This document summarizes Opera Mini's growth and performance in May 2009. Some key points:
- Opera Mini saw 8% growth in users since April and over 136% growth since May 2008.
- India moved up and Ukraine moved down in the top 10 countries by users. Southeast Asian countries also saw strong growth, particularly Vietnam which grew over 400% in users.
- Google and Yahoo remained the most used search engines overall, though regional players like Baidu and Yandex dominated in China and Russia.
- The mobile web continued expanding rapidly, with over 9.6 billion pages viewed on Opera Mini in May 2009, up 11% from April.
Opera Mini saw impressive growth in March 2009 with over 23 million unique users, an increase of 12.1% from the previous month. Total pages viewed increased 17.4% to over 8.6 billion and data consumed increased 19.3% to over 148 million MB. Chile surpassed Brazil as the top Latin American country for Opera Mini usage. Nigeria joined the top 10 global list for the first time. Country snapshots showed strong growth across many markets including Russia, Indonesia, China and others.
The document provides a summary of mobile web usage in 2008 based on data from the Opera Mini browser. It finds that social networking sites dominated mobile web traffic globally and in most countries. The top three social networks globally were VKontakte, Facebook, and Friendster. Facebook saw enormous growth rates in many countries like Indonesia (+4380%) and Egypt (+3400%). The document predicts continued strong growth in mobile web and social networking usage in 2009, especially in developing countries.
The document discusses trends in mobile internet usage globally. Some key points:
- Mobile internet penetration and usage is growing rapidly in emerging markets while growth is slower in developed markets.
- A significant portion (around 50%) of mobile internet users in Africa and Asia access the internet primarily or solely through their mobile devices, whereas in Western countries most still use desktop/laptop computers as the main access point.
- Many of the "mobile-only" internet users in emerging markets are younger (under 25 years old) while profiles vary more in developed countries.
- Countries like India, Indonesia, and Nigeria have seen very high year-over-year growth rates in metrics like user numbers, page views,
AdMob's monthly report provides insights into mobile app and website usage trends based on data from their network of over 15,000 mobile sites and apps. Some key findings:
- Smartphone traffic increased 193% in the past year and accounted for 48% of traffic in February 2010, up from 35% in February 2009, driven primarily by growth in iPhone and Android devices.
- Feature phone traffic declined from 58% to 35% of total traffic as users switched to smartphones, though feature phone traffic still grew 31% overall.
- Mobile internet device traffic grew the most at 403%, with the iPod touch responsible for 93% of that category's traffic.
- The top smartphone platforms were the
This document summarizes the mobile apps market in Russia in 2018. It provides information on population size and smartphone penetration rates. Russia has the 9th largest population globally at 146 million people, and a smartphone penetration rate of 58.7%, lower than the global average. Android is the dominant mobile OS in Russia. In 2018, Russia had the 5th highest number of app downloads globally at 4.82 billion, up 12% from 2017. Popular Russian apps include VK, OK, Sberbank Online, and Yandex apps. The document also outlines key mobile usage trends, top apps, and legal/quality considerations for the Russian app market.
AdMob stores and analyzes data from each ad request to serve the most relevant ad possible. AdMob Mobile Metrics offers a snapshot of this data to provide insight into trends in the mobile ecosystem.
Our April 2010 report compares unique devices running the Android and iPhone Operating Systems (OS) in our network.
The document discusses mobile input and forms. It makes three main points:
1. Put effort into input where there is the most payoff, such as on capable smartphones where input is easier. However, don't forget about SMS input which is widely used.
2. Take the pain out of forms by shortening them, using better layouts like top-aligned labels, defining clear input types, and using smart defaults to reduce input needed.
3. Look beyond traditional forms for input, such as using SMS, touch-friendly layouts, and leveraging new HTML5 input types. Focus on making input as easy as possible across different mobile devices.
This document discusses the concept of mobile first design. It argues that web products should be designed with mobile in mind first due to the massive growth of mobile usage and opportunities it provides. Constraints of mobile such as small screens require a focus on simplicity and essential features. Mobile capabilities can also drive innovation if designers challenge themselves to make full use of sensors, location detection and other mobile features.
