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This chapter traces the evolution of mobile communications as a site of China’s “home-base” industrial strategy and, after the 2008 global economic crisis, as part of intensified geopolitical struggle in the techno-economic realm. This chapter, first, historicizes telecom development through successive network generations, starting from fixed-line networks to second-generation and then third-generation mobile networks. As the business ecosystem includes network-equipment production, handset production, and content development and distribution, this chapter, then, explores market-specific trajectories, dynamics, and challenges so as to make sense of varying state actions and the obstacles they faced under the general 3G developmental framework. Lastly, to underscore the state’s diluted interventionist capacity, the coda explores how the 3G mobile communications development has affected state strategies and competitive structures in the 4G era.
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33

Martin, Chuck. The third screen: The ultimate guide to mobile marketing. 2015.

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34

Triandafyllidou, Anna. The Return of the National in a Mobile World. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474428231.003.0002.

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Nations are faced today with a new set of social and economic challenges: economic globalisation has intensified bringing with it a more intense phase of cultural interconnectedness and political interdependence. Globalisation has also further driven and multiplied international flows not only of capitals, goods and services but also of people. National states have seen their capacity to govern undermined by these processes. However, in Europe, the nation continues to be a powerful source of identity and legitimacy. This chapter offers a reflection on the centrifugal and centripetal forces that challenge the nation today and the kind of analytical tools that we need to connect wider socio-economic transformations with nationalism theories. The chapter is organised as follows. I first briefly review globalisation as a socio-economic phenomenon and the changes it brings at the identity level, leading to what Bauman has termed liquid modernity. In section three I am arguing however that the increased and diversified types of international migration and mobility that globalisation brings, lead to the re-emergence of the nation as a relevant point of reference for identification as well as a relevant political community that can protect people and tame the forces of globalisation. Last I am surveying developments in several European countries showing how citizens seek refuge from the social and economic challenges of globalisation and international mobility in the warm embrace of the nation that offers both the promise of political sovereignty and legitimacy and that of a feeling of shared destiny – something that for instance regional formations like the European Union cannot offer.
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35

Information at Sea: Shipboard Command and Control in the U. S. Navy, from Mobile Bay to Okinawa. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013.

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36

Karnik, Niranjan S. Vulnerability, youth, and homelessness: Ethical considerations on the roles of technology in the lives of adolescents and young adults. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198786832.003.0004.

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Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, Instagram … It is easy to see that society is in a tide or successive waves of social media. All of this is linked to mobile technology and the expanding role that it plays in people’s lives. This chapter takes a close look at the role of technology in the lives of young people and more specifically in the lives of vulnerable youth. The first section of this chapter examines the ways that social media and mobile technology impact adolescents and young adults, and considers some of the emerging ethical considerations for mental health clinicians and researchers. Next, it examines subsets of youth who are marginalized, including young people with mental illness or autism, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) youth. Finally, it considers the ethical and neuroethical issues that surround homeless youth and their use of technology.
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37

Lloyd, Ian J. 15. Patents. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198787556.003.0015.

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This chapter focuses upon the somewhat complex manner in which the patent system has operated in respect of so-called software-related inventions. Topics discussed include the Patents Act 1977 and the European Patent Convention; the development of software patent jurisprudence; and the mobile phone patent wars.
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38

Oates, Thomas P. “We Ought to See What We’re Buying”. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252040948.003.0004.

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This chapter details how the mediated NFL draft emerged out of a set of contingencies produced by shifts in sport media industries during the early 1980s. The event grew in popularity by presenting the thorough, extended, and systematic assessment of NFL prospects as entertaining. But this fun has a profound political edge. By framing NFL prospects as transparent, knowable docile bodies, the discourses of the draft present them explicitly as commodities to be compared with each other. Thus positioned, prospects, the vast majority of prospects of whom are black, circulate in ways that revive looking practices that connect the male body, race, commerce, and pleasure. To unpack this process, the chapter proceeds in three parts. The first details how the draft came to be a televised spectacle. This is followed by a discussion of the process by which prospects are presented as docile bodies and explicitly imagined as useful, malleable commodities. I then consider how the dynamics of this market mobilize expressions of erotic desire for commodified black male bodies.
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39

Park, Robert, and S. Brooke Milne. Pre-Dorset Culture. Edited by Max Friesen and Owen Mason. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199766956.013.39.

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This chapter summarizes our current understanding of the widespread and diverse Pre-Dorset culture, known from the central and eastern parts of the Canadian Arctic between 4500 and 2700 B.P. The Pre-Dorset were mobile foragers, moving across the landscape to exploit seasonally available land and sea mammals in different locales, although the extent of their movements varied considerably. The lithic component of their technology has been more intensively studied than the organic component due to differential preservation; it too is characterized by considerable variability. The chapter summarizes the finds from several sites and explores the difficulty in defining Pre-Dorset as a single cohesive entity due both to its history of research and its enormous geographic extent.
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40

Carr, James Revell. Introduction. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038600.003.0001.

