THE POWER OF CATEGORY AND NETWORKING
The philosophic of Immanuel Kant, said that the power of category there are some point, such as: Qualitative, Quantitative, and category Relationship. Each of that has capacity in basic area. First, the basic of Quantitative are Plural, partial and singular. Second, the Qualitative of category is according of universal, partial and unique. And the last, Category Relationship according with the basic principal, like the law of if only if or the relation of cause and effect.
We can see many references in the power of category and networking, in nomena or phenomena. In nomena, there are two criteria category, that is category (categorization) and networking. Where the Categorization, we must know the definition, the function, the purpose, and the component of the reference.
And in phenomena, there are many step to be a real dream. We must know the category of highlighting ideas in our work, such as: the title, the abstraction, the introduction, the power of category, the power of networking, the relationship, the conclusion, and the reference.
The power of the network can create a bigger, national, global, or local presence than you could create on your own. This categorization has been important to us and helped us develop a much better methodology on how best to utilize our network. It has helped us develop an understanding of when we can rely on a contact to help us and when the request for help is unlikely to bear fruit. Having said that, we also realize that if our never ask, we will never know and we just never know who might know whom, for it is a small world. To restate the obvious not everyone in the network is equally able or willing (or a combination of both) to help in times like this. This leads to the next step on how to best utilize the network to get to the next opportunity. Network can be divided into three categories or four if we include friends.
There are four predefined relationship categories:
Hierarchical: Relationship types that are used to connect objects that have a hierarchical relationship.
peer to peer: Relationship types that are used to connect object that have a peer relationship.
Support: Relationship types that connect supporting objects to another object (for example, you can connect a News object to a Spreadsheet object).
Precedence: Relationship types that connect precedence objects to data resources (for example, you can connect a Precedence object to a File object). Objects that are connected with this category of relationship are displayed in the Information Catalog Center Show Lineage Tree window.
There are eight predefined relationship types:
Attachment: Attaches objects to other objects. Comment objects can only be attached to other objects as a support object.
Cascade: Connects two precedence objects.
Contact: Identifies a reference for more information about an object. More information might include the person who created the information that the object represents or the department responsible for maintaining the information.
Contains: Identifies Information Catalog Center objects that contain other objects. For example, use contains to denote objects in a hierarchical relationship, where one object is the parent and the other is the child.
Dictionary: Associates a glossary entry object type with another object. You can use a glossary entry object type to define terminology that is associated with the object.
Input: Connects objects that transform to their input data resource.
Linked: Connects two or more objects in an information catalog. Objects in a linked relationship are peers, rather than a hierarchical relationship.
Output: Connects objects that transform to their output data resource.
Supported: Provides additional information about your information catalog or enterprise.
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