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Intuit QuickBase - Easy Online Project Management
Keep projects on-time & on-budget. Easily control access, share information & manage tasks, issues & resources online. 30-Day Free Trial. Try Now!
www.quickbase.com
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OpenAir Project Management
Deliver projects on time and within budget. Track project scope and performance. Free Online Demo.
www.OpenAir.com
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Project Management Software from Dexter + Chaney
Spectrum's™ 30 integrated modules allows you to tackle the most complex projects with ease. Project mgmt, accounting, job costing, & more! Call today!
www.DexterChaney.com
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Project Management Software
Provides manufacturers with a collaborative environment and a suite of business solutions that allow teams to better manage projects and programs.
www.skire.com
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Project Management Software Directory
Compare project management software using Capterra's free, comprehensive directory.
Capterra.com
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Collaborative Project Management For The Team
TeamDirection IntelliGantt connects projects managers with their team, whether they're down the hall or on the road. Intuitively and elegantly.
www.teamdirection.com
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Project Mangement
Find: Project mangement Review & Compare!
FindStuff.com
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SpiraPlan - Project Management Software - Free Trial
A complete Project Management System in one package, that manages your project's requirements, releases, iterations, tasks and bugs/issues. Web Based.
www.inflectra.com
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Project Management How To
Compare a wide range of leading sites online.
www.kdirectory.co.uk
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Find Project Management
Looking for Project management? Find it cheaper at ShopBrite. Your source for everything under the sun!
ShopBrite.com
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Project Definition–noun | 1. | something that is contemplated, devised, or planned; plan; scheme. | | 2. | a large or major undertaking, esp. one involving considerable money, personnel, and equipment. | | 3. | a specific task of investigation, esp. in scholarship. | | 4. | Education. a supplementary, long-term educational assignment necessitating personal initiative, undertaken by an individual student or a group of students. | –verb (used with object) project | 6. | to propose, contemplate, or plan. | | 7. | to throw, cast, or impel forward or onward. | | 8. | to set forth or calculate (some future thing): They projected the building costs for the next five years. | | 9. | to throw or cause to fall upon a surface or into space, as a ray of light or a shadow. | | 10. | to cause (a figure or image) to appear, as on a background. | | 11. | to regard (something within the mind, as a feeling, thought, or attitude) as having some form of reality outside the mind: He projected a thrilling picture of the party's future. | | 12. | to cause to jut out or protrude. | | 13. | Geometry. | a. | to throw forward an image of (a figure or the like) by straight lines or rays, either parallel, converging, or diverging, that pass through all its points and reproduce it on another surface or figure. | | b. | to transform the points (of one figure) into those of another by a correspondence between points. | | | 14. | to present (an idea, program, etc.) for consideration or action: They made every effort to project the notion of world peace. | | 15. | to use (one's voice, gestures, etc.) forcefully enough to be perceived at a distance, as by all members of the audience in a theater. | | 16. | to communicate clearly and forcefully (one's thoughts, personality, role, etc.) to an audience, as in a theatrical performance; produce a compelling image of. | | 17. | to cause (the voice) to appear to come from a source other than oneself, as in ventriloquism; throw. | –verb (used without object) project | 18. | to extend or protrude beyond something else. | | | 19. | to use one's voice forcefully enough to be heard at a distance, as in a theater. | | 20. | to produce a clear impression of one's thoughts, personality, role, etc., in an audience; communicate clearly and forcefully. | | 21. | Psychology. to ascribe one's own feelings, thoughts, or attitudes to others. | | From Dictionary
Management Definition–noun | 1. | the act or manner of managing; handling, direction, or control. |
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tr> | 2. | skill in managing; executive ability: great management and tact. | | 3. | the person or persons controlling and directing the affairs of a business, institution, etc.: The store is under new management. | | 4. | executives collectively, considered as a class (distinguished from labor ). | | From Dictionary
Related topics from BritannicaManhattan Project U.S. government research project (1942-45) that produced the first atomic bombs.research and development A popular treatment is Joseph J. Moder, Cecil R. Phillips, and Edward W. Davis, Project Management with CPM, PERT, and Precedence Diagramming, 3rd ed. (1983); a more complete work is J. Wiest and F. ...
research and development logistics Both during and after World War II the United States operated the largest and most advanced logistic system in the world. Its wartime operations stressed speed, volume, and risk-taking more than ...
boundary ecosystem Among ecosystems that are easiest to destroy permanently are these boundary ecosystems. Wetlands can be isolated from their hydrologic source and essentially destroyed if drainage areas are altered ...
Lesotho Of primary importance to the country is the Lesotho Highlands Water Project (LHWP), a large-scale water-transfer plan involving Lesotho and South Africa. Although similar plans had been discussed ...
Preparing for Emergencies The U.S. federal government did not become actively involved in disaster response until the 1930s and then did so only on an ad hoc basis, providing funding to repair highways and bridges damaged by ...
research and development Most research and development projects are examples of a project, or one-shot, production system. Here, as opposed to the ongoing activity found in batch or continuous systems, resources are brought ...
Haldane, Elizabeth Sanderson Scottish social-welfare worker and author.Hill, Octavia leader of the British open-space movement, which resulted in the foundation (1895) of the National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty. She was also a housing reformer whose ...
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