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This introductory chapter sets out the book's purpose, which is to show that Hawaiians' musical interactions with Euro-American ships occurred frequently and in great numbers. Native Hawaiians began learning and adapting the music of the sailors and whalers, from sea chanteys to minstrel songs, from the time of Cook's arrival. These musical interactions were central to the development of syncretic Hawaiian music in the late nineteenth century, but they also contributed to the development of seamen's songs, ballads, and chanteys. Most important, this book shows that Hawaiians in the nineteenth century were extremely mobile and cosmopolitan, far from the image of primitive, isolated islanders popularized by the tourism industry. An overview of the subsequent chapters is also presented.
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41

Mobil Travel Guide: Nascar Travel Planner : The Best Places to See, Stay, EAT Around 31 Nascar-sanctioned Tracks Featured. Nascar Librery Collection, 2005.

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42

Livermore, Roy. Poles Apart. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198717867.003.0004.

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In just a few years, the magnetic bar-code secreted beneath the world’s oceans had provided detailed intelligence on the motions of the plates. When combined with other data from the sea floor, this allowed geophysicists to reconstruct the history of entire ocean basins following the rifting of Pangea. Some folk, however, are never happy, and ‘glass-half-empty’ types might well have complained that, impressive as all this was, it accounted for less than 200 million of the 4500 million years of Earth history, i.e. just 4%. What about that other 96%? Did plate tectonics operate through part or all of this long history and, in any case, how could you ever know, since the evidence had all been shredded by the closure of earlier oceans? There was hope: the same process that had so conveniently sequestered the recent history of the plates in the sea floor had also been at work throughout much of earlier geological time, recording the story in rocks onshore. By comparison with the high-definition picture of plate motions offered by bar-codes and fracture zones, this recording was monochrome, fuzzy, and incomplete. Yet, by the mid-1950s, it had already provided conclusive evidence that continents were truly mobile. Curiously, hardly anyone noticed.
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43

Baecker, Ronald M. Computers and Society. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198827085.001.0001.

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The last century has seen enormous leaps in the development of digital technologies, and most aspects of modern life have changed significantly with their widespread availability and use. Technology at various scales - supercomputers, corporate networks, desktop and laptop computers, the internet, tablets, mobile phones, and processors that are hidden in everyday devices and are so small you can barely see them with the naked eye - all pervade our world in a major way. Computers and Society: Modern Perspectives is a wide-ranging and comprehensive textbook that critically assesses the global technical achievements in digital technologies and how are they are applied in media; education and learning; medicine and health; free speech, democracy, and government; and war and peace. Ronald M. Baecker reviews critical ethical issues raised by computers, such as digital inclusion, security, safety, privacy,automation, and work, and discusses social, political, and ethical controversies and choices now faced by society. Particular attention is paid to new and exciting developments in artificial intelligence and machine learning, and the issues that have arisen from our complex relationship with AI.
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44

Godley, Andrew. Migration of Entrepreneurs. Edited by Anuradha Basu, Mark Casson, Nigel Wadeson, and Bernard Yeung. Oxford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199546992.003.0022.

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In the classical and neoclassical economists' development of the theory of entrepreneurship, little role was allocated to one of the more obvious empirical observations of entrepreneurial behaviour: entrepreneurs have always been highly mobile individuals. This omission may of course have been because the focus of so much attention among nineteenth-century economists was on the dramatic events then unfolding in the industrializing regions of Britain and the United States, before then spreading further afield. This article reviews the literature on immigrant entrepreneurship, focusing especially on recently published investigations of historic cases, before making some theoretical observations and suggesting areas for further research.
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45

Einstein, Mara. Advertising. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/wentk/9780190625887.001.0001.

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3000. That's the number of marketing messages the average American confronts on a daily basis from TV commercials, magazine and newspaper print ads, radio commercials, pop-up ads on gaming apps, to pre-roll on YouTube videos and native advertising on mobile news apps. These commercial messages are so pervasive that we cannot help but be affected by perpetual come-ons to keeping buying. Over the last decade, advertising has become more devious, more digital, and more deceptive, with an increasing number of ads designed to appear to the untrained eye to be editorial content. It's easy to see why. As we have become smarter at avoiding ads, advertisers have become smarter about disguising them. Mara Einstein exposes how our shopping, political and even dating preferences are unwittingly formed by brand images and the mythologies embedded in them. Advertising: What Everyone Needs to Know® helps us combat the effects of manipulative advertising, and enables the reader to understand how marketing industries work in the digital age, particularly in their uses and abuses of Big Data. Most importantly, it awakens us to advertising's subtle and not so subtle impact on our lives-both as individuals and as a global society. What ideas and information are being communicated to us-and to what end?
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46

Gunn, Steven. The making of Tudor England. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199659838.003.0018.

