Smart Contracts on a Blockchain: Transaction Governance with the Potential of Deductive Certainty
Research paper (under review)
Research paper (under review)
Working paper
Working paper
Published in Journal 1, 2009
This paper is about the number 1. The number 2 is left for future work.
Recommended citation: Your Name, You. (2009). "Paper Title Number 1." Journal 1. 1(1). http://academicpages.github.io/files/paper1.pdf
Published in Journal 1, 2010
This paper is about the number 2. The number 3 is left for future work.
Recommended citation: Your Name, You. (2010). "Paper Title Number 2." Journal 1. 1(2). http://academicpages.github.io/files/paper2.pdf
Published in Journal 1, 2015
This paper is about the number 3. The number 4 is left for future work.
Recommended citation: Your Name, You. (2015). "Paper Title Number 3." Journal 1. 1(3). http://academicpages.github.io/files/paper3.pdf
Published:
This is a description of your talk, which is a markdown files that can be all markdown-ified like any other post. Yay markdown!
Published:
This is a description of your conference proceedings talk, note the different field in type. You can put anything in this field.
TUM M.Sc. Lecture & Tutorial, TUM School of Management, 2017
The aim of the lecture is to give the participants an introductory overview over the methods of empirical research. Furthermore, participating students should learn the basic tools to conduct empirical research projects (e.g. seminar paper or final thesis).
TUM M.Sc. case study seminar, TUM School of Management, 2018
An interactive case study seminar where students had to apply their theoretical knowledge in the field of innovation management to real-life management cases. The course covers the essentials of innovation and technology management in high-technology corporations based on introductory lectures and case studies.
TUM M.Sc. advanced seminar, TUM School of Management, 2018
In this seminar, I taught students how to write an academic paper. The topic of this seminar was blockchain technology and smart contracts.
TUM M.Sc. advanced topics seminar, TUM School of Management, 2019
The aim of the seminar is to develop innovative ideas within the framework of a real innovation project. In teams of four, together with the project partner, the students will go through the individual phases of a Lead User project. Students will identify trends in a jointly defined search field and then search for lead users and experts in the specified area. The seminar concludes with a Lead User workshop where innovative product concepts are developed for the project partner. The theoretical foundation is the Lead User method, developed by Eric von Hippel at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Executive teaching, TUM Executive Education Center, 2019
Fall 2019 - Fall 2022