The panel ICT for the Cultural Heritage has been held in L'Aquila, on May 04th and 05th 2017. Its main goals have been:
- to let researchers from the Smart Cities and Communites Laboratory from CINI () meet to share knowledge, discuss, and open new collaborations in the field of ICT for the Cultural Heritage;
- to let cultural heritage administrators (directors, cultural heritage curators, etc.) meet italian researchers proposing concrete solutions and projects that use the ICT for improving the cultural heritage management.
The slides from the event are available at:
https://www.slideshare.net/ICTBeniCulturaliUnivAQ/
HBIM Leinster House, Laser Scan Survey Modelling and Conservation documentati...CARARE
Leinster House, currently the seat of the Parliament in Ireland, was constructed in 1745 for the Duke of Leinster as a country House. The Discovery Programme is creating a Historic Building Information Model (HBIM) of Leinster House to support its conservation and management. The paper describes the HBIM workflow, the challenges faced and techniques being used by the Discovery Programme to create a solution and protocols that can be used on other historic buildings managed by the Office of Public Works in Ireland. The project to create the HBIM is a partnership involving the Discovery Programme, Carleton Immersive Media Studio and Dublin Institute of Technology.
What is GeoBIM? Steve Crompton at Digital Construction Week 2016 GroupBC
Steve Crompton, our Chief Technology Officer, presents on GeoBIM and the benefits of linking geospatial data as layers to models for a richer and better understanding of built asset projects, enabling better decisions and efficiencies.
(10) L’Aquila, a green field for Cultural Heritage Valorization: INCIPICT an...ICTBeniCulturaliUnivAQ
The panel ICT for the Cultural Heritage has been held in L'Aquila, on May 04th and 05th 2017. Its main goals have been:
- to let researchers from the Smart Cities and Communites Laboratory from CINI () meet to share knowledge, discuss, and open new collaborations in the field of ICT for the Cultural Heritage;
- to let cultural heritage administrators (directors, cultural heritage curators, etc.) meet italian researchers proposing concrete solutions and projects that use the ICT for improving the cultural heritage management.
The slides from the event are available at:
https://www.slideshare.net/ICTBeniCulturaliUnivAQ/
HBIM Leinster House, Laser Scan Survey Modelling and Conservation documentati...CARARE
Leinster House, currently the seat of the Parliament in Ireland, was constructed in 1745 for the Duke of Leinster as a country House. The Discovery Programme is creating a Historic Building Information Model (HBIM) of Leinster House to support its conservation and management. The paper describes the HBIM workflow, the challenges faced and techniques being used by the Discovery Programme to create a solution and protocols that can be used on other historic buildings managed by the Office of Public Works in Ireland. The project to create the HBIM is a partnership involving the Discovery Programme, Carleton Immersive Media Studio and Dublin Institute of Technology.
What is GeoBIM? Steve Crompton at Digital Construction Week 2016 GroupBC
Steve Crompton, our Chief Technology Officer, presents on GeoBIM and the benefits of linking geospatial data as layers to models for a richer and better understanding of built asset projects, enabling better decisions and efficiencies.
(10) L’Aquila, a green field for Cultural Heritage Valorization: INCIPICT an...ICTBeniCulturaliUnivAQ
The panel ICT for the Cultural Heritage has been held in L'Aquila, on May 04th and 05th 2017. Its main goals have been:
- to let researchers from the Smart Cities and Communites Laboratory from CINI () meet to share knowledge, discuss, and open new collaborations in the field of ICT for the Cultural Heritage;
- to let cultural heritage administrators (directors, cultural heritage curators, etc.) meet italian researchers proposing concrete solutions and projects that use the ICT for improving the cultural heritage management.
The slides from the event are available at:
https://www.slideshare.net/ICTBeniCulturaliUnivAQ/
Flavio Bono - Smart Buildings Analysis with Digital Twins.pptxFIWARE
The development of Smart Cities is becoming increasingly important in the creation of intelligent ecosystems. The primary objective of Smart Cities is to enhance the quality of life of citizens while also engaging companies to work towards achieving mission zero. However, the question arises as to how this can be achieved. How can technology, urban needs, and mission zero objectives be effectively interconnected in a city setting?
