The Joy of Efficiency

The Joy of Efficiency
Author: Paul Westbrook
Publisher:
Total Pages: 198
Release: 2019-07-16
Genre:
ISBN: 9781733956307

Do you have enough time? Do you have enough money? Efficiency is a way to get more of both. It's not a compromise; it's an optimization that makes everything better. It's a way to live more lightly on the planet, and at the same time to live more comfortably. It's quality verses quantity.Efficiency rewards you the way a financial investment grows. Just as compound interest allows your money to grow over time, efficiency's benefits continue to accumulate. Efficiency has a better return with a higher guarantee than any financial investment. To get results just replace some old, bad habits with new, better ones.This book has three major sections. 1. The first third can help you organize your life so you have more time and money.2. The middle third will help you build or buy a better house. This section includes many practical details to help you design a new home or improve the efficiency of your existing one.3. If you work in a corporation and want to improve your buildings, systems, or work processes, then the final third is for you.Could you use more joy in your life? The tips in this book could provide the secret you've been missing - the joy of efficiency.

The Ascent of Market Efficiency

The Ascent of Market Efficiency
Author: Simone Polillo
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 139
Release: 2020-08-15
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1501750380

The Ascent of Market Efficiency weaves together historical narrative and quantitative bibliometric data to detail the path financial economists took in order to form one of the central theories of financial economics—the influential efficient-market hypothesis—which states that the behavior of financial markets is unpredictable. As the notorious quip goes, a blindfolded monkey would do better than a group of experts in selecting a portfolio of securities, simply by throwing darts at the financial pages of a newspaper. How did such a hypothesis come to be so influential in the field of financial economics? How did financial economists turn a lack of evidence about systematic patterns in the behavior of financial markets into a foundational approach to the study of finance? Each chapter in Simone Polillo's fascinating meld of economics, science, and sociology focuses on these questions, as well as on collaborative academic networks, and on the values and affects that kept the networks together as they struggled to define what the new field of financial economics should be about. In doing so, he introduces a new dimension—data analysis—to our understanding of the ways knowledge advances. There are patterns in the ways knowledge is produced, and The Ascent of Market Efficiency helps us make sense of these patterns by providing a general framework that can be applied equally to other social and human sciences.

Production Line Efficiency

Production Line Efficiency
Author: Sabry Shaaban
Publisher: Business Expert Press
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2010-05-28
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1606491563

This book covers the area of unpaced, unbalanced production lines. You will find an up-to-date discussion of how designing these lines can be made more efficient by taking advantage of inherent imbalance -- for example operators who work at different speeds- a concept which has traditionally been seen as an obstacle to efficient production. A series of experiments are presented to illustrate the issues involved in improving performance through production line imbalance. This area is of interest to postgraduate and executive level students interested in the area of production, and to managers of manual or semi-automated production lines who are interested in innovative approaches to line design. In this book you will find some surprisingly easy ways to improve performance with low or zero costs. Emphasis is placed on reducing the amount of time production lines lie idle, and on reducing work in process. This is a timely contribution to the field when managers are casting around for new ways to cut waste and reduce their use of natural resources.

The Efficiency Paradox

The Efficiency Paradox
Author: Edward Tenner
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 314
Release: 2018-04-17
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0525520309

A "skillful and lucid" (The Wall Street Journal) way of thinking about efficiency, challenging our obsession with it—and offering a new understanding of how to benefit from the powerful potential of serendipity. Algorithms, multitasking, the sharing economy, life hacks: our culture can't get enough of efficiency. One of the great promises of the Internet and big data revolutions is the idea that we can improve the processes and routines of our work and personal lives to get more done in less time than we ever have before. There is no doubt that we're performing at higher levels and moving at unprecedented speed, but what if we're headed in the wrong direction? Melding the long-term history of technology with the latest headlines and findings of computer science and social science, The Efficiency Paradox questions our ingrained assumptions about efficiency, persuasively showing how relying on the algorithms of digital platforms can in fact lead to wasted efforts, missed opportunities, and, above all, an inability to break out of established patterns. Edward Tenner reveals what we and our institutions, when equipped with an astute combination of artificial intelligence and trained intuition, can learn from the random and unexpected.

Getting Things Done

Getting Things Done
Author: David Allen
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 354
Release: 2015-03-17
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0698161866

The book Lifehack calls "The Bible of business and personal productivity." "A completely revised and updated edition of the blockbuster bestseller from 'the personal productivity guru'"—Fast Company Since it was first published almost fifteen years ago, David Allen’s Getting Things Done has become one of the most influential business books of its era, and the ultimate book on personal organization. “GTD” is now shorthand for an entire way of approaching professional and personal tasks, and has spawned an entire culture of websites, organizational tools, seminars, and offshoots. Allen has rewritten the book from start to finish, tweaking his classic text with important perspectives on the new workplace, and adding material that will make the book fresh and relevant for years to come. This new edition of Getting Things Done will be welcomed not only by its hundreds of thousands of existing fans but also by a whole new generation eager to adopt its proven principles.

