Marketing has transformed to satisfy
this changing technological culture.
Not exact matches
While each travel and expense policy must reflect the specific goals and
culture of an organization, the most effective ones are sturdy enough to help drive the objectives of the organization while remaining sufficiently flexible to encompass industry
changes and
technological developments.
Today's rapidity of
change (
technological, symbolic, metaphorical, communicative) challenges us to reflect and communicate about faith within
changing Church communities in
changing cultures.
In this we can again distinguish the scientific and
technological changes brought about in modern times, alongside a humanistic
culture and the unification of the world under capitalistic globalization.
When that
culture started
changing in the early 20th century, the small «c» church didn't
change with it but kept redoubling its efforts in the 19th century mode (albeit w / some modern
technological updates).
Technological change, above all, doomed the fight for decency in American popular
culture, as every successive
technological innovation weakened the power of regulators, moral and otherwise, while expanding the venues where human weakness could be exploited for fun and profit (mainly the latter).
What is considered inedible varies among users (e.g., chicken feet are consumed in some food supply chains but not others),
changes over time, and is influenced by a range of variables including
culture, socio - economic factors, availability, price,
technological advances, international trade, and geography.
«They have limited
technological capacities and finances, which have certain implications on
culture that are irreversible — giving up their private land,
changing customs and moving elsewhere.»
One of the open secrets of the life sciences used to be that 99 % of all bacterial species couldn't be
cultured in the lab - but all of a sudden and with a comparatively simple
technological advance, that has
changed.
In his thoughtful analysis of the unprecedented
technological changes in contemporary
culture, Gardner wisely posits a symbiosis of the old with the new.
Though some observers, including multiple - intelligences guru Howard Gardner, point to schools as the «conservators» of our
culture, and therefore instinctively conservative in what they do, the resistance comes more from the fact that our public school system has evolved an extremely delicate balance between many sets of pressures — political, parental, social, organizational, supervisory, and financial — that any
technological change is bound to disrupt.
The stories forged in Israel that the entire world has come to know have
changed people and nations and inspired countless works of art, music, literature, speech, science, and valor for thousands of years; and today, Israel's
technological innovation, diverse
culture, and ongoing adventure captivate millions of visitors every year.
As
culture shifts, moving with
changes in the social and political landscape or
technological innovations, so does the art being produced.
Italian architect Ippolito Pestellini Laparelli, partner at OMA working on preservation, scenography and curation, is both leading OMA Urban Studies, as well as the team of creative mediators, which includes the Swiss contemporary art curator Mirjam Varadinis, who works in Kunsthaus Zurich and was co-curator of TRACK, a large scale city - wide international exhibition in the tradition of «Chambres d'amis» in Ghent, Belgium; Spanish architect, artist and scholar based in New York and Madrid, Andrés Jaque, the founder of the Office of Political Innovation, working on the intersection of research, politics and design; and Dutch filmmaker and journalist Bregtje van der Haak, who has been directing international documentaries and transmedia projects on long - term social
change with a special focus on urbanisation and
technological culture.
Since 1997, she has been directing international documentaries and transmedia projects on long - term social
change with a special focus on urbanization and
technological culture.
As Slaw readers will know, one of the themes that recurs here quite frequently is the role of publishing and books in this
culture of rapid
technological change.
A traditional working
culture may also be holding law firms back from embracing
technological change: roughly 87 % of those surveyed said they still use pen and paper for completing legal work.
The social
changes of the last generation fostered by globalization and the
technological transformations in communication systems have significantly
changed the young minds of the country and augmented the exposure to western
culture, which promotes liberal attitude in gender mix and premarital relationship.