Fighting too many fires and no time for innovation? What is Ansible Automation and how can I scale my IT automation, manage complex deployments and speed productivity.
This document outlines a presentation on reimagining collaboration through virtual means. It discusses how today's issues require collaboration on a larger scale. It also explores how the internet and technology have enabled more open and widespread collaboration. The presentation advocates for establishing common frameworks, building trust through processes, and taking advantage of the unique aspects of virtual collaboration in order to achieve levels of collaboration previously not possible.
Innovation in a time of radical changesSimone Cicero
This is the presentation I've made during Joe Justice's Workshop in Rome, for the Wikispeed European Tour organized by Ouishare in Rome, Barcelona and Paris.
Here's a related post http://wp.me/plmpp-px
Blog link here >> http://goo.gl/Z8P6Q
(context/introduction of the presentation)
This is the presentation I used for my talk at the IDCAMP.
I tried to put together two things:
- an analysis of the new practices we need to create enduring and impacting enterprise in a time of radical change
- a practical 10 rules guide to be adopted.
All the material produced on my own is CC-BY-NC.
This document discusses how "turtles" or reluctant organizations that resist change can be disrupted by "gazelles" or innovative startups, and outlines lessons for public sector organizations to promote openness, interoperability, and their platforms as innovation platforms to better connect and support innovative solutions. The document was written by Dr. Julia Glidden of 21c Consultancy in June 2013 and provides an overview of disruptive innovation as well as examples of creating open data apps and enabling smart city services through open data and moving from closed to open systems and architectures.
Smart cities are about people and technology. This webinar will discuss groundbreaking examples of successful projects as well as pitfalls. It will be a broad discussion kickstarting with a look at the following issues:
-How should a city go about developing a strategy for development in a 'smart' way?
-How can community revitalisation be supported with new technology?
-How can citizens be helped to go about their business using smart technology, for example in the area of transport?
Whether it is democratic accountability, energy efficiency and renewable energy, zero waste targets or walkability there is hardly an area of life that is not being touched by revolutionary promise of smart cities. But as an umbrella term it is often used in advisedly. This webinar will attempt to sort out genuine success stories from business as usual hype.
Social innovations are new ideas that meet social needs in more effective ways. They can be products, services, or models that create social relationships and new collaborations. While social innovations help address old social and environmental issues, strengthen societies, and create jobs, there are also several barriers to social innovation. In Lithuania specifically, while the concept is not well defined or researched, some social innovations have been created unconsciously. Barriers there include a lack of venture capital, transparency in public funding, cooperation in the social welfare sector, and management knowledge in social entrepreneurship.
Introduction to the OW2 Open Source Accessibility InitiativeOW2
Introduction to the OW2 Open Source Accessibility Initiative at Paris Open Source Summit 2017, by Christian Paterson, Head of Orange Open Source Governance at Orange.
This document outlines a presentation on reimagining collaboration through virtual means. It discusses how today's issues require collaboration on a larger scale. It also explores how the internet and technology have enabled more open and widespread collaboration. The presentation advocates for establishing common frameworks, building trust through processes, and taking advantage of the unique aspects of virtual collaboration in order to achieve levels of collaboration previously not possible.
Innovation in a time of radical changesSimone Cicero
This is the presentation I've made during Joe Justice's Workshop in Rome, for the Wikispeed European Tour organized by Ouishare in Rome, Barcelona and Paris.
Here's a related post http://wp.me/plmpp-px
Blog link here >> http://goo.gl/Z8P6Q
(context/introduction of the presentation)
This is the presentation I used for my talk at the IDCAMP.
I tried to put together two things:
- an analysis of the new practices we need to create enduring and impacting enterprise in a time of radical change
- a practical 10 rules guide to be adopted.
All the material produced on my own is CC-BY-NC.
This document discusses how "turtles" or reluctant organizations that resist change can be disrupted by "gazelles" or innovative startups, and outlines lessons for public sector organizations to promote openness, interoperability, and their platforms as innovation platforms to better connect and support innovative solutions. The document was written by Dr. Julia Glidden of 21c Consultancy in June 2013 and provides an overview of disruptive innovation as well as examples of creating open data apps and enabling smart city services through open data and moving from closed to open systems and architectures.
Smart cities are about people and technology. This webinar will discuss groundbreaking examples of successful projects as well as pitfalls. It will be a broad discussion kickstarting with a look at the following issues:
-How should a city go about developing a strategy for development in a 'smart' way?
-How can community revitalisation be supported with new technology?
-How can citizens be helped to go about their business using smart technology, for example in the area of transport?
Whether it is democratic accountability, energy efficiency and renewable energy, zero waste targets or walkability there is hardly an area of life that is not being touched by revolutionary promise of smart cities. But as an umbrella term it is often used in advisedly. This webinar will attempt to sort out genuine success stories from business as usual hype.
Social innovations are new ideas that meet social needs in more effective ways. They can be products, services, or models that create social relationships and new collaborations. While social innovations help address old social and environmental issues, strengthen societies, and create jobs, there are also several barriers to social innovation. In Lithuania specifically, while the concept is not well defined or researched, some social innovations have been created unconsciously. Barriers there include a lack of venture capital, transparency in public funding, cooperation in the social welfare sector, and management knowledge in social entrepreneurship.