Opera Mini saw impressive growth in March 2009 with over 23 million unique users, an increase of 12.1% from the previous month. Total pages viewed increased 17.4% to over 8.6 billion and data consumed increased 19.3% to over 148 million MB. Chile surpassed Brazil as the top Latin American country for Opera Mini usage. Nigeria joined the top 10 global list for the first time. Country snapshots showed strong growth across many markets including Russia, Indonesia, China and others.
The document provides a summary of mobile web usage in 2008 based on data from the Opera Mini browser. It finds that social networking sites dominated mobile web traffic globally and in most countries. The top three social networks globally were VKontakte, Facebook, and Friendster. Facebook saw enormous growth rates in many countries like Indonesia (+4380%) and Egypt (+3400%). The document predicts continued strong growth in mobile web and social networking usage in 2009, especially in developing countries.
The document discusses trends in mobile internet usage globally. Some key points:
- Mobile internet penetration and usage is growing rapidly in emerging markets while growth is slower in developed markets.
- A significant portion (around 50%) of mobile internet users in Africa and Asia access the internet primarily or solely through their mobile devices, whereas in Western countries most still use desktop/laptop computers as the main access point.
- Many of the "mobile-only" internet users in emerging markets are younger (under 25 years old) while profiles vary more in developed countries.
- Countries like India, Indonesia, and Nigeria have seen very high year-over-year growth rates in metrics like user numbers, page views,
AdMob's monthly report provides insights into mobile app and website usage trends based on data from their network of over 15,000 mobile sites and apps. Some key findings:
- Smartphone traffic increased 193% in the past year and accounted for 48% of traffic in February 2010, up from 35% in February 2009, driven primarily by growth in iPhone and Android devices.
- Feature phone traffic declined from 58% to 35% of total traffic as users switched to smartphones, though feature phone traffic still grew 31% overall.
- Mobile internet device traffic grew the most at 403%, with the iPod touch responsible for 93% of that category's traffic.
- The top smartphone platforms were the
This document summarizes the mobile apps market in Russia in 2018. It provides information on population size and smartphone penetration rates. Russia has the 9th largest population globally at 146 million people, and a smartphone penetration rate of 58.7%, lower than the global average. Android is the dominant mobile OS in Russia. In 2018, Russia had the 5th highest number of app downloads globally at 4.82 billion, up 12% from 2017. Popular Russian apps include VK, OK, Sberbank Online, and Yandex apps. The document also outlines key mobile usage trends, top apps, and legal/quality considerations for the Russian app market.
AdMob stores and analyzes data from each ad request to serve the most relevant ad possible. AdMob Mobile Metrics offers a snapshot of this data to provide insight into trends in the mobile ecosystem.
Our April 2010 report compares unique devices running the Android and iPhone Operating Systems (OS) in our network.
The document discusses mobile input and forms. It makes three main points:
1. Put effort into input where there is the most payoff, such as on capable smartphones where input is easier. However, don't forget about SMS input which is widely used.
2. Take the pain out of forms by shortening them, using better layouts like top-aligned labels, defining clear input types, and using smart defaults to reduce input needed.
3. Look beyond traditional forms for input, such as using SMS, touch-friendly layouts, and leveraging new HTML5 input types. Focus on making input as easy as possible across different mobile devices.
This document discusses the concept of mobile first design. It argues that web products should be designed with mobile in mind first due to the massive growth of mobile usage and opportunities it provides. Constraints of mobile such as small screens require a focus on simplicity and essential features. Mobile capabilities can also drive innovation if designers challenge themselves to make full use of sensors, location detection and other mobile features.
The Obama 2008 presidential campaign utilized new media to build the Obama brand from low name recognition to the presidency over two years. [1] The campaign prioritized new media and staffed it equally with other divisions, gathering a database of 13 million supporters through compelling content on platforms like Facebook, YouTube, email and mobile. [2] Testing, measurement, and optimization were central to the data-driven new media strategy of fundraising, volunteer mobilization, and communicating a focused, consistent message of change. [3] Obama's grassroots, supporter-centered approach revolutionized political new media and helped him become the 2008 Marketer of the Year.