Learn more about Smart City ecosystems powered by FIWARE, Smart City solutions and technologies to improve citizens life and at the end fulfilling mission zero together by the power of technology.
Be part of a discussion for future cities powered by FIWARE.
Digital Cultural Heritage and the new EU Framework Programmelocloud
2nd LoCloud Awareness Event at the Ministry of Education and Culture, Cyprus 5 March 2014. Presentation delivered by Marinos Ioannides, Cyprus University of Technology
Iolanda Pensa, Wikimedia projects and OpenStreetMap as an Open Research Infrastructure, 03 February 2024, FOSDEM, Bruxelles, CC BY-SA 4.0
The Wikimedia and OpenStreetMap projects are an existing free software infrastructure that already produces citizen science and can be used by researchers to share and co-produce data and to produce - and reproduce - the results of research. The presentation specifically refers to the potential of data related to cultural heritage for studies in the humanities and in particular in museology, art, art history and history of architecture.
Talk titled 'User-centred and Participatory Cartography'
Interest in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) has been part of Geographical Information Science (GIScience) and cartography for a long time. Even before the term Geographical Information System (GIS) was invented (Tomlinson, 1967), researchers of “Man Machine Interaction” at MIT where utilising the display capabilities of the latest generation of computers to manipulate oceanic geographical information (Pivar at al., 1963). From this early start, HCI became an integral part of Cartography and GIScience research agendas. Interest focused on expert cartographers and their work in the 1960s and 1970s, and moved to wider range of specialised users in the 1980s and 1990s. This followed the spread of geographic technologies to wider audiences, culminating with the ‘Cambrian Explosion’ of maps on the internet. More recently, with the increased abilities of members of the public to create and share information, cartography became available to many, sometimes under the guise of ‘neogeography’. The talk with cover the evolution of HCI research in Cartography, focusing on participatory GIS and mapping, and demonstrating the importance of user centred design in the sharing of maps within this domain. It ends with examples of citizen science and how cartography play a role within it.
Onna project: a natural interaction installation and mobile solution for cult...Gianpaolo D'Amico
Presentation of the article about the design and development of a cross-modal multi-located framework for cultural heritage.
The paper was presented at the conference Built Heritage 2013, Monitoring Conservation Management, Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy, 18-20 November 2013.
Presentation on new EC programmes related to the cultural heritage given by Marcel Watelet, European Commission
LoCloud Conference
Sharing local cultural heritage online with LoCloud services
Amersfoort, Netherlands
5 February 2016
Similar to (9) L’Aquila, a green field for Cultural Heritage Valorization: INCIPICT and the 5G experimentation (Part I)(Panel ICT for the Cultural Heritage)
Flavio Bono - Smart Buildings Analysis with Digital Twins.pptxFIWARE
The development of Smart Cities is becoming increasingly important in the creation of intelligent ecosystems. The primary objective of Smart Cities is to enhance the quality of life of citizens while also engaging companies to work towards achieving mission zero. However, the question arises as to how this can be achieved. How can technology, urban needs, and mission zero objectives be effectively interconnected in a city setting?
Learn more about Smart City ecosystems powered by FIWARE, Smart City solutions and technologies to improve citizens life and at the end fulfilling mission zero together by the power of technology.
Be part of a discussion for future cities powered by FIWARE.
Digital Cultural Heritage and the new EU Framework Programmelocloud
2nd LoCloud Awareness Event at the Ministry of Education and Culture, Cyprus 5 March 2014. Presentation delivered by Marinos Ioannides, Cyprus University of Technology
Iolanda Pensa, Wikimedia projects and OpenStreetMap as an Open Research Infrastructure, 03 February 2024, FOSDEM, Bruxelles, CC BY-SA 4.0
The Wikimedia and OpenStreetMap projects are an existing free software infrastructure that already produces citizen science and can be used by researchers to share and co-produce data and to produce - and reproduce - the results of research. The presentation specifically refers to the potential of data related to cultural heritage for studies in the humanities and in particular in museology, art, art history and history of architecture.
