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Globalization is taking a step backward. What, then, is the best way to organize a global enterprise? The key, Steven Weber explains, is to prepare for a world increasingly made up of competing regions with distinct rules and standards. This new condition could be more prosperous, but there will also be more friction and therefore more risk.
Presents a framework for computing the outage probability (OP) and transmission capacity (TC) in a wireless network. This volume gives a unified treatment of the TC framework that has been developed by the authors and their collaborators over the past decade.
Free-market capitalism, hegemony, Western culture, peace, and democracy-ideas that shaped world politics in the 20th century and underpinned American foreign policy-have lost their strength. Hegemony (benign or otherwise) is no longer a choice. The authors argue that in the 21st century the U.S. must rely on strategy, make trade-offs, and compete.
Weber argues that ensuring free distribution of code among computer programmers can create a more effective process for developing intellectual products. He suggests that the success of open source is not a freakish exception to economic principles and explains the political and economic dynamics of this critical market development.
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