This document provides 26 questions for researchers to ask online sample providers to better evaluate their methodology and ensure sample quality. The questions cover topics like company profile, sample sources, panel recruitment, data quality validation, and privacy/compliance. The goal is to help researchers determine if a provider's online sampling approach is appropriate for their research objectives and needs.
This document provides guidelines for conducting market and opinion research using the internet. It discusses basic principles such as ensuring voluntary participation, disclosing the researcher's identity, safeguarding respondent anonymity, using privacy policy statements, maintaining data security, addressing reliability and validity, guidelines for interviewing children, and restrictions on unsolicited email. It also provides additional guidance on these principles and guidelines for using internet access panels, including best practices for panel recruitment, project management, monitoring, maintenance, and privacy/data protection. The document aims to help researchers uphold ethical standards and comply with relevant laws and codes of practice when conducting internet-based research.
Opera Mini usage continues to grow rapidly worldwide. In September 2009, Opera Mini passed 500 million average daily page views and 2 petabytes of monthly data processed. Usage is growing fastest in developing countries. The top countries for Opera Mini usage save up to $8.1 billion per year through data compression. Growth in countries like Vietnam, Indonesia, and South Africa underscores the role of mobile internet access in expanding opportunities globally.
The document discusses the growth of mobile web browsing and Opera Mini. It notes that in July 2009, Opera Mini users viewed over 12 billion pages, up 15.4% from the previous month. Emerging markets like Russia and Indonesia have seen especially strong growth, driven by increasing social networking on mobile devices. Examples from Russia show people using the mobile web for transportation updates, news, and social media. The mobile web enables access to information without needing a PC. The document suggests India, Nigeria, South Africa and other countries may see similar growth patterns.
This document summarizes Opera Mini usage trends in Central Europe. It finds that mobile web usage via Opera Mini has grown significantly in countries like Poland, Czech Republic, Romania, and Slovakia from 2009 to 2010. Poland has seen especially strong growth, with page views increasing 68.5% and unique users growing 16.1%. The document also analyzes browsing habits and popular websites in each country. Overall, it demonstrates the rapid growth of the mobile web in Central and Eastern Europe driven by services like Opera Mini.
Internet trends - Mini Report based on gemiusRankingGemius Baltics
Internet trends in CEE and MENA regions in 2010. Report based on gemiusRanking data.
gemiusRanking data for Baltics are available on:
LV www.ranking.lv
LT www.ranking.lt
EE www.rankingee.com
This document discusses key trends in social media and the cross-device future from Opera Software's perspective. It summarizes findings from Opera's State of the Mobile Web reports, including that emerging economies are driving significant mobile web usage and growth, the social web is a major driver of mobile traffic, and full-featured web browsers are becoming more prevalent on mobile devices. It advocates for open web standards and progressive enhancement to provide universal access to the web across all devices.
Mobile Phone Publishing Terminalfour Presentation V3David Miller
The document discusses the importance of mobile publishing and the key issues companies will face. It outlines how the mobile landscape is very fragmented with many different device platforms, browsers, and screen sizes. This makes publishing content that works well across all mobile environments challenging. The document recommends using a content management system like TerminalFour to develop a standard website and then repurpose the content for different mobile channels and devices. The CMS can help manage all the various mobile versions while reusing the same underlying content.
The Obama 2008 presidential campaign utilized new media to build the Obama brand from low name recognition to the presidency over two years. [1] The campaign prioritized new media and staffed it equally with other divisions, gathering a database of 13 million supporters through compelling content on platforms like Facebook, YouTube, email and mobile. [2] Testing, measurement, and optimization were central to the data-driven new media strategy of fundraising, volunteer mobilization, and communicating a focused, consistent message of change. [3] Obama's grassroots, supporter-centered approach revolutionized political new media and helped him become the 2008 Marketer of the Year.