Talk titled 'User-centred and Participatory Cartography'
Interest in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) has been part of Geographical Information Science (GIScience) and cartography for a long time. Even before the term Geographical Information System (GIS) was invented (Tomlinson, 1967), researchers of “Man Machine Interaction” at MIT where utilising the display capabilities of the latest generation of computers to manipulate oceanic geographical information (Pivar at al., 1963). From this early start, HCI became an integral part of Cartography and GIScience research agendas. Interest focused on expert cartographers and their work in the 1960s and 1970s, and moved to wider range of specialised users in the 1980s and 1990s. This followed the spread of geographic technologies to wider audiences, culminating with the ‘Cambrian Explosion’ of maps on the internet. More recently, with the increased abilities of members of the public to create and share information, cartography became available to many, sometimes under the guise of ‘neogeography’. The talk with cover the evolution of HCI research in Cartography, focusing on participatory GIS and mapping, and demonstrating the importance of user centred design in the sharing of maps within this domain. It ends with examples of citizen science and how cartography play a role within it.
Onna project: a natural interaction installation and mobile solution for cult...Gianpaolo D'Amico
Presentation of the article about the design and development of a cross-modal multi-located framework for cultural heritage.
The paper was presented at the conference Built Heritage 2013, Monitoring Conservation Management, Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy, 18-20 November 2013.
Presentation on new EC programmes related to the cultural heritage given by Marcel Watelet, European Commission
LoCloud Conference
Sharing local cultural heritage online with LoCloud services
Amersfoort, Netherlands
5 February 2016
Presented at the ICT track of the JRC's Workshop on Scientific Support of the Danube Region Strategy
Similar to (9) L’Aquila, a green field for Cultural Heritage Valorization: INCIPICT and the 5G experimentation (Part I)(Panel ICT for the Cultural Heritage) (20)
Sachpazis:Terzaghi Bearing Capacity Estimation in simple terms with Calculati...Dr.Costas Sachpazis
Terzaghi's soil bearing capacity theory, developed by Karl Terzaghi, is a fundamental principle in geotechnical engineering used to determine the bearing capacity of shallow foundations. This theory provides a method to calculate the ultimate bearing capacity of soil, which is the maximum load per unit area that the soil can support without undergoing shear failure. The Calculation HTML Code included.
Water billing management system project report.pdfKamal Acharya
Our project entitled “Water Billing Management System” aims is to generate Water bill with all the charges and penalty. Manual system that is employed is extremely laborious and quite inadequate. It only makes the process more difficult and hard.
The aim of our project is to develop a system that is meant to partially computerize the work performed in the Water Board like generating monthly Water bill, record of consuming unit of water, store record of the customer and previous unpaid record.
We used HTML/PHP as front end and MYSQL as back end for developing our project. HTML is primarily a visual design environment. We can create a android application by designing the form and that make up the user interface. Adding android application code to the form and the objects such as buttons and text boxes on them and adding any required support code in additional modular.
MySQL is free open source database that facilitates the effective management of the databases by connecting them to the software. It is a stable ,reliable and the powerful solution with the advanced features and advantages which are as follows: Data Security.MySQL is free open source database that facilitates the effective management of the databases by connecting them to the software.
Hybrid optimization of pumped hydro system and solar- Engr. Abdul-Azeez.pdffxintegritypublishin
Advancements in technology unveil a myriad of electrical and electronic breakthroughs geared towards efficiently harnessing limited resources to meet human energy demands. The optimization of hybrid solar PV panels and pumped hydro energy supply systems plays a pivotal role in utilizing natural resources effectively. This initiative not only benefits humanity but also fosters environmental sustainability. The study investigated the design optimization of these hybrid systems, focusing on understanding solar radiation patterns, identifying geographical influences on solar radiation, formulating a mathematical model for system optimization, and determining the optimal configuration of PV panels and pumped hydro storage. Through a comparative analysis approach and eight weeks of data collection, the study addressed key research questions related to solar radiation patterns and optimal system design. The findings highlighted regions with heightened solar radiation levels, showcasing substantial potential for power generation and emphasizing the system's efficiency. Optimizing system design significantly boosted power generation, promoted renewable energy utilization, and enhanced energy storage capacity. The study underscored the benefits of optimizing hybrid solar PV panels and pumped hydro energy supply systems for sustainable energy usage. Optimizing the design of solar PV panels and pumped hydro energy supply systems as examined across diverse climatic conditions in a developing country, not only enhances power generation but also improves the integration of renewable energy sources and boosts energy storage capacities, particularly beneficial for less economically prosperous regions. Additionally, the study provides valuable insights for advancing energy research in economically viable areas. Recommendations included conducting site-specific assessments, utilizing advanced modeling tools, implementing regular maintenance protocols, and enhancing communication among system components.