Foundations of Quantization for Probability Distributions

Foundations of Quantization for Probability Distributions
Author: Siegfried Graf
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 734
Release: 2000-05-16
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 9783540673941

Due to the rapidly increasing need for methods of data compression, quantization has become a flourishing field in signal and image processing and information theory. The same techniques are also used in statistics (cluster analysis), pattern recognition, and operations research (optimal location of service centers). The book gives the first mathematically rigorous account of the fundamental theory underlying these applications. The emphasis is on the asymptotics of quantization errors for absolutely continuous and special classes of singular probabilities (surface measures, self-similar measures) presenting some new results for the first time. Written for researchers and graduate students in probability theory the monograph is of potential interest to all people working in the disciplines mentioned above.

The Human Society and the Internet: Internet Related Socio-Economic Issues

The Human Society and the Internet: Internet Related Socio-Economic Issues
Author: Won Kim
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 485
Release: 2003-06-29
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 3540477497

During the past several years, the world has entered the first phase of the Internet Revolution. Investors showed confidence and faith in the prospects of the Internet driven economy. In the US alone, some 30,000 dot com companies have sprung up to support electronic commerce with a wide variety of business models, technologies, and/or items or services to sell or even give away. Traditional businesses, so called brick and mortar, or offline, businesses, have started to respond to challenges by Internet based new competitors by augmenting their own businesses with Internet based, or online, businesses and/or filing lawsuits against them. The initial business to consumer orientation of electronic commerce is giving way to business to business commerce, with large corporations forming electronic exchanges or consortia to conduct commerce among members. Government, industry, and civic groups have started addressing social issues related to the Internet, such as taxation on electronic commerce, privacy, intellectual property rights, security, hacking, cyber crimes, digital divide, etc. Governments have started legitimizing electronic signatures and stepping up efforts to track down perpetrators of cyber crimes. The courts have started to wrestle with issues of privacy, intellectual property rights, crimes, and impediments to Internet driven economy.

When More Is Not Better

When More Is Not Better
Author: Roger L. Martin
Publisher: Harvard Business Press
Total Pages: 206
Release: 2020-09-29
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1647820073

American democratic capitalism is in danger. How can we save it? For its first two hundred years, the American economy exhibited truly impressive performance. The combination of democratically elected governments and a capitalist system worked, with ever-increasing levels of efficiency spurred by division of labor, international trade, and scientific management of companies. By the nation's bicentennial celebration in 1976, the American economy was the envy of the world. But since then, outcomes have changed dramatically. Growth in the economic prosperity of the average American family has slowed to a crawl, while the wealth of the richest Americans has skyrocketed. This imbalance threatens the American democratic capitalist system and our way of life. In this bracing yet constructive book, world-renowned business thinker Roger Martin starkly outlines the fundamental problem: We have treated the economy as a machine, pursuing ever-greater efficiency as an inherent good. But efficiency has become too much of a good thing. Our obsession with it has inadvertently shifted the shape of our economy, from a large middle class and smaller numbers of rich and poor (think of a bell-shaped curve) to a greater share of benefits accruing to a thin tail of already-rich Americans (a Pareto distribution). With lucid analysis and engaging anecdotes, Martin argues that we must stop treating the economy as a perfectible machine and shift toward viewing it as a complex adaptive system in which we seek a fundamental balance of efficiency with resilience. To achieve this, we need to keep in mind the whole while working on the component parts; pursue improvement, not perfection; and relentlessly tweak instead of attempting to find permanent solutions. Filled with keen economic insight and advice for citizens, executives, policy makers, and educators, When More Is Not Better is the must-read guide for saving democratic capitalism.

An Introduction to Thermodynamics

An Introduction to Thermodynamics
Author: Robert Simpson Silver
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 174
Release: 1971-05-02
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0521080649

This 1971 book offers a different, more practical approach to the standard industry textbook.

The Collected Scientific Work of David Cass

The Collected Scientific Work of David Cass
Author: David Cass
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing
Total Pages: 394
Release: 2011-01-26
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0857246410

Consists of David Cass' early work from his time in graduate school at Stanford University, studying under Hirofumi Uzawa, and as an assistant professor at Yale's Cowles Commission, and his tenure at Carnegie Mellon University's Graduate School of Industrial Administration.