This document provides 26 questions for researchers to ask online sample providers to better evaluate their methodology and ensure sample quality. The questions cover topics like company profile, sample sources, panel recruitment, data quality validation, and privacy/compliance. The goal is to help researchers determine if a provider's online sampling approach is appropriate for their research objectives and needs.
This document provides guidelines for conducting market and opinion research using the internet. It discusses basic principles such as ensuring voluntary participation, disclosing the researcher's identity, safeguarding respondent anonymity, using privacy policy statements, maintaining data security, addressing reliability and validity, guidelines for interviewing children, and restrictions on unsolicited email. It also provides additional guidance on these principles and guidelines for using internet access panels, including best practices for panel recruitment, project management, monitoring, maintenance, and privacy/data protection. The document aims to help researchers uphold ethical standards and comply with relevant laws and codes of practice when conducting internet-based research.
Opera Mini usage continues to grow rapidly worldwide. In September 2009, Opera Mini passed 500 million average daily page views and 2 petabytes of monthly data processed. Usage is growing fastest in developing countries. The top countries for Opera Mini usage save up to $8.1 billion per year through data compression. Growth in countries like Vietnam, Indonesia, and South Africa underscores the role of mobile internet access in expanding opportunities globally.
The document discusses the growth of mobile web browsing and Opera Mini. It notes that in July 2009, Opera Mini users viewed over 12 billion pages, up 15.4% from the previous month. Emerging markets like Russia and Indonesia have seen especially strong growth, driven by increasing social networking on mobile devices. Examples from Russia show people using the mobile web for transportation updates, news, and social media. The mobile web enables access to information without needing a PC. The document suggests India, Nigeria, South Africa and other countries may see similar growth patterns.
This document summarizes Opera Mini usage trends in Central Europe. It finds that mobile web usage via Opera Mini has grown significantly in countries like Poland, Czech Republic, Romania, and Slovakia from 2009 to 2010. Poland has seen especially strong growth, with page views increasing 68.5% and unique users growing 16.1%. The document also analyzes browsing habits and popular websites in each country. Overall, it demonstrates the rapid growth of the mobile web in Central and Eastern Europe driven by services like Opera Mini.
Internet trends - Mini Report based on gemiusRankingGemius Baltics
Internet trends in CEE and MENA regions in 2010. Report based on gemiusRanking data.
gemiusRanking data for Baltics are available on:
LV www.ranking.lv
LT www.ranking.lt
EE www.rankingee.com
This document discusses key trends in social media and the cross-device future from Opera Software's perspective. It summarizes findings from Opera's State of the Mobile Web reports, including that emerging economies are driving significant mobile web usage and growth, the social web is a major driver of mobile traffic, and full-featured web browsers are becoming more prevalent on mobile devices. It advocates for open web standards and progressive enhancement to provide universal access to the web across all devices.
Mobile Phone Publishing Terminalfour Presentation V3David Miller
The document discusses the importance of mobile publishing and the key issues companies will face. It outlines how the mobile landscape is very fragmented with many different device platforms, browsers, and screen sizes. This makes publishing content that works well across all mobile environments challenging. The document recommends using a content management system like TerminalFour to develop a standard website and then repurpose the content for different mobile channels and devices. The CMS can help manage all the various mobile versions while reusing the same underlying content.
The document discusses designing mobile web experiences. It begins by noting that while some devices like the iPhone are popular, the overall penetration of smartphones remains relatively low globally. It then examines the diversity of mobile devices and browsers in use. The document argues for an adaptive approach that works across different browsers and devices, using techniques like responsive design with media queries. It provides guidelines for mobile-friendly development, such as using semantic HTML, limiting animations for performance, and structuring CSS to deliver the right styles for each device type. The goal is to make the mobile web accessible to all users, not just those with specific devices.
The document analyzes the success of the iPhone and what it revealed about the future of mobile phones. It summarizes that the iPhone was very successful due to its large touchscreen, ease of use, and ability to access the full, uncensored internet experience like on a PC. This shifted users away from previous mobile internet experiences that were limited in bandwidth and customized portals, and towards viewing the mobile internet and the iPhone as a ubiquitous internet device.