Welcome to WIPAC Monthly the magazine brought to you by the LinkedIn Group Water Industry Process Automation & Control.
In this month's edition, along with this month's industry news to celebrate the 13 years since the group was created we have articles including
A case study of the used of Advanced Process Control at the Wastewater Treatment works at Lleida in Spain
A look back on an article on smart wastewater networks in order to see how the industry has measured up in the interim around the adoption of Digital Transformation in the Water Industry.
Immunizing Image Classifiers Against Localized Adversary Attacksgerogepatton
This paper addresses the vulnerability of deep learning models, particularly convolutional neural networks
(CNN)s, to adversarial attacks and presents a proactive training technique designed to counter them. We
introduce a novel volumization algorithm, which transforms 2D images into 3D volumetric representations.
When combined with 3D convolution and deep curriculum learning optimization (CLO), itsignificantly improves
the immunity of models against localized universal attacks by up to 40%. We evaluate our proposed approach
using contemporary CNN architectures and the modified Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR-10
and CIFAR-100) and ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC12) datasets, showcasing
accuracy improvements over previous techniques. The results indicate that the combination of the volumetric
input and curriculum learning holds significant promise for mitigating adversarial attacks without necessitating
adversary training.
Harnessing WebAssembly for Real-time Stateless Streaming PipelinesChristina Lin
Traditionally, dealing with real-time data pipelines has involved significant overhead, even for straightforward tasks like data transformation or masking. However, in this talk, we’ll venture into the dynamic realm of WebAssembly (WASM) and discover how it can revolutionize the creation of stateless streaming pipelines within a Kafka (Redpanda) broker. These pipelines are adept at managing low-latency, high-data-volume scenarios.
HEAP SORT ILLUSTRATED WITH HEAPIFY, BUILD HEAP FOR DYNAMIC ARRAYS.
Heap sort is a comparison-based sorting technique based on Binary Heap data structure. It is similar to the selection sort where we first find the minimum element and place the minimum element at the beginning. Repeat the same process for the remaining elements.
CW RADAR, FMCW RADAR, FMCW ALTIMETER, AND THEIR PARAMETERSveerababupersonal22
It consists of cw radar and fmcw radar ,range measurement,if amplifier and fmcw altimeterThe CW radar operates using continuous wave transmission, while the FMCW radar employs frequency-modulated continuous wave technology. Range measurement is a crucial aspect of radar systems, providing information about the distance to a target. The IF amplifier plays a key role in signal processing, amplifying intermediate frequency signals for further analysis. The FMCW altimeter utilizes frequency-modulated continuous wave technology to accurately measure altitude above a reference point.
(9) L’Aquila, a green field for Cultural Heritage Valorization: INCIPICT and the 5G experimentation (Part I)(Panel ICT for the Cultural Heritage)
1. L’Aquila, a green field for
Cultural Heritage Valorization:
INCIPICT and the 5G experimentation
Prof. Stefanno Brusaporci
Università degli studi dell’Aquila
stefano.brusaporci@univaq.it
2. 2
The reconstruction offers the opportunity (“green
field”) to transform L’Aquila in a pilot smart city
integrating new infrastructures and technologies.
The University of L'Aquila is driving this ambitious
project (named “Innovating City Planning through
Information and Communications Technologies” –
INCIPICT) by means of collaborations with
industry partners / other universities and research
centers and supported by public funds.