Introduction to the OW2 Open Source Accessibility InitiativeOW2
Introduction to the OW2 Open Source Accessibility Initiative at Paris Open Source Summit 2017, by Christian Paterson, Head of Orange Open Source Governance at Orange.
Imagine a world where government unleashes innovation... not stagnation. With open government, it's possible.
Are you ready for open government? Learn more at www.ibm.com/government
This document discusses policy 2.0, which aims to make policymaking more open, evidence-based, and collaborative. It argues that policy 2.0 utilizes open data and crowdsourcing to better understand problems, generate policy ideas, and evaluate policies. The document outlines challenges in governance that policy 2.0 seeks to address and provides examples of tools and design principles to facilitate more emergent, peer-to-peer policymaking. It also acknowledges potential issues like spam, conflicts, and ensuring ideas are implemented.
Keynote address at SFSCon in Bolzano, Italy, explaining how the topology of society has changed to make collaboration and free software the key to innovation.
From Software to Manufacturing: how the open, agile and p2p revolution is com...Codemotion
The document discusses the open source, agile, and peer-to-peer revolution moving from software to manufacturing. It notes that distributed team management, frugal engineering, and design practices from software are being applied to physical production. Examples mentioned include open source hardware projects like 3D printing and compressed earth brick presses. The document advocates stopping reinventing things and instead open sourcing solutions to scale impact and cooperation globally.
Analyzing Ubuntu Community with GrimoireLab (UbuCon Europe 2018)Manrique Lopez
This document summarizes a presentation about analyzing the Ubuntu community using GrimoireLab software. GrimoireLab is an open source software project that provides analytics on open source communities and projects. It can analyze data from sources like Launchpad, Git, files, GitHub issues and pull requests, mailing lists, and meetups to understand community metrics like activity, performance, collaboration, and diversity for a project like Ubuntu. The presentation demonstrates how GrimoireLab can extract insights about an open source community to help improve community engagement, contribution levels, and innovation.
DrupalGov Canberra 2014 Keynote: Code for a better world: Open Source Drupal ...Jeffrey McGuire
The document discusses how open source Drupal can enable successful digital government by facilitating collaboration, transparency, participation, and innovation. It provides examples of how Drupal has delivered these qualities on government websites and applications. The presentation argues that open source options like Drupal give governments more control over their technology compared to proprietary software.
Building Bridges Across Company and Community -SCALE15xNithya A. Ruff
Increasingly companies are part of the open source ecosystem and are starting new projects and contributing to projects. And community members often feel that open source is becoming more commercial and driven by companies. How can we learn to work together and coexist? What can we do to increase our understanding of each other and find common ground and bridges? We need to work together more than ever as open source grows. Come and discuss with me, idea for how we can support the continued healthy evolution and momentum of open
SB11 - Taking steps in your organization - Laszlo and Zhexembayeva Sustainable Brands
This document discusses four trends for organizations to consider regarding corporate sustainability and social responsibility. First, sustainability is becoming an inevitable reality rather than just a moral choice due to increasing pressures from regulators, investors, and other stakeholders. Second, organizations should shift from just marketing green products to developing smart solutions. Third, organizations need to move beyond incremental changes and pursue radical innovation. Fourth, organizations need to adopt a whole system perspective and consider sustainability throughout their operations and partnerships rather than just an add-on responsibility. The document provides exercises for organizations to brainstorm sustainability opportunities and develop project ideas that create business value.
Shifting Sands: The new face of sustainable innovation in the age of social m...Greg Matthews
Originally presented at Community 2.0 in May of 2010 ... focused on articulating how social media can impact innovation in the enterprise, supported by examples from Humana's Consumer Innovation team
Norrköping Twestival 12 Feb 2009 - "Social Media For Social Change: Spreading...Anders Abrahamsson
Social media can be used to spread information about innovative solutions and business practices related to sustainability and helping those living below the poverty line of $4 per day. The document discusses challenges faced by this population and how social enterprises called "sustainopreneurs" work to solve sustainability problems through creative organizing while respecting life-supporting systems. It provides several examples of water purification innovations and invites questions.
This document provides an overview of Thrive Lake County, a network that connects socially and environmentally responsible businesses. The network aims to address issues like isolation, complexity, and lack of shared values that businesses face. It does this by making connections between members simple and fun. Members benefit from shared expertise, core values around sustainability and livelihood, and opportunities to collaborate on projects to transform the local economy through collective action.
The banking industry is changing. It's in a transition a transformation. How can banks adopt? Learn about gamification, intrapreneurship, hackathons and more.
Presentation of Rabobank @ Fresh2015 by Maarten Molenaar & Maarten Korz
This presentation was provided by Cameron Neylon of Curtin University during the joint NISO-ICSTI webinar, Enabling Innovation in Researcher Workflow and Scholarly Communication, held on October 26, 2016.
Agile Design and Collaborative Creativity in Web of ThingsMartin Mahaux
The document discusses agile design and collaborative creativity for socio-technical systems like the Web of Things. It argues that to drive sustainable innovation in these complex, fast-moving systems, an agile design approach is needed that incorporates collaboration through iterative experimental design with stakeholders. Creativity is defined as something that is both novel and useful. The document also discusses the role of participation, noting that it can lead to more sustainability if certain obstacles are mitigated, as it empowers people and revives democracy by opening up solution spaces to more viewpoints and concerns. However, it may be restricted to elites unless specific facilitation is provided, and individualism or tensions between amateurs and experts could still undermine participation's benefits.