The document summarizes key points from the International Information Innovation Conference 2009 Day 2 presentation on mobile commerce. It discusses the growth of mobile internet and application usage. It notes that search volumes are rising on operator portals which now link to off-portal sites. Discovery of mobile applications is becoming a focus, with options including app stores, pre-loaded apps, banners, text campaigns, and search listings. Operators employ various paid and free discovery methods on their networks.
This document discusses trends in internet and mobile technology. It covers topics like the global reach of the internet, rapid growth of mobile internet and smartphones, and transition to new interfaces like touchscreens. Key points include that 81% of users of major online properties are outside the US, China added more internet users over 3 years than exist in the US, and mobile advertising revenues are growing rapidly.
The document summarizes key points about the iPhone for website owners, including:
- The iPhone browser allows desktop-style browsing of websites, while most mobile phones require optimized mobile versions.
- iPhone usage is still relatively low compared to other phones and desktop computers, but is growing rapidly.
- Websites can integrate with the iPhone to add features like payments and age verification.
- Developers are encouraged to support the iPhone platform given its growing popularity and distribution via the iTunes Store, but the market remains in flux.
There is a huge cultural shift taking place. For the last 10 years, since 2000 we have experienced how everything is getting digital. The mobile phone is today just as powerful as a desktop computer in 2000. We have all this power in our pocket.
This presentation was given at the Gambling Technology Strategies 2011 in London.
Nokia was once the dominant mobile phone manufacturer, holding over 30% of the global market share. However, its market share dropped below 30% in 2011 as it struggled to compete with smartphones running Android and iOS that had more advanced apps and processors. In an attempt to turn things around, in 2011 Nokia partnered with Microsoft to use the Windows Phone platform for future devices. However, Nokia remained dependent on Microsoft and faced strong competition from Apple and Google, making a full recovery difficult. The partnership aimed to combine Nokia's manufacturing and distribution with Microsoft's software expertise to build a new mobile ecosystem.
Nokia was once the dominant mobile phone manufacturer, holding over 30% of the global market share. However, its market share dropped below 30% in 2011 as it struggled to compete with smartphones running Android and iOS that had more advanced apps and processors. In an attempt to turn things around, in 2011 Nokia partnered with Microsoft to use the Windows Phone platform for future devices. However, Nokia remained dependent on Microsoft and faced strong competition from Apple and Google, making it difficult for the company to recover its former dominance in the mobile market.
Nokia was once the dominant mobile phone manufacturer, holding over 30% of the global market share. However, its market share declined rapidly as it struggled to compete with smartphones running iOS and Android that had more advanced apps and processors. In 2011, Nokia partnered with Microsoft to use the Windows Phone platform in hopes of regaining market share. However, being too reliant on Microsoft posed risks. The partnership aimed to combine Nokia's manufacturing and distribution with Microsoft's software expertise to create an innovative mobile ecosystem.
Nokia was once the dominant mobile phone manufacturer, holding over 30% of the global market share. However, its market share dropped below 30% in 2011 as it struggled to compete with smartphones running Android and iOS that had more advanced apps and processors. In an attempt to turn things around, in 2011 Nokia partnered with Microsoft to use the Windows Phone platform for future devices. However, Nokia remained dependent on Microsoft and faced strong competition from Apple and Google, making a full recovery difficult. The partnership aimed to combine Nokia's manufacturing and distribution with Microsoft's software expertise to build a new mobile ecosystem.
Nokia was once the dominant mobile phone manufacturer, holding over 30% of the global market share. However, its market share dropped below 30% in 2011 as it struggled to compete with smartphones running Android and iOS that had more advanced apps and processors. In an attempt to turn things around, in 2011 Nokia partnered with Microsoft to use the Windows Phone platform for future Nokia devices. However, Nokia remained dependent on Microsoft and faced strong competition in the smartphone market from Apple and Google. The partnership aimed to combine Nokia's manufacturing and distribution with Microsoft's software expertise to create a new mobile ecosystem.