Project objective is to trial, develop and validate
new disruptive applications and innovative
technologies in the area of IoT and Smart Cities.
http://Incipict.univaq.it
From the April 6th
2009 earthquake to now
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017
3. INCIPICT – project objectives
October 2014 – December 2018 (extension requested up to December
2019)
Requirements of the Ministry of Social Cohesion:
•Push the reconstruction towards a Smart-City model
•Fully integrate the City and its University
We decided to address the project towards a “Living Laboratory” model, so
pushing the city to become smart and the University to strengthen its skills on
key research areas related to the Smart-City concept.
The INCIPICT main aim is to attract the interest of the Scientific Community
on L’Aquila Living Lab through:
•Experimental infrastructures – activities on Smart-City related research areas
•Local research skills – leveraging on the mature and well recognized local
research competencies
3Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017
4. INCIPICT – Use Cases
4
1. Structural Health Monitoring (SHM)
2. Building Energy Management (BEM)
3. ICT for Cultural Heritage
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017
5. UC3 – ICT for Cultural Heritage
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 5
3D Modelling Digital Museum
BIM
6. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 6
7. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 7
Community
+
ICT
Heritage
Making
Digital
Museum
8. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 8
DIGITAL MUSEUM & HISTORICAL CITY
9. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 9
Community continuously re-creates the urban
landscape
Consequently, the urban landscape can be understood through historical
synchronic and diachronic reconstruction of significant
moments of transformations, representative of events, cultures and values
occurred over time.
In this way, the study of urban landscape configures as a scientific
reconstruction of changing “urban scenes”, inclusive of the
whole aspects of urban dimensions both tangible and
intangible
Nevertheless, the study aims:
•To the virtual reconstruction of no more existing
scenarios,
•it is an instrument to analyze a timeline of events that brought to the current
configuration, useful to study present values.
10. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 10
e area of St. Salvatore Hospital (current view and historical maps) characterized by important modifications and stratificatio
11. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 11
The area of St. Salvatore Hospital (current views and historical image)
12. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 12
St. Salvatore Hospital
Current facade
Historical photo (1934)
13. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 13
• Digital surveying of current buildings
• Laser scanning
• Digital photogrammetry
• 3D modeling
14. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 14
INTERPRETATION
and
RECONSTRUCTION
of past
configurations
according to:
•Architectural surveying
•Archival documents
•Historical maps
•Old photos
15. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 15
16. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 16
Virtual reconstructions of St. Agnese monastery and of St. Salvatore Hospital
XIX century
XX century
17. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 17
Virtual reconstructions. View of the area coming from the historical paths of Via Cascina
XVI century
XVIII century
18. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 18
Virtual reconstructions. View of the area coming from the historical paths of Via Paganica
XVI century
XIX century
19. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 19
Social Media for a
partecipative urban
spaces re-semantization
People are cultural
content producers
20. UC3 – Digital Museum
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 20
Augmented-Reality apps for knowledge construction and sharing
21. UC3 – HBIM Historical Building Information Modeling
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 21
22. UC3 – HBIM Historical Building Information Modeling
Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 22
23. Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 23
1. MODELLING
UC3 – HBIM Historical Building Information Modeling
24. Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 24
2. DATABASE
What information for historic buildings?
UC3 – HBIM Historical Building Information Modeling
25. Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 25
UC3 – HBIM Historical Building Information Modeling
Correlation between BIM and an external
Database
26. Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 26
UC3 – HBIM Historical Building Information Modeling
Correlation between BIM and an external
Database
INTER-OPERATION
27. Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 27
UC3 – HBIM Historical Building Information Modeling
Archival documents
28. Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 28
UC3 – HBIM Historical Building Information Modeling
Constructive systems
29. Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 29
UC3 – HBIM Historical Building Information Modeling
Constructive systems
30. Panel “ICT per I Beni Culturali” – L’Aquila, May 4-5 2017 30
UC3 – HBIM Historical Building Information Modeling
HBIM + ICT = !
Creation of a
tool for Built
Heritage
Conservation
and daily
Management
Augmented
Reality
NEW
ADVANCED
HERITAGE
APPLICATIONS