SUSTAINABLE FUTURES AND CONCEPTS, By Louise Armstrong, Forum for the Futuredesis_uk
Forum for the Future is a sustainability non-profit that works globally with business, government, and others to solve complex sustainability challenges. They take a systems approach, seeking to shift key systems like sectors and economies onto more sustainable paths. Their work includes developing scenarios and concepts to explore sustainable futures, leading company transformations towards sustainability, and convening innovation coalitions to address large challenges across value chains and sectors. They advocate that higher education can play a role by nurturing future thinking skills, encouraging system thinking, and collaborating to bring more concepts for sustainability to life.
Future Proof Design and the Platform Design CanvasSimone Cicero
This presentation was given as an introduction of a workshop on the platform design canvas during the Barcelona Design Thinking Week at the Elisava Design and Engineering School.
The objective of the canvas is to help people design Platforms and Ecosystems not only one shot, one feature, linear products.
The canvas itself is derived by the Business Model Canvas of which it tries to overcome the limitations when applied in Platform Design.
The Platform Design Canvas is currently in Live Edit here http://goo.gl/wz615
Context post: http://meedabyte.com/2013/06/26/the-platform-design-canvas-a-tool-for-business-design/
Old vs. New Economy. Keynote speech at EUKN EGTC Conference - Civic Economy i...OuiShare
The document provides an overview of a keynote presentation comparing the "old economy" to the emerging "new economy" or "civic economy". The keynote speaker contrasts the hierarchical, competition-based structures of the old economy with the collaborative, peer-to-peer and sharing-based structures of the new economy. Examples of how production, consumption and financing are changing through collaborative models are discussed. In conclusion, the new economy is described as more sustainable, inclusive and focused on social well-being compared to the extractive and unequal nature of the old economy.
Old Economy vs. New Economy. Keynote speech at the annual EUKN EGTC ConferenceThomas Doennebrink
Keynote @Conference on the Civic Economy - Time to get ready Organized by European Urban Knowledge Network (EUKN) in cooperation with the municipality of Amsterdam & Pakhuis de Zwijger. Amsterdam 20.10.2014.
Be On Time with Digital Transformation: build platforms, access ecosystems, t...Simone Cicero
This presentation explains in a few slides how the convergence of new technologies and new habits and expectations is changing what the user expects from the firm and therefore the firm itself: this is digital transformation.
Firms are therefore evolving into post-industrial platforms, and to enable this transformation you need to move forward as an organization along three layers: technology platforms supporting your strategy, organizational design principles and building new innovation capabilities.
Plus: this presentation will link you to a new tool that we're about to release (as OCT 2015) - The Platform Design Toolkit 2.0 - see www.platformdesigntoolkit.com
Contribution at AGORADA+ 2016 conference (official meeting of the European Association of Development Agencies), about how manufacturing should become tool for social inclusion. The incredible opportunity made by "industry 4.0" approaches must lead to a new season where small companies are linked with super automated plants and supply chains in order to design a sustainable future where we'll able to produce locally almost everything.
Imagine a world where government unleashes innovation... not stagnation. With open government, it's possible.
Are you ready for open government? Learn more at www.ibm.com/government
This document discusses policy 2.0, which aims to make policymaking more open, evidence-based, and collaborative. It argues that policy 2.0 utilizes open data and crowdsourcing to better understand problems, generate policy ideas, and evaluate policies. The document outlines challenges in governance that policy 2.0 seeks to address and provides examples of tools and design principles to facilitate more emergent, peer-to-peer policymaking. It also acknowledges potential issues like spam, conflicts, and ensuring ideas are implemented.
Keynote address at SFSCon in Bolzano, Italy, explaining how the topology of society has changed to make collaboration and free software the key to innovation.
From Software to Manufacturing: how the open, agile and p2p revolution is com...Codemotion
The document discusses the open source, agile, and peer-to-peer revolution moving from software to manufacturing. It notes that distributed team management, frugal engineering, and design practices from software are being applied to physical production. Examples mentioned include open source hardware projects like 3D printing and compressed earth brick presses. The document advocates stopping reinventing things and instead open sourcing solutions to scale impact and cooperation globally.
Analyzing Ubuntu Community with GrimoireLab (UbuCon Europe 2018)Manrique Lopez
This document summarizes a presentation about analyzing the Ubuntu community using GrimoireLab software. GrimoireLab is an open source software project that provides analytics on open source communities and projects. It can analyze data from sources like Launchpad, Git, files, GitHub issues and pull requests, mailing lists, and meetups to understand community metrics like activity, performance, collaboration, and diversity for a project like Ubuntu. The presentation demonstrates how GrimoireLab can extract insights about an open source community to help improve community engagement, contribution levels, and innovation.
DrupalGov Canberra 2014 Keynote: Code for a better world: Open Source Drupal ...Jeffrey McGuire
The document discusses how open source Drupal can enable successful digital government by facilitating collaboration, transparency, participation, and innovation. It provides examples of how Drupal has delivered these qualities on government websites and applications. The presentation argues that open source options like Drupal give governments more control over their technology compared to proprietary software.