This document discusses the mobile app landscape and challenges some common assumptions about apps. It notes that the number of apps and downloads continues to grow rapidly across platforms like Android, iOS, Nokia and Windows Phone. However, it argues that apps are not defined by technology, are not necessarily a business model, and are not just a distribution method. The top websites still account for a large percentage of total web traffic. It encourages developers to think beyond traditional notions of what an app is and how it fits within their business.
This document contains a presentation on mobile development cliches. It discusses mobile app statistics for platforms like Android, iOS, Nokia and Windows Phone over time. It also touches on costs of mobile app production and distribution. Key points include comparisons of number of apps and downloads per platform, increases in mobile websites over time, and challenges to common views of apps as just distribution methods bound to technologies.
Similar to 2009, Opera, State Of The Mobile Web, May (20)
This document provides a summary of key digital marketing trends in 2008. It found that while internet usage grew, the economic slowdown caused declines in some areas like retail e-commerce and display advertising. Search and video continued to grow substantially. Top trends included a focus on jobs, coupons and politics websites due to the economy, as well as growth of social media and video sites like YouTube and Hulu. Google became the top overall website.
Over the past few years, listening to radio via the internet has grown significantly in the UK. The survey found that 14.5 million people, or 28.9% of UK adults, have listened to the radio online. 9.4 million people do so at least weekly. Listen Again services, which allow listening to missed broadcasts, are popular, with 9.3 million people using them. 6 million people have downloaded podcasts. The average podcast user subscribes to 3.59 podcasts and listens for just over an hour per week. Comedy and music are the most popular genres. iTunes is the most commonly used software for accessing podcasts. Podcasting appears to have a marginal positive impact on live radio listening.
Programming Foundation Models with DSPy - Meetup SlidesZilliz
Prompting language models is hard, while programming language models is easy. In this talk, I will discuss the state-of-the-art framework DSPy for programming foundation models with its powerful optimizers and runtime constraint system.
Main news related to the CCS TSI 2023 (2023/1695)Jakub Marek
An English 🇬🇧 translation of a presentation to the speech I gave about the main changes brought by CCS TSI 2023 at the biggest Czech conference on Communications and signalling systems on Railways, which was held in Clarion Hotel Olomouc from 7th to 9th November 2023 (konferenceszt.cz). Attended by around 500 participants and 200 on-line followers.
The original Czech 🇨🇿 version of the presentation can be found here: https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/hlavni-novinky-souvisejici-s-ccs-tsi-2023-2023-1695/269688092 .
The videorecording (in Czech) from the presentation is available here: https://youtu.be/WzjJWm4IyPk?si=SImb06tuXGb30BEH .
Your One-Stop Shop for Python Success: Top 10 US Python Development Providersakankshawande
Simplify your search for a reliable Python development partner! This list presents the top 10 trusted US providers offering comprehensive Python development services, ensuring your project's success from conception to completion.
Dandelion Hashtable: beyond billion requests per second on a commodity serverAntonios Katsarakis
This slide deck presents DLHT, a concurrent in-memory hashtable. Despite efforts to optimize hashtables, that go as far as sacrificing core functionality, state-of-the-art designs still incur multiple memory accesses per request and block request processing in three cases. First, most hashtables block while waiting for data to be retrieved from memory. Second, open-addressing designs, which represent the current state-of-the-art, either cannot free index slots on deletes or must block all requests to do so. Third, index resizes block every request until all objects are copied to the new index. Defying folklore wisdom, DLHT forgoes open-addressing and adopts a fully-featured and memory-aware closed-addressing design based on bounded cache-line-chaining. This design offers lock-free index operations and deletes that free slots instantly, (2) completes most requests with a single memory access, (3) utilizes software prefetching to hide memory latencies, and (4) employs a novel non-blocking and parallel resizing. In a commodity server and a memory-resident workload, DLHT surpasses 1.6B requests per second and provides 3.5x (12x) the throughput of the state-of-the-art closed-addressing (open-addressing) resizable hashtable on Gets (Deletes).
