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The Age Of Discontinuity

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The article was published on 1968-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 752 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Discontinuity (geotechnical engineering).

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Personal computing acceptance factors in small firms: a structural equation model

TL;DR: The findings indicate that perceived ease of use is a dominant factor in explaining perceived usefulness and system usage, and that perceived usefulness has a strong effect on system usage.
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Theories of the Information Society

TL;DR: Webster as discussed by the authors examines what thinkers mean by an information society, and looks closely at different approaches to informational developments, concluding that, while there has undoubtedly been an information explosion, it is premature to conceive of an Information Society.
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Origin and theoretical basis of new public management

TL;DR: The authors describes the characteristics of New Public Management (NPM) and gives a cursory overview of the development of the behavioral-administrative sciences and their relation to NPM, concluding that there will never be one paradigm for the behavioral administrator sciences; and without an accepted paradigm, a paradigm change is not really possible.
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The Nature and Design of Post-Industrial Organizations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the nature and design of post-industrial organizations, and examine designs for making more effective three processes that will exhibit increased importance in post industrial organizations: decision-making, innovation, and information acquisition and distribution.
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The contrasting interaction effects of improvisational behavior with entrepreneurial self-efficacy on new venture performance and entrepreneur work satisfaction

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the moderating effect of entrepreneurial self-efficacy on the relationship of founders' improvisational behavior with both the performance of their startups and their individual level of work satisfaction using a national (United States) random sample of 159 entrepreneurs.