Building Bridges Across Company and Community -SCALE15xNithya A. Ruff
Increasingly companies are part of the open source ecosystem and are starting new projects and contributing to projects. And community members often feel that open source is becoming more commercial and driven by companies. How can we learn to work together and coexist? What can we do to increase our understanding of each other and find common ground and bridges? We need to work together more than ever as open source grows. Come and discuss with me, idea for how we can support the continued healthy evolution and momentum of open
SB11 - Taking steps in your organization - Laszlo and Zhexembayeva Sustainable Brands
This document discusses four trends for organizations to consider regarding corporate sustainability and social responsibility. First, sustainability is becoming an inevitable reality rather than just a moral choice due to increasing pressures from regulators, investors, and other stakeholders. Second, organizations should shift from just marketing green products to developing smart solutions. Third, organizations need to move beyond incremental changes and pursue radical innovation. Fourth, organizations need to adopt a whole system perspective and consider sustainability throughout their operations and partnerships rather than just an add-on responsibility. The document provides exercises for organizations to brainstorm sustainability opportunities and develop project ideas that create business value.
Shifting Sands: The new face of sustainable innovation in the age of social m...Greg Matthews
Originally presented at Community 2.0 in May of 2010 ... focused on articulating how social media can impact innovation in the enterprise, supported by examples from Humana's Consumer Innovation team
Norrköping Twestival 12 Feb 2009 - "Social Media For Social Change: Spreading...Anders Abrahamsson
Social media can be used to spread information about innovative solutions and business practices related to sustainability and helping those living below the poverty line of $4 per day. The document discusses challenges faced by this population and how social enterprises called "sustainopreneurs" work to solve sustainability problems through creative organizing while respecting life-supporting systems. It provides several examples of water purification innovations and invites questions.
This document provides an overview of Thrive Lake County, a network that connects socially and environmentally responsible businesses. The network aims to address issues like isolation, complexity, and lack of shared values that businesses face. It does this by making connections between members simple and fun. Members benefit from shared expertise, core values around sustainability and livelihood, and opportunities to collaborate on projects to transform the local economy through collective action.
The banking industry is changing. It's in a transition a transformation. How can banks adopt? Learn about gamification, intrapreneurship, hackathons and more.
Presentation of Rabobank @ Fresh2015 by Maarten Molenaar & Maarten Korz
This presentation was provided by Cameron Neylon of Curtin University during the joint NISO-ICSTI webinar, Enabling Innovation in Researcher Workflow and Scholarly Communication, held on October 26, 2016.
Agile Design and Collaborative Creativity in Web of ThingsMartin Mahaux
The document discusses agile design and collaborative creativity for socio-technical systems like the Web of Things. It argues that to drive sustainable innovation in these complex, fast-moving systems, an agile design approach is needed that incorporates collaboration through iterative experimental design with stakeholders. Creativity is defined as something that is both novel and useful. The document also discusses the role of participation, noting that it can lead to more sustainability if certain obstacles are mitigated, as it empowers people and revives democracy by opening up solution spaces to more viewpoints and concerns. However, it may be restricted to elites unless specific facilitation is provided, and individualism or tensions between amateurs and experts could still undermine participation's benefits.
SUSTAINABLE FUTURES AND CONCEPTS, By Louise Armstrong, Forum for the Futuredesis_uk
Forum for the Future is a sustainability non-profit that works globally with business, government, and others to solve complex sustainability challenges. They take a systems approach, seeking to shift key systems like sectors and economies onto more sustainable paths. Their work includes developing scenarios and concepts to explore sustainable futures, leading company transformations towards sustainability, and convening innovation coalitions to address large challenges across value chains and sectors. They advocate that higher education can play a role by nurturing future thinking skills, encouraging system thinking, and collaborating to bring more concepts for sustainability to life.
Future Proof Design and the Platform Design CanvasSimone Cicero
This presentation was given as an introduction of a workshop on the platform design canvas during the Barcelona Design Thinking Week at the Elisava Design and Engineering School.
The objective of the canvas is to help people design Platforms and Ecosystems not only one shot, one feature, linear products.
The canvas itself is derived by the Business Model Canvas of which it tries to overcome the limitations when applied in Platform Design.
The Platform Design Canvas is currently in Live Edit here http://goo.gl/wz615
Context post: http://meedabyte.com/2013/06/26/the-platform-design-canvas-a-tool-for-business-design/
Old vs. New Economy. Keynote speech at EUKN EGTC Conference - Civic Economy i...OuiShare
The document provides an overview of a keynote presentation comparing the "old economy" to the emerging "new economy" or "civic economy". The keynote speaker contrasts the hierarchical, competition-based structures of the old economy with the collaborative, peer-to-peer and sharing-based structures of the new economy. Examples of how production, consumption and financing are changing through collaborative models are discussed. In conclusion, the new economy is described as more sustainable, inclusive and focused on social well-being compared to the extractive and unequal nature of the old economy.
Old Economy vs. New Economy. Keynote speech at the annual EUKN EGTC ConferenceThomas Doennebrink
Keynote @Conference on the Civic Economy - Time to get ready Organized by European Urban Knowledge Network (EUKN) in cooperation with the municipality of Amsterdam & Pakhuis de Zwijger. Amsterdam 20.10.2014.
Be On Time with Digital Transformation: build platforms, access ecosystems, t...Simone Cicero
This presentation explains in a few slides how the convergence of new technologies and new habits and expectations is changing what the user expects from the firm and therefore the firm itself: this is digital transformation.