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/how-axelera-ai-uses-digital-compute-in-memory-to-deliver-fast-and-energy-efficient-computer-vision-a-presentation-from-axelera-ai/
Bram Verhoef, Head of Machine Learning at Axelera AI, presents the “How Axelera AI Uses Digital Compute-in-memory to Deliver Fast and Energy-efficient Computer Vision” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
As artificial intelligence inference transitions from cloud environments to edge locations, computer vision applications achieve heightened responsiveness, reliability and privacy. This migration, however, introduces the challenge of operating within the stringent confines of resource constraints typical at the edge, including small form factors, low energy budgets and diminished memory and computational capacities. Axelera AI addresses these challenges through an innovative approach of performing digital computations within memory itself. This technique facilitates the realization of high-performance, energy-efficient and cost-effective computer vision capabilities at the thin and thick edge, extending the frontier of what is achievable with current technologies.
In this presentation, Verhoef unveils his company’s pioneering chip technology and demonstrates its capacity to deliver exceptional frames-per-second performance across a range of standard computer vision networks typical of applications in security, surveillance and the industrial sector. This shows that advanced computer vision can be accessible and efficient, even at the very edge of our technological ecosystem.
Freshworks Rethinks NoSQL for Rapid Scaling & Cost-EfficiencyScyllaDB
Freshworks creates AI-boosted business software that helps employees work more efficiently and effectively. Managing data across multiple RDBMS and NoSQL databases was already a challenge at their current scale. To prepare for 10X growth, they knew it was time to rethink their database strategy. Learn how they architected a solution that would simplify scaling while keeping costs under control.
Skybuffer SAM4U tool for SAP license adoptionTatiana Kojar
Manage and optimize your license adoption and consumption with SAM4U, an SAP free customer software asset management tool.
SAM4U, an SAP complimentary software asset management tool for customers, delivers a detailed and well-structured overview of license inventory and usage with a user-friendly interface. We offer a hosted, cost-effective, and performance-optimized SAM4U setup in the Skybuffer Cloud environment. You retain ownership of the system and data, while we manage the ABAP 7.58 infrastructure, ensuring fixed Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and exceptional services through the SAP Fiori interface.
Northern Engraving | Nameplate Manufacturing Process - 2024Northern Engraving
Manufacturing custom quality metal nameplates and badges involves several standard operations. Processes include sheet prep, lithography, screening, coating, punch press and inspection. All decoration is completed in the flat sheet with adhesive and tooling operations following. The possibilities for creating unique durable nameplates are endless. How will you create your brand identity? We can help!
In the realm of cybersecurity, offensive security practices act as a critical shield. By simulating real-world attacks in a controlled environment, these techniques expose vulnerabilities before malicious actors can exploit them. This proactive approach allows manufacturers to identify and fix weaknesses, significantly enhancing system security.
This presentation delves into the development of a system designed to mimic Galileo's Open Service signal using software-defined radio (SDR) technology. We'll begin with a foundational overview of both Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) and the intricacies of digital signal processing.
The presentation culminates in a live demonstration. We'll showcase the manipulation of Galileo's Open Service pilot signal, simulating an attack on various software and hardware systems. This practical demonstration serves to highlight the potential consequences of unaddressed vulnerabilities, emphasizing the importance of offensive security practices in safeguarding critical infrastructure.
Generating privacy-protected synthetic data using Secludy and MilvusZilliz
During this demo, the founders of Secludy will demonstrate how their system utilizes Milvus to store and manipulate embeddings for generating privacy-protected synthetic data. Their approach not only maintains the confidentiality of the original data but also enhances the utility and scalability of LLMs under privacy constraints. Attendees, including machine learning engineers, data scientists, and data managers, will witness first-hand how Secludy's integration with Milvus empowers organizations to harness the power of LLMs securely and efficiently.
Discover top-tier mobile app development services, offering innovative solutions for iOS and Android. Enhance your business with custom, user-friendly mobile applications.
