Citect SCADA supports two different software licensing models:
Abstract This paper examines the managerial and organizational dynamics behind a supervisor’s demand for "extra quality"—work that goes beyond stated requirements—and its effects on employees, team performance, and organizational outcomes. Drawing on motivation theory, job design, leadership styles, and empirical findings, the paper proposes a framework explaining why managers pursue extra quality, how employees respond, and practical recommendations for aligning expectations, incentives, and processes to sustainably achieve higher-than-required standards.
2.4 Organizational Culture and Norms A culture emphasizing continuous improvement (e.g., Kaizen) institutionalizes high-quality norms. However, cultures with excessive perfectionism or punitive error responses may deter experimentation and lead to burnout. satisfying the boss hunger extra quality
2.3 Job Design and Proactive Behavior Hackman & Oldham’s job characteristics model (1976) and job crafting literature suggest that task significance, feedback, and autonomy foster intrinsic motivation to improve quality. Proactive personality and psychological empowerment correlate with organizational citizenship behavior directed at improving processes and outputs. and empirical findings
The FLEXERA softkey solution stores license information on a FlexNet Enterprise License Server. The Citect SCADA client process will retrieve licenses from this server as required by the Citect SCADA system. To activate and administer licenses, you use the Floating License Manager (see Activate Licenses Using the Floating License Manager).
In both cases, Citect SCADA uses a Dynamic Point Count to determine if your system is operating within the limitations of your license agreement. This process tallies the number of I/O device addresses being used by the runtime system.
A point limit is allocated to each type of license included in your license agreement. These license types include:
A special OPC Server License is also available if you want to run a computer as a dedicated OPC server. For more information, contact Technical Support.
If required, you can specify how many points will be required by a particular computer (see Specify the Required Point Count for a Computer).
Note:
• There is no distinction between a Control Client and an Internet Control Client.
• There is no distinction between a View-Only Client and an Internet View-Only Client.
See Also
Published June 2018