Paul Beynon-Davies
Cardiff University
186 Papers
1.3K Citations
Paul Beynon-Davies is an academic researcher from Cardiff University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Information system & Rapid application development. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 183 publications. Previous affiliations of Paul Beynon-Davies include Swansea University & University of Wales.
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Papers
‘It’s lots of bits of paper and ticks and post‐it notes and things . . .’: a case study of a rapid application development project
TL;DR: In this paper, an in-depth case study of a rapid application development (RAD) project is presented, which is a recent information systems development method noted for its high levels of user involvement and use of iterative prototyping.
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Personal identity management in the information polity: The case of the UK national identity card
TL;DR: This paper unpack the issue of multiple identity management in the Information Age in terms of a semiotic framework consisting of three interrelated processes - authentication, identification and enrolment and test the explanatory utility of this framework against a contemporary and prominent case from the UK.
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The proposal of a comparative framework to evaluate e-business stages of growth models
TL;DR: A comparative framework for contrasting e-business growth models within the context of small and medium enterprises is proposed and the need for a representative and empirical model and the appropriate methodology to attain this outcome is identified.
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•Book
Significance: Exploring the Nature of Information, Systems and Technology
Paul Beynon-Davies
- 30 Nov 2010
TL;DR: Signs are critically important in all forms of activity, including business, because they establish what it is to be human as discussed by the authors, and without signs we could not think, communicate what we think and ensure that we collaborate together in our work, home and leisure.
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Prototyping praxis: constructing computer systems and building belief
TL;DR: Findings are discussed from a multidisciplinary research project, which investigated the use of prototyping in commercial information systems development in the United Kingdom during the period 1995 to 1998.
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