Conversational agents, or chatbots, are increasingly used to access all sorts of services using natural language. While open-domain chatbots - like ChatGPT - can converse on any topic, task-oriented chatbots - the focus of this paper - are designed for specific tasks, like booking a flight, obtaining customer support, or setting an appointment. Like any other software, task-oriented chatbots need to be properly tested, usually by defining and executing test scenarios (i.e., sequences of user-chatbot interactions). However, there is currently a lack of methods to quantify the completeness and strength of such test scenarios, which can lead to low-quality tests, and hence to buggy chatbots.
To fill this gap, we propose adapting mutation testing (MuT) for task-oriented chatbots. To this end, we introduce a set of mutation operators that emulate faults in chatbot designs, an architecture that enables MuT on chatbots built using heterogeneous technologies, and a practical realisation as an Eclipse plugin. Moreover, we evaluate the applicability, effectiveness and efficiency of our approach on open-source chatbots, with promising results.
Essentials of Automations: Exploring Attributes & Automation ParametersSafe Software
Building automations in FME Flow can save time, money, and help businesses scale by eliminating data silos and providing data to stakeholders in real-time. One essential component to orchestrating complex automations is the use of attributes & automation parameters (both formerly known as “keys”). In fact, it’s unlikely you’ll ever build an Automation without using these components, but what exactly are they?
Attributes & automation parameters enable the automation author to pass data values from one automation component to the next. During this webinar, our FME Flow Specialists will cover leveraging the three types of these output attributes & parameters in FME Flow: Event, Custom, and Automation. As a bonus, they’ll also be making use of the Split-Merge Block functionality.
You’ll leave this webinar with a better understanding of how to maximize the potential of automations by making use of attributes & automation parameters, with the ultimate goal of setting your enterprise integration workflows up on autopilot.
"Frontline Battles with DDoS: Best practices and Lessons Learned", Igor IvaniukFwdays
At this talk we will discuss DDoS protection tools and best practices, discuss network architectures and what AWS has to offer. Also, we will look into one of the largest DDoS attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure that happened in February 2022. We'll see, what techniques helped to keep the web resources available for Ukrainians and how AWS improved DDoS protection for all customers based on Ukraine experience
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift.pdfTosin Akinosho
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift
Overview
Dive into the world of anomaly detection on edge devices with our comprehensive hands-on tutorial. This SlideShare presentation will guide you through the entire process, from data collection and model training to edge deployment and real-time monitoring. Perfect for those looking to implement robust anomaly detection systems on resource-constrained IoT/edge devices.
Key Topics Covered
1. Introduction to Anomaly Detection
- Understand the fundamentals of anomaly detection and its importance in identifying unusual behavior or failures in systems.
2. Understanding Edge (IoT)
- Learn about edge computing and IoT, and how they enable real-time data processing and decision-making at the source.
3. What is ArgoCD?
- Discover ArgoCD, a declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes, and its role in deploying applications on edge devices.
4. Deployment Using ArgoCD for Edge Devices
- Step-by-step guide on deploying anomaly detection models on edge devices using ArgoCD.
5. Introduction to Apache Kafka and S3
- Explore Apache Kafka for real-time data streaming and Amazon S3 for scalable storage solutions.
6. Viewing Kafka Messages in the Data Lake
- Learn how to view and analyze Kafka messages stored in a data lake for better insights.
7. What is Prometheus?
- Get to know Prometheus, an open-source monitoring and alerting toolkit, and its application in monitoring edge devices.
8. Monitoring Application Metrics with Prometheus
- Detailed instructions on setting up Prometheus to monitor the performance and health of your anomaly detection system.
9. What is Camel K?
- Introduction to Camel K, a lightweight integration framework built on Apache Camel, designed for Kubernetes.
10. Configuring Camel K Integrations for Data Pipelines
- Learn how to configure Camel K for seamless data pipeline integrations in your anomaly detection workflow.
11. What is a Jupyter Notebook?
- Overview of Jupyter Notebooks, an open-source web application for creating and sharing documents with live code, equations, visualizations, and narrative text.
12. Jupyter Notebooks with Code Examples
- Hands-on examples and code snippets in Jupyter Notebooks to help you implement and test anomaly detection models.