-
Featured services
Think beyond the robots
The successful integration of AI and IoT in manufacturing will depend on effective change management, upskilling and rethinking business models.
Read the blog -
Services
Nutzen Sie unsere Fähigkeiten, um die Transformation Ihres Unternehmens zu beschleunigen.
-
Services
Network-Services
Beliebte Produkte
-
Private 5G
Unser Cloud-nativer Secure-by-Design-Ansatz gewährleistet eine 24/7-Überwachung durch unsere Global Operations Centers, die Ihre Netzwerke und Geräte auf einer „As-a-Service“-Basis verwalten.
-
Verwaltete Campus-Netzwerke
Unsere Managed Campus Networks Services transformieren Campusnetzwerke, Unternehmensnetzwerke sowie miteinander verbundene lokale Netzwerke und vernetzen intelligente Orte und Branchen.
-
-
Services
Cloud and IT Infrastructure Services
Beliebte Produkte
-
Cloud Transformation Services
Finden Sie heraus, wie Sie die Leistungsfähigkeit der Cloud nutzen können, um die Agilität und die Effizienz in Ihrem Unternehmen zu steigern.
-
Private Cloud
So können Sie sicherstellen, dass geschäftskritische Systeme hochverfügbar sind und Sie die volle Kontrolle über die Sicherheit, Compliance und Leistung Ihrer Infrastruktur haben.
-
-
Edge as a Service
-
Services
Software defined Infrastructure Services
-
Services
Global Data Centers
-
Services
Digital Collaboration and CX
Beliebte Produkte
-
CX Managed Services
Überbrücken Sie Lücken bei Fähigkeiten, Wissen und Fertigkeiten, um eine außergewöhnliche Kundenzufriedenheit zu erreichen, die die Bedürfnisse Ihrer Kunden in einem sich schnell entwickelnden und wettbewerbsintensiven Umfeld erfüllt.
-
Digital Events
Von virtuellen Events, Webcasts und Webinaren bis hin zu Broadcasting- und Audiokonferenzen – unsere skalierbaren Lösungen vergrößern die Wirkung Ihrer digitalen Veranstaltungen und können auf Ihre Geschäftsanforderungen zugeschnitten werden.
-
IDC MarketScape: Anbieterbewertung für Rechenzentrumsservices weltweit 2023
Wir glauben, dass Marktführer zu sein eine weitere Bestätigung unseres umfassenden Angebotes im Bereich Rechenzentren ist.
Holen Sie sich den IDC MarketScape -
-
Erkenntnisse
Erfahren Sie, wie die Technologie Unternehmen, die Industrie und die Gesellschaft prägt.
Copilot für Microsoft 365
Jeder kann mit einem leistungsstarken KI-Tool für die tägliche Arbeit intelligenter arbeiten.
Copilot noch heute entdecken -
Lösungen
Wir helfen Ihnen dabei, den Anforderungen an kontinuierliche Innovation und Transformation gerecht zu werden
Global Employee Experience Trends Report
Excel in EX mit Forschung basierend auf Interviews mit über 1.400 Entscheidungsträger:innen auf der ganzen Welt.
Besorgen Sie sich den EX-Report -
Erfahren Sie, wie wir Ihre Geschäftstransformation beschleunigen können
-
Über uns
Neueste Kundenberichte
-
Liantis
Im Laufe der Zeit hatte Liantis, ein etabliertes HR-Unternehmen in Belgien, Dateninseln und isolierte Lösungen als Teil seines Legacysystems aufgebaut.
-
Randstad
We ensured that Randstad’s migration to Genesys Cloud CX had no impact on availability, ensuring an exceptional user experience for clients and talent.
-
-
Sustainability
-
NTT DATA und HEINEKEN
HEINEKEN revolutioniert die Mitarbeitererfahrung und die Zusammenarbeit mit einem hybriden Arbeitsplatzmodell.