Firms are therefore evolving into post-industrial platforms, and to enable this transformation you need to move forward as an organization along three layers: technology platforms supporting your strategy, organizational design principles and building new innovation capabilities.
Plus: this presentation will link you to a new tool that we're about to release (as OCT 2015) - The Platform Design Toolkit 2.0 - see www.platformdesigntoolkit.com
Contribution at AGORADA+ 2016 conference (official meeting of the European Association of Development Agencies), about how manufacturing should become tool for social inclusion. The incredible opportunity made by "industry 4.0" approaches must lead to a new season where small companies are linked with super automated plants and supply chains in order to design a sustainable future where we'll able to produce locally almost everything.
On the role of Openness and Platforms in the Age of MakersSimone Cicero
This is the presentation I gave at the second edition of the Shenzhen China International Design Fair.
I spoke about the role of Open and Shared Innovation in the age of manufacturing transformation.
This presentation deals with the impact of digital transformation in the manufacturing industry and depicts the most interesting - the available - roles in the manufacturing ecosystem of the future.
An informative context for this presentation can be accessed here: http://wp.me/plmpp-xn
Rethinking OSS In An Era of Cloud and MLPeter Wang
This document discusses issues related to open source software (OSS) in the era of cloud computing and machine learning. It addresses topics like sustainability of OSS projects, maintainer burnout, and commercial exploitation of OSS. It argues that many of these issues are really "business model" problems rather than technical problems. The document also discusses how OSS communities value empowering people to innovate through open collaboration and aligning various stakeholders. It emphasizes that open APIs and non-proprietary standards are important to preserve user choice and control as software becomes more distributed through APIs and services.
The document discusses two models of innovation: the pipeline model and the swarm model.
The pipeline model views innovation as occurring within organizations through a linear process of research and development. Knowledge is created and protected within organizations. Users are passive recipients of innovations.
The swarm model views innovation as a decentralized, collaborative process. Users actively contribute and help shape innovations. Examples mentioned include Linux, eBay, and open source projects. Innovation occurs through the interaction of many individuals and organizations through online platforms and networks.
The swarm model is seen as better able to deal with uncertainty and benefit from "distributed intelligence." However, questions are raised about how swarm models are initiated and funded, and whether they work for complex, costly innovations.
1) The document discusses the need for a new way of perceiving, being, and doing in the world as the old ways no longer work due to current crises.
2) It proposes moving from an industrial-market era focused on GDP to a socio-ecological era with new metrics like the ISEW that consider social and environmental welfare over time.
3) Social innovation is presented as a process where new ideas come from those directly involved in problems to find solutions through collaboration rather than top-down approaches. This distributes complexity and innovation rather than centralizing it.
1) The document discusses the need for a new way of perceiving, being, and doing in the world as the old ways no longer work due to current crises.
2) It proposes moving from an industrial-market era focused on GDP to a socio-ecological era with new metrics like the ISEW that consider social and environmental welfare over time.
3) Social innovation is presented as a process where new ideas come from those directly involved in problems to find solutions through collaboration rather than top-down approaches. This distributes complexity and innovation more widely.
A tale from the future, by Eugenio Battagliabioflux
You might have heard of a new breed of organisational models, responding to the fast growing adaptability, engagement and collaboration needs within modern company structures. Or you might have simply experienced the sound problems of slowness, rigidity, bureaucracy, disengagement along with various kinds of waste and bottlenecks that “traditional” organisational models generate and suffer nowadays. What if OpenDrop is the first real experiment of a new way of doing research and business, together with a constantly growing, loosely coupled and horizontally managed team of value driven innovators? This is a tale from the future where in the development of OpenDrop (OD) we have deployed an innovative governance and operations management system which is meant to be adaptive, dynamic and anti-fragile. Where we have successfully layed the foundations for our governance in the principles of commons-based peer production and liquid management allowing anyone to contribute, and for this contribution to be accounted.
About the speaker:
Eugenio studied molecular and system biotechnology with a specialization in integrative neuroscience. He experiment in the field of Life Sciences with emerging and low-cost technologies, solving global issues and exploring novel forms of ethical deliberation. He led the development and management of several projects acquiring the tools to deal with an increasingly complex and multidisciplinary environment. His mission is to build and nurture a collaborative society by connecting people, organisations and ideas around fairness, openness and trust. He supports meaningful projects in social innovation, enabling fruitful collaborations with public institutions and progressive companies that want to build a resilient society.
From Collaborative Economy to Collaborative OrganizationDavid Weingartner
What does it need to become a collaborative organization?
Slides of the talk given at CN Wintercongress of Detecon Consulting in February 2015.
After an introduction to the Collaborative Economy and its relation to the term "Sharing Economy", the presentation shows reasons for its rapid growth: Businesses as platforms. What are the elements of a platform? Why does it allow for rapid growth and value creation?
Taking this as a basis, we translated the concept to the organizational level using OuiShare as an example. What does it need to become a truly collaborative organization? What is the culture and tools needed? What tools and organizations inspired OuiShare?
What was once an objective on every key brand strategy document has become an overused, and at times, a meaningless phrase. Almost like an involuntary reflex, communication became — and continues to be — the most popular tool for showcasing brand transparency. This deck explores a model for thinking about transparency in a modern world.
Key note presentation josephine green- piramids to pancakescsdbdv
This is Josephine Green's key note presentation from our Squaretable event which we hosted 22-9-2011 on the subject of 'new customer realities: capturing added value from sustainability'.
