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Wiki: Web Collaboration

Anja Ebersbach Markus Glaser Richard Heigl

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

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Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Information Systems Applications (incl. Internet); Multimedia Information Systems; Document Preparation and Text Processing; Media Design

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2006 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-540-25995-4

ISBN electrónico

978-3-540-29267-8

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2006

Tabla de contenidos

Working with TWiki

Anja Ebersbach; Markus Glaser; Richard Heigl

The question whether supply or demand is holding back the growth of the venture capital market is not new. However, for Germany it has not been contemplated seriously in the literature so far. In terms of the design of an effective public policy aimed at fostering venture capital activity, this is most unfortunate. After all, if we do not even know where the bottleneck lies, how can we design policies to help widen it, other than by relying on pure luck? Even more troubling, it appears that public policy for venture capital has been seriously and systematically misguided in the past. As was laid out in chapter 4.4, all governmental initiatives have so far by and large met with little, if any, success. It is little comfort, then, that similar schemes have not yielded the envisioned positive results on the other side of the Atlantic, either: “In the United States, programs like the Department of Commerce’s Advanced Technology Program (ATP) have disbursed over $1 billion to small high-technology businesses over the past ten years, with few tangible results.”

III. - TWiki, the Jack of all Trades | Pp. 167-180

Formatting in TWiki

Anja Ebersbach; Markus Glaser; Richard Heigl

The question whether supply or demand is holding back the growth of the venture capital market is not new. However, for Germany it has not been contemplated seriously in the literature so far. In terms of the design of an effective public policy aimed at fostering venture capital activity, this is most unfortunate. After all, if we do not even know where the bottleneck lies, how can we design policies to help widen it, other than by relying on pure luck? Even more troubling, it appears that public policy for venture capital has been seriously and systematically misguided in the past. As was laid out in chapter 4.4, all governmental initiatives have so far by and large met with little, if any, success. It is little comfort, then, that similar schemes have not yielded the envisioned positive results on the other side of the Atlantic, either: “In the United States, programs like the Department of Commerce’s Advanced Technology Program (ATP) have disbursed over $1 billion to small high-technology businesses over the past ten years, with few tangible results.”

III. - TWiki, the Jack of all Trades | Pp. 181-192

Searching in TWiki

Anja Ebersbach; Markus Glaser; Richard Heigl

The question whether supply or demand is holding back the growth of the venture capital market is not new. However, for Germany it has not been contemplated seriously in the literature so far. In terms of the design of an effective public policy aimed at fostering venture capital activity, this is most unfortunate. After all, if we do not even know where the bottleneck lies, how can we design policies to help widen it, other than by relying on pure luck? Even more troubling, it appears that public policy for venture capital has been seriously and systematically misguided in the past. As was laid out in chapter 4.4, all governmental initiatives have so far by and large met with little, if any, success. It is little comfort, then, that similar schemes have not yielded the envisioned positive results on the other side of the Atlantic, either: “In the United States, programs like the Department of Commerce’s Advanced Technology Program (ATP) have disbursed over $1 billion to small high-technology businesses over the past ten years, with few tangible results.”

III. - TWiki, the Jack of all Trades | Pp. 193-203

User Permissions in TWiki

Anja Ebersbach; Markus Glaser; Richard Heigl

The question whether supply or demand is holding back the growth of the venture capital market is not new. However, for Germany it has not been contemplated seriously in the literature so far. In terms of the design of an effective public policy aimed at fostering venture capital activity, this is most unfortunate. After all, if we do not even know where the bottleneck lies, how can we design policies to help widen it, other than by relying on pure luck? Even more troubling, it appears that public policy for venture capital has been seriously and systematically misguided in the past. As was laid out in chapter 4.4, all governmental initiatives have so far by and large met with little, if any, success. It is little comfort, then, that similar schemes have not yielded the envisioned positive results on the other side of the Atlantic, either: “In the United States, programs like the Department of Commerce’s Advanced Technology Program (ATP) have disbursed over $1 billion to small high-technology businesses over the past ten years, with few tangible results.”

III. - TWiki, the Jack of all Trades | Pp. 205-217

Administering TWiki

Anja Ebersbach; Markus Glaser; Richard Heigl

The question whether supply or demand is holding back the growth of the venture capital market is not new. However, for Germany it has not been contemplated seriously in the literature so far. In terms of the design of an effective public policy aimed at fostering venture capital activity, this is most unfortunate. After all, if we do not even know where the bottleneck lies, how can we design policies to help widen it, other than by relying on pure luck? Even more troubling, it appears that public policy for venture capital has been seriously and systematically misguided in the past. As was laid out in chapter 4.4, all governmental initiatives have so far by and large met with little, if any, success. It is little comfort, then, that similar schemes have not yielded the envisioned positive results on the other side of the Atlantic, either: “In the United States, programs like the Department of Commerce’s Advanced Technology Program (ATP) have disbursed over $1 billion to small high-technology businesses over the past ten years, with few tangible results.”