Lesen Sie die Geschichte von HEINEKEN -
- Karriere
Pliny knew very well that representations of Homer were imaginary projections and nothing more, all of them driven by a powerful desire to put a face on a name. Nor was Pliny’s insight exceptional among the ancients. Whenever they were faced with a claim about Homer or his likeness, they too had to struggle with competing impulses, which typically took the form of the admission “I know very well that the evidence of Homer before me is the result of illegitimate imaginary construction, a mere stab in the dark, but I will treat it as if it were authentic, valid, and probative just the same.” Such is the logic of fetishistic illusion, which overcomes the oddity of the experience that Pliny so perceptively puts his finger on: For how can you feel a sense of loss for something that you never possessed to begin with? One obviously can, which does not yet give us much information about the nature of the loss; it merely confirms its effects. The effects of this kind of thinking were confirmed in practice: Homer may have been lost forever, but his cultural value and cachet were inextinguishable.
Evidently, the mystery of Homer could chafe and attract in equal measures, and at one and the same time. The more one sought to pin down facts about Homer’s physical appearance and his life, the harder it proved to do so. As the urge grew greater, so did the corresponding anxiety. After antiquity, attempts to capture Homer’s likeness in a visual medium continued to rely almost exclusively on citations and re-elaborations of the ancient tradition’s own guesswork: they constituted a continuation of the ancient series.
Ancient portraiture solved the problem of representing Homer by skirting it. Artists produced images that declared their generic character with an iconography that in effect said, This is (a representation) of Homer. Then they added details that gave their images an effect of the real and the illusion of authenticity: a twist of hair here, a crease of flesh there, extra contouring on the cloak, a certain heaviness in the eyelids, and so on. Where the particulars failed to convince, the typological character of the portrait stepped in to assure the beholder’s gaze that it was at least trained on an identifiable subject: portrayed in any given instance was, if not the reality, then at least the idea—someone’s idea, or antiquity’s collective idea—of Homer.
This is a title right here.
Strange item 1
The Strange item 1 is looking forward to a week in Hong Kong. There are numerous people there on the list.
Strange item 2
Only stranger items x2 exist here and there are no ways to prove otherwise, so unless you've got your ducks in rows, prepare all engine blocks for cracking and failure.
Strange item 3
Only stranger items x3 exist here and there are no ways to prove otherwise, so unless you've got your ducks in rows, prepare all engine blocks for cracking and failure.
Only stranger items x3 exist here and there are no ways to prove otherwise, so unless you've got your ducks in rows, prepare all engine blocks for cracking and failure.
Only stranger items x3 exist here and there are no ways to prove otherwise, so unless you've got your ducks in rows, prepare all engine blocks for cracking and failure.
Pliny knew very well that representations of Homer were imaginary projections and nothing more, all of them driven by a powerful desire to put a face on a name. Nor was Pliny’s insight exceptional among the ancients. Whenever they were faced with a claim about Homer or his likeness, they too had to struggle with competing impulses, which typically took the form of the admission “I know very well that the evidence of Homer before me is the result of illegitimate imaginary construction, a mere stab in the dark, but I will treat it as if it were authentic, valid, and probative just the same.” Such is the logic of fetishistic illusion, which overcomes the oddity of the experience that Pliny so perceptively puts his finger on: For how can you feel a sense of loss for something that you never possessed to begin with? One obviously can, which does not yet give us much information about the nature of the loss; it merely confirms its effects. The effects of this kind of thinking were confirmed in practice: Homer may have been lost forever, but his cultural value and cachet were inextinguishable.
Evidently, the mystery of Homer could chafe and attract in equal measures, and at one and the same time. The more one sought to pin down facts about Homer’s physical appearance and his life, the harder it proved to do so. As the urge grew greater, so did the corresponding anxiety. After antiquity, attempts to capture Homer’s likeness in a visual medium continued to rely almost exclusively on citations and re-elaborations of the ancient tradition’s own guesswork: they constituted a continuation of the ancient series.
Ancient portraiture solved the problem of representing Homer by skirting it. Artists produced images that declared their generic character with an iconography that in effect said, This is (a representation) of Homer. Then they added details that gave their images an effect of the real and the illusion of authenticity: a twist of hair here, a crease of flesh there, extra contouring on the cloak, a certain heaviness in the eyelids, and so on. Where the particulars failed to convince, the typological character of the portrait stepped in to assure the beholder’s gaze that it was at least trained on an identifiable subject: portrayed in any given instance was, if not the reality, then at least the idea—someone’s idea, or antiquity’s collective idea—of Homer.