This document provides an overview of the Open Source Ecology paradigm and Civilization Starter Kit. The Open Source Ecology movement aims to create an open source economy through open access to economically significant designs and techniques. This will lower barriers to entry and allow communities to produce more locally. The goal is for communities to gain the knowledge to produce essential resources and become more self-sufficient through the open sharing of technology. The Civilization Starter Kit outlines 50 industrial machines that would allow small scale communities to achieve modern comforts by producing locally.
It argues that open design, by pooling knowledge and resources, facilitating user participation, and re-evaluating concepts of time, can make strong contributions to sustainability and building stronger communities. The author believes open design is a tool to solve problems arising from systemic moral failures. Examples discussed include open-source washing machines and a project to build homes and community for the lonely or useless.
Similar to 2 - Building bridges with Ansible Automation (20)
We all love the chameleon, and SUSE is long known for its Linux OS - but there is so much more in the world of SUSE.
In this session Jurriën will dive into how SUSE is helping organizations accelerate their digital transformation through container management, hybrid cloud IT infrastructure, and IT operations at the Edge.
Because from core, to cloud, to Edge, SUSE is helping firms to innovate everywhere.
This document summarizes SEP's hybrid backup and recovery software. SEP has over 30 years of backup experience and supports backups from SMB to enterprise. Their software is made in Germany and they have a reputation for excellent support. The document outlines SEP's partnerships with companies like SAP, Red Hat, SUSE, and others. It provides information on backup capabilities for virtualization platforms, databases, operating systems, and applications that SEP supports through various agents and integrations.
The document discusses requirements and considerations for selecting open source tools for container orchestration and runtime. It evaluates Ansible, Terraform, Puppet, Kubernetes, and Nomad for orchestration and decides on Nomad for its ease of use and low learning curve. It also selects Consul for service discovery. The document outlines the installation process and architecture, showing how Consul, Nomad, Traefik, Prometheus, Grafana, Loki, and Minio would integrate together. It provides version details and screenshots of the setup. It suggests next steps like full testing and Raspberry Pi support. Managed options from Devfactory are also discussed.
The document outlines the agenda for the OPEN'22 conference, including sessions on Red Hat, new partners like HashiCorp and Confluent, and product sponsor shoutouts. It also discusses Kangaroot's transition to more virtual work over the past two years, emphasizing an anytime/anywhere flexible approach and emphasizing asynchronous collaboration. Lastly, it proposes initiatives like the ROOT Fund to support open source community work, the Automation Factory to advance Ansible skills, and RootStacks with open source infrastructure templates and managed services.
The document discusses open source software and provides examples of its use by government agencies in Belgium. It begins with an anecdote about how the author got introduced to open source software while sailing. It then discusses how open source has risen in popularity due to factors like EU policies encouraging less dependence on closed source software. The document provides examples of government agencies in Belgium that have adopted open source solutions like PostgreSQL and migrated away from proprietary databases. It discusses case studies of the National Forensic Institute and RvIG adopting open source.
Deploying NGINX in Cloud Native KubernetesKangaroot
Using cloud-native application services is easy, it “just works”. Many customers choose them without giving it a second thought. However, these app services vary from cloud to cloud, with differing levels of quality and numbers of features making visibility and control inconsistent across clouds.
And then there is cost…it’s hard to know what your deployment is going to cost until after it’s been built. Often the services must be compiled in a piecemeal fashion and many products carry bloated code that increases costs.
Finally, security is often an afterthought. Moreover, SecOps teams struggle to keep up with the breakneck app release cadence that has become typical. Often they are seen as DevOps viewing them as a major constraint on the ability to deliver software quickly.
In this workshop, we showcase the NGINX solutions for cloud native Kubernetes that will allow you to:
- Reduce tool sprawl and provide a standard set of services
- Control costs with lightweight and easy solutions
- Bring teams together with automation and self‑service capabilities
Cloud demystified, what remains after the fog has lifted. Kangaroot
The document provides an introduction to cloud computing concepts from Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) to Platform as a Service (PaaS) to Software as a Service (SaaS) to Database as a Service (DBaaS). It discusses different cloud models including private, public, multi-cloud and hybrid clouds. It also covers cloud native technologies like Kubernetes and microservices. The document cautions that while cloud promises flexibility and agility, the realities of cloud adoption require assessing one's specific business needs and whether a cloud provider can truly deliver the desired advantages. It promotes BigAnimal as a fully managed PostgreSQL database service in the cloud to help enterprises with their cloud journeys.
From NetOps to DevOps, modern app teams need a self‑service, API‑driven platform that integrates easily into CI/CD workflows to accelerate app deployment and makes app lifecycle management easier – whether your app has a hybrid or microservices architecture.
Built to manage NGINX Plus instances, NGINX Controller is cloud‑native, secure, and high‑performance. During this webinar, we demonstrate how NGINX Controller can streamline the management of your NGINX Application Services.
Kangaroot EDB Webinar Best Practices in Security with PostgreSQLKangaroot
The webinar will review a multi-layered framework for PostgreSQL security, with a deeper focus on limiting access to the database and data, as well as securing the data.
Using the popular AAA (Authentication, Authorisation, Auditing) framework EnterpriseDB will cover:
- Best practices for authentication (trust, certificate, MD5, Scram, etc).