III. - TWiki, the Jack of all Trades | Pp. 219-232

Designing a TWiki

Anja Ebersbach; Markus Glaser; Richard Heigl

The question whether supply or demand is holding back the growth of the venture capital market is not new. However, for Germany it has not been contemplated seriously in the literature so far. In terms of the design of an effective public policy aimed at fostering venture capital activity, this is most unfortunate. After all, if we do not even know where the bottleneck lies, how can we design policies to help widen it, other than by relying on pure luck? Even more troubling, it appears that public policy for venture capital has been seriously and systematically misguided in the past. As was laid out in chapter 4.4, all governmental initiatives have so far by and large met with little, if any, success. It is little comfort, then, that similar schemes have not yielded the envisioned positive results on the other side of the Atlantic, either: “In the United States, programs like the Department of Commerce’s Advanced Technology Program (ATP) have disbursed over $1 billion to small high-technology businesses over the past ten years, with few tangible results.”

III. - TWiki, the Jack of all Trades | Pp. 233-252

Preliminary Thoughts

Anja Ebersbach; Markus Glaser; Richard Heigl

The question whether supply or demand is holding back the growth of the venture capital market is not new. However, for Germany it has not been contemplated seriously in the literature so far. In terms of the design of an effective public policy aimed at fostering venture capital activity, this is most unfortunate. After all, if we do not even know where the bottleneck lies, how can we design policies to help widen it, other than by relying on pure luck? Even more troubling, it appears that public policy for venture capital has been seriously and systematically misguided in the past. As was laid out in chapter 4.4, all governmental initiatives have so far by and large met with little, if any, success. It is little comfort, then, that similar schemes have not yielded the envisioned positive results on the other side of the Atlantic, either: “In the United States, programs like the Department of Commerce’s Advanced Technology Program (ATP) have disbursed over $1 billion to small high-technology businesses over the past ten years, with few tangible results.”

IV. - TWiki as a Project Kit | Pp. 255-264

Conceptual Phase: Collecting Ideas and Outlining the Project

Anja Ebersbach; Markus Glaser; Richard Heigl

The question whether supply or demand is holding back the growth of the venture capital market is not new. However, for Germany it has not been contemplated seriously in the literature so far. In terms of the design of an effective public policy aimed at fostering venture capital activity, this is most unfortunate. After all, if we do not even know where the bottleneck lies, how can we design policies to help widen it, other than by relying on pure luck? Even more troubling, it appears that public policy for venture capital has been seriously and systematically misguided in the past. As was laid out in chapter 4.4, all governmental initiatives have so far by and large met with little, if any, success. It is little comfort, then, that similar schemes have not yielded the envisioned positive results on the other side of the Atlantic, either: “In the United States, programs like the Department of Commerce’s Advanced Technology Program (ATP) have disbursed over $1 billion to small high-technology businesses over the past ten years, with few tangible results.”

IV. - TWiki as a Project Kit | Pp. 265-277

Composing the Project Plan

Anja Ebersbach; Markus Glaser; Richard Heigl

The question whether supply or demand is holding back the growth of the venture capital market is not new. However, for Germany it has not been contemplated seriously in the literature so far. In terms of the design of an effective public policy aimed at fostering venture capital activity, this is most unfortunate. After all, if we do not even know where the bottleneck lies, how can we design policies to help widen it, other than by relying on pure luck? Even more troubling, it appears that public policy for venture capital has been seriously and systematically misguided in the past. As was laid out in chapter 4.4, all governmental initiatives have so far by and large met with little, if any, success. It is little comfort, then, that similar schemes have not yielded the envisioned positive results on the other side of the Atlantic, either: “In the United States, programs like the Department of Commerce’s Advanced Technology Program (ATP) have disbursed over $1 billion to small high-technology businesses over the past ten years, with few tangible results.”

IV. - TWiki as a Project Kit | Pp. 279-305

Preparing for Your Event

Anja Ebersbach; Markus Glaser; Richard Heigl

The question whether supply or demand is holding back the growth of the venture capital market is not new. However, for Germany it has not been contemplated seriously in the literature so far. In terms of the design of an effective public policy aimed at fostering venture capital activity, this is most unfortunate. After all, if we do not even know where the bottleneck lies, how can we design policies to help widen it, other than by relying on pure luck? Even more troubling, it appears that public policy for venture capital has been seriously and systematically misguided in the past. As was laid out in chapter 4.4, all governmental initiatives have so far by and large met with little, if any, success. It is little comfort, then, that similar schemes have not yielded the envisioned positive results on the other side of the Atlantic, either: “In the United States, programs like the Department of Commerce’s Advanced Technology Program (ATP) have disbursed over $1 billion to small high-technology businesses over the past ten years, with few tangible results.”

IV. - TWiki as a Project Kit | Pp. 307-317