Los grandes centros comerciales viven una etapa dorada y son el activo más deseado del sector inmobiliario. En lo que va de año, se han cerrado compras por más de 1.600 millones. Se esperan movimientos por 3.500 millones de euros más.
Son el rey del sector inmobiliario. Ya sean de menor tamaño o de grandes dimensiones, localizados en las afueras de grandes capitales o en el centro de pequeñas ciudades, los centros comerciales protagonizan la mayoría de las inversiones inmobiliarias en España.
Hetel osatzen duten ikastetxeetako Lanbide Heziketako berrikuntza teknologikoaren kudeaketa programaren barnean, BeTEKu (Berrikuntza Teknologikoaren Kudeaketa) metodologia sustatzen ari da. Ikastetxe bakoitza teknologia batean erreferentea da eta bere xedea da teknologia horren garapenean lider izatea eta Euskal Herriko gainontzeko Lanbide Heziketako zentroetara eta inguruko enpresetara hedatzea.
Mondragon Goi Eskola Politeknikoa HETELen barnean dagoenez, BeTEKu metodologia mikrofresaketa eta mikromekanizazio teknologietan erabiltzen ari dira, hainbat heziketa zikloetarako material didaktikoa sortzeko.
The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed between the European Commission and the European Investment Bank (EIB) has paved the way for improved access to finance for investments in Key Enabling Technologies (KETs).
The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) was signed at the inaugural meeting of the High-Level Group on Key Enabling Technologies.
Former European Commission Vice-President Antonio Tajani, responsible for industry and entrepreneurship, and Vice-President Philippe de Fontaine Vive, responsible for innovation at the Bank, stressed that the agreement sent a strong signal that KETs should be a priority investment area in Europe.
The High-Level Group (HLG) on Key Enabling Technologies (KETs) that met in January 2014 presented the document ‘KETs for a competitive Europe’.
The document:
summarises the importance of KETs for Europe;
analyses the state of implementation of the European strategy for KETs;
provides an overview of the remaining bottlenecks;
outlines the way forward.
It was drafted for the discussion on industrial competitiveness held at the March European Summit (see European Council Conclusions 20/21 March below).
In 2015, hospitals will – and should – make more advanced use of "third platform" technologies based on mobile tools, social channels, data analytics and the cloud, according to a recent report from IDC Health Insights.
With healthcare costs unsustainable, but these new technologies now ubiquitous, IDC officials say hospital CIOs will increasingly be turning to new tools – especially as consumers expect healthcare to be as responsive to their wants and needs as other industries.
By 2050, one-third of the world’s energy will need to come from renewable sources, like solar or wind. No, this isn’t a statement made by environmental organizations, but by two of the world’s largest oil companies, British Petroleum (BP) and Shell.
For countries like Iceland, which is already generating 100 percent of its energy from renewable sources, that statistic doesn’t sound ominous, but for the majority of the world’s countries who are still dependent on fossil fuels, it’s time to start thinking about what will power mankind’s way forward.
One of the joys of roughing it in nature is the disconnect from today’s constant technology. However, the silent bliss for some is a bothersome inconvenience for others, which is why the creators of a new technology sought out a power solution to strike a balance between the two. Lovers of nature and technology, meet the KaliPAK, the portable renewable energy generator.
The first wave of Internet disruption enabled purely digital products to be sold and delivered online. New digital players grabbed the opportunity to distribute news, music, movies, and so on online and deliver only what people wanted to consume, even if that meant just a portion of the full content. In recent years, a new wave of digital disruption has been taking over the web. This second wave is characterized by the separation of consumption activities that traditionally went together, hand-in-hand, such as TV shows and advertising. The authors term this process of separating jointly consumed activities as "decoupling." Decoupling is the breaking of links between consumer activities that have traditionally been done together.