- Advanced approaches, such as password profiles.
- Deep dive of authorisation and data access control for roles, database objects (tables, etc), view usage, row-level security, and data redaction.
- Auditing, encryption, and SQL injection attack prevention
Do you want to start with OpenShift but don’t have the manpower, knowledge, e...Kangaroot
Do you want to start with containers or a Kubernetes platform? You don’t have the in-house knowledge, experience, manpower to setup OpenShift? Get OpenShift in a box, managed by Kangaroot.
Digital Transformation requires a change in culture ànd in tools. OpenShift-in-a-box contains a managed platform to give you the tools at a fixed monthly fee ànd workshops & services to help you drive your change in development culture.
Red Hat multi-cluster management & what's new in OpenShiftKangaroot
More and more organisations are not only using container platforms but starting to run multiple clusters of containers. And with that comes new headaches of maintaining, securing, and updating those multiple clusters. In this session we'll look into how Red Hat has solved multi-cluster management, covering cluster lifecycle, app lifecycle, and governance/risk/compliance.
There is no such thing as “Vanilla Kubernetes”Kangaroot
홏홝홚홧홚 홞홨 홣홤 홨홪환홝 황홝홞홣활 홖홨 홑홖홣홞홡홡홖 홆홪홗홚홧홣홚황홚홨. Do you want to start your Digital Transformation, but struggling to find your way in OpenShift or Kubernetes? Together with Red Hat where we'll compare Vanilla Kubernetes with OpenShift. #DigitalTransformation #DevOps #RedHat #Kubernetes #OpenShift #VanillaKubernetes #automation #containers #orchestration
Bechtle AG is a large European IT infrastructure company with over 30 years of experience. It has a comprehensive portfolio of vendor-neutral cloud and IT solutions. Bechtle Clouds provides an enterprise-grade cloud platform through major brands and self-developed services in a multi-cloud environment. Bechtle has existing framework contracts with the Belgian government for services such as Red Hat subscriptions and software/hardware procurement.
Kangaroot open shift best practices - straight from the battlefieldKangaroot
This document discusses best practices for Day 2 operations on OpenShift infrastructure from experts with 20 years of experience in Linux and open source. It provides recommendations around designing highly available etcd clusters, implementing federated Prometheus monitoring across multiple clusters using Prometheus or Thanos, centralized logging with ElasticStack, persistent storage options, container registry considerations, backup solutions using Minio and Velero, application deployments with GitOps, and secrets storage with Vault. The company also provides 24/7 support for customers.
OpenShift 4, the smarter Kubernetes platformKangaroot
OpenShift 4 introduces automated installation, patching, and upgrades for every layer of the container stack from the operating system through application services.
DDS Security Version 1.2 was adopted in 2024. This revision strengthens support for long runnings systems adding new cryptographic algorithms, certificate revocation, and hardness against DoS attacks.
Neo4j - Product Vision and Knowledge Graphs - GraphSummit ParisNeo4j
Dr. Jesús Barrasa, Head of Solutions Architecture for EMEA, Neo4j
Découvrez les dernières innovations de Neo4j, et notamment les dernières intégrations cloud et les améliorations produits qui font de Neo4j un choix essentiel pour les développeurs qui créent des applications avec des données interconnectées et de l’IA générative.
A Study of Variable-Role-based Feature Enrichment in Neural Models of CodeAftab Hussain
Understanding variable roles in code has been found to be helpful by students
in learning programming -- could variable roles help deep neural models in
performing coding tasks? We do an exploratory study.
- These are slides of the talk given at InteNSE'23: The 1st International Workshop on Interpretability and Robustness in Neural Software Engineering, co-located with the 45th International Conference on Software Engineering, ICSE 2023, Melbourne Australia
Flutter is a popular open source, cross-platform framework developed by Google. In this webinar we'll explore Flutter and its architecture, delve into the Flutter Embedder and Flutter’s Dart language, discover how to leverage Flutter for embedded device development, learn about Automotive Grade Linux (AGL) and its consortium and understand the rationale behind AGL's choice of Flutter for next-gen IVI systems. Don’t miss this opportunity to discover whether Flutter is right for your project.
Software Engineering, Software Consulting, Tech Lead, Spring Boot, Spring Cloud, Spring Core, Spring JDBC, Spring Transaction, Spring MVC, OpenShift Cloud Platform, Kafka, REST, SOAP, LLD & HLD.
Using Query Store in Azure PostgreSQL to Understand Query PerformanceGrant Fritchey
Microsoft has added an excellent new extension in PostgreSQL on their Azure Platform. This session, presented at Posette 2024, covers what Query Store is and the types of information you can get out of it.
Measures in SQL (SIGMOD 2024, Santiago, Chile)Julian Hyde
SQL has attained widespread adoption, but Business Intelligence tools still use their own higher level languages based upon a multidimensional paradigm. Composable calculations are what is missing from SQL, and we propose a new kind of column, called a measure, that attaches a calculation to a table. Like regular tables, tables with measures are composable and closed when used in queries.
SQL-with-measures has the power, conciseness and reusability of multidimensional languages but retains SQL semantics. Measure invocations can be expanded in place to simple, clear SQL.
To define the evaluation semantics for measures, we introduce context-sensitive expressions (a way to evaluate multidimensional expressions that is consistent with existing SQL semantics), a concept called evaluation context, and several operations for setting and modifying the evaluation context.