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The new men’s role in Henry VII’s regime must be set amid the contribution made to his reign by other royal councillors and servants, bishops, lesser clerics, peers, and courtiers. Yet their efforts did much to give his government its distinctive flavour. Their careers as upwardly mobile agents of royal power were not unprecedented, but were notable in their impact, paralleled those of their contemporaries in other European polities, and foreshadowed those of later sixteenth-century statesmen. Their importance was evident to those interpreting Henry’s reign in the decades that followed, into the generations of Holinshed and Stow, Shakespeare, and Bacon. Critical contemporaries were right that they mixed self-help liberally with public service, but they were central to the making of Tudor England.
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47

Land.Technik 2018. VDI Verlag, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.51202/9783181023327.

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Inhalt Plenarvorträge Wissenschaft für die Gesellschaft – Die Universität Hohenheim gestern – heute – morgen 1 K. Huber, Universität Hohenheim, Stuttgart Entwicklung von IT-Lösungen für die Landwirtschaft – Warum ist es so schwierig, die Landwirtschaft zu digitalisieren? 5 A. Prankl, FARMDOK GmbH, Wieselburg, Österreich Prozessdatenerfassung Verfahrenssimulation zur Ermittlung von Maschineneinsatzzeiten auf landwirtschaftlichen Betrieben 7 L. Trösken, S. Steinhaus, L. Frerichs, Technische Universität Braunschweig – Institut für mobile Maschinen und Nutzfahrzeuge, Braunschweig Vergleich von Treibhausgasemissionen der Milcherzeugung und der Rohmilchlogistik zur nachhaltigen Milcherzeugerakquise für Molkereien – Wie kann die Rohmilch am nachhaltigsten erzeugt und zur Molkerei transportiert werden? 17 M. Schmid, S. Wörz, O. Hijazi, H. Bernhardt, Lehrstuhl für Agrarsystemtechnik, Freising Automatisierte Zeiterfassung und Zeitgliederung bei landwi...
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48

Taberlet, Pierre, Aurélie Bonin, Lucie Zinger, and Eric Coissac. DNA extraction. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198767220.003.0005.

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Chapter 5 “DNA extraction” focuses on the particularities and practical constraints associated with the isolation of eDNA from environmental samples. The extraction protocol is indeed crucial in eDNA studies, as it will determine whether extracellular, intracellular, or total DNA is targeted. Chapter 5 describes the main advantages and limitations of the most popular extraction kits aimed at obtaining DNA from soil, sediment, litter, feces, or water. It provides a detailed protocol for DNA extraction from soil samples using a saturated phosphate buffer. This protocol has been optimized for an easy implementation in the field using a mobile laboratory, so the material and consumables necessary are also listed.
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49

Stark, Johanna. Law for Sale. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198839491.001.0001.

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The book focuses on the philosophical underpinnings, problems, and consequences of regulatory competition. The term ‘regulatory competition’ describes a dynamic in which states as producers of legal rules compete for the favour of mobile consumers of their legal products. Besides discussing regulatory competition, a factual phenomenon, identifying the structural conditions for law markets to occur and referring to particular fields of law where competitive dynamics among legislators can be observed, arguments critical of regulatory competition as a policy approach are presented from the perspective of political theory and philosophy. These arguments provide a clearer picture of the incompatibilities between the theoretical pedigree of regulatory competition—the assumptions we must accept in order to see its promises and its appeal—and other sets of beliefs and commitments that shape our thinking about law and the state. They come to the conclusion that the existence of so-called ‘law markets’ that come with a commodification of law itself is at odds with both our conception of the functions of legal rules and of key political ideals and principles such as democracy, state autonomy, and political authority.
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50

Wilson, Keeley. The Astronomer’s Perspective. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198777199.003.0009.

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This concluding chapter, which is more conceptual than descriptive, reflects on the fact that a few key decisions made in the early 1990s explain Nokia’s success, while decisions mostly made in the 2001–5 period and often based on heuristics inherited from the past, largely shaped Nokia’s subsequent decline. These latter decisions set in motion a course of events leading to a stunted evolution toward strategic stasis, and made escaping from it all but impossible. As a way to summarize the main findings and conceptual implications from the research, the chapter returns to the research questions raised in Chapter 1—whether Nokia’s decline was the result of management volition, stunted evolution, or environmental selection—and shows how analyzing and conceptualizing the story of Nokia in mobile phones helps address these and sheds valuable light on their managerial implications.
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