A talk at SIGMOD, June 9–15, 2024, Santiago, Chile
Authors: Julian Hyde (Google) and John Fremlin (Google)
https://doi.org/10.1145/3626246.3653374
What is Augmented Reality Image Trackingpavan998932
Augmented Reality (AR) Image Tracking is a technology that enables AR applications to recognize and track images in the real world, overlaying digital content onto them. This enhances the user's interaction with their environment by providing additional information and interactive elements directly tied to physical images.
8 Best Automated Android App Testing Tool and Framework in 2024.pdfkalichargn70th171
Regarding mobile operating systems, two major players dominate our thoughts: Android and iPhone. With Android leading the market, software development companies are focused on delivering apps compatible with this OS. Ensuring an app's functionality across various Android devices, OS versions, and hardware specifications is critical, making Android app testing essential.
Neo4j - Product Vision and Knowledge Graphs - GraphSummit ParisNeo4j
Dr. Jesús Barrasa, Head of Solutions Architecture for EMEA, Neo4j
Découvrez les dernières innovations de Neo4j, et notamment les dernières intégrations cloud et les améliorations produits qui font de Neo4j un choix essentiel pour les développeurs qui créent des applications avec des données interconnectées et de l’IA générative.
UI5con 2024 - Keynote: Latest News about UI5 and it’s EcosystemPeter Muessig
Learn about the latest innovations in and around OpenUI5/SAPUI5: UI5 Tooling, UI5 linter, UI5 Web Components, Web Components Integration, UI5 2.x, UI5 GenAI.
Recording:
https://www.youtube.com/live/MSdGLG2zLy8?si=INxBHTqkwHhxV5Ta&t=0
Graspan: A Big Data System for Big Code AnalysisAftab Hussain
We built a disk-based parallel graph system, Graspan, that uses a novel edge-pair centric computation model to compute dynamic transitive closures on very large program graphs.
We implement context-sensitive pointer/alias and dataflow analyses on Graspan. An evaluation of these analyses on large codebases such as Linux shows that their Graspan implementations scale to millions of lines of code and are much simpler than their original implementations.
These analyses were used to augment the existing checkers; these augmented checkers found 132 new NULL pointer bugs and 1308 unnecessary NULL tests in Linux 4.4.0-rc5, PostgreSQL 8.3.9, and Apache httpd 2.2.18.
- Accepted in ASPLOS ‘17, Xi’an, China.
- Featured in the tutorial, Systemized Program Analyses: A Big Data Perspective on Static Analysis Scalability, ASPLOS ‘17.
- Invited for presentation at SoCal PLS ‘16.
- Invited for poster presentation at PLDI SRC ‘16.
Zoom is a comprehensive platform designed to connect individuals and teams efficiently. With its user-friendly interface and powerful features, Zoom has become a go-to solution for virtual communication and collaboration. It offers a range of tools, including virtual meetings, team chat, VoIP phone systems, online whiteboards, and AI companions, to streamline workflows and enhance productivity.
Do you want Software for your Business? Visit Deuglo
Deuglo has top Software Developers in India. They are experts in software development and help design and create custom Software solutions.
Deuglo follows seven steps methods for delivering their services to their customers. They called it the Software development life cycle process (SDLC).
Requirement — Collecting the Requirements is the first Phase in the SSLC process.
Feasibility Study — after completing the requirement process they move to the design phase.
Design — in this phase, they start designing the software.
Coding — when designing is completed, the developers start coding for the software.
Testing — in this phase when the coding of the software is done the testing team will start testing.
Installation — after completion of testing, the application opens to the live server and launches!
Maintenance — after completing the software development, customers start using the software.
Microservice Teams - How the cloud changes the way we workSven Peters
A lot of technical challenges and complexity come with building a cloud-native and distributed architecture. The way we develop backend software has fundamentally changed in the last ten years. Managing a microservices architecture demands a lot of us to ensure observability and operational resiliency. But did you also change the way you run your development teams?
Sven will talk about Atlassian’s journey from a monolith to a multi-tenanted architecture and how it affected the way the engineering teams work. You will learn how we shifted to service ownership, moved to more autonomous teams (and its challenges), and established platform and enablement teams.
OpenMetadata Community Meeting - 5th June 2024OpenMetadata
The OpenMetadata Community Meeting was held on June 5th, 2024. In this meeting, we discussed about the data quality capabilities that are integrated with the Incident Manager, providing a complete solution to handle your data observability needs. Watch the end-to-end demo of the data quality features.
* How to run your own data quality framework
* What is the performance impact of running data quality frameworks
* How to run the test cases in your own ETL pipelines
* How the Incident Manager is integrated
* Get notified with alerts when test cases fail
Watch the meeting recording here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UbNOje0kf6E
6. 6
OPEN ORGANIZATIONS CREATE
SUSTAINED COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
OPEN
TECHNOLOGY
OPEN
CULTURE
New delivery models
and revenue streams
New ecosystem
of innovations
Faster time to market Cultural
transformation
COLLABORATION | TRANSPARENCY | INCLUSIVITY | ADAPTABILITY | COMMUNITY
7. 7
COLLABORATIVE CULTURE
1. Respond to opportunities more quickly.
2. Improve access to resources & talent for the organization.
3. Inspire & motivate people at all levels to act with accountability.