A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Given by Christy Henshaw of the Wellcome Library
Open Access 2016 at Margaret Smith LibrarySally Schramm
The document discusses the Margaret Smith Library at the South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity. It summarizes the library's contributions to research and teaching through its heritage collections and role in a global web of data. The library acts as both a traditional library, housing books, journals, and multimedia, as well as a unique library containing archives, rare books, and special collections. It has expanded its resources through partnerships with groups like the Biodiversity Heritage Library to provide open access to biodiversity research from around the world.
Railienė B., Olechnoviciene J. Publishing a newspaper Pavement News – a respi...Birute Railiene
Historical studies of the Vilnius University (founded in 1579), enlisting subjects, names and facts sometimes cover a more vide range of the academic activities, including a description of academic respite. The leisure in 19th ct was much different from its forms in 21th. Here we would like to present a newspaper Wiadomosci Brukowe (Pavement News), issued during 1816–1822 in Vilnius. It was secretly published from the first issue. From 1817 it was issued by an informal society Rascals. The society itself deserves a special survey, but we would like to give only some facts: almost all members were the respectable professors of the university or honourable community representatives. The idea of a society was “humour and good temper”. The special fact about the society was secrecy – they used names from Lithuanian mythology to sign their articles in Wiadomosci Brukowe. Prof. Andrew Sniadecki (1768–1838) was one of the editors and author of many articles.
Wiadomosci Brukowe was a weekly satiric newspaper, first of such sort issues in Lithuania. It was founded by a Ignacy Emanuel Lachnicki (1793–1826) and Kazimir Kontrim (1777–1836), since 1817 was issued by a society Rascals. The newspaper was disseminated in Lithuania, Poland, Russia. Authors did their best to mock on the faults of a society, greed, drinking, etc. Their special gun was satire, sometimes it was very sharp. The paper will present content analysis of the newspaper, as a platform to comment latest events of society life, also including comments by University professors.
Rethinking Evaluation Metrics in Light of Flickr Commons: The Smithsonian Ins...Effie Kapsalis
This presentation examined how several institutions on Flickr Commons – the Library of Congress, the Powerhouse Museum, the Smithsonian, New York Public Library, and Cornell University Library – are navigating the concept of evaluation in an emerging arena where compelling statistics are often qualitative, difficult to gather, and ever-changing. The joint presentation looked at how these different institutions managed metrics and evaluation in highly collaborative Web spaces.
Wellcome Library’s Collections – An IntroductionLitSciMed .
The document provides an introduction to the collections of the Wellcome Library, including an overview of its origins and unifying themes. It describes Sir Henry Wellcome's extensive collections focusing on the history of medicine which formed the basis of the Library. The Library houses diverse special collections spanning from medieval texts to contemporary born-digital materials, covering topics from alchemy to psychiatry. It aims to balance representing notable figures with ordinary practitioners. The Library's online resources provide broad access to its collections.
The document summarizes the subject strengths of the Special Collections at Newcastle University Library. It lists the subject strengths as political history, social history, military history, history of medicine, and literature and literary arts. For each subject strength, it provides examples of relevant collections held in the Special Collections that support learning, teaching, research, innovation and engagement.
Open Access 2016 at Margaret Smith LibrarySally Schramm
The document discusses the Margaret Smith Library at the South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity. It summarizes the library's contributions to research and teaching through its heritage collections and role in a global web of data. The library acts as both a traditional library, housing books, journals, and multimedia, as well as a unique library containing archives, rare books, and special collections. It has expanded its resources through partnerships with groups like the Biodiversity Heritage Library to provide open access to biodiversity research from around the world.
Railienė B., Olechnoviciene J. Publishing a newspaper Pavement News – a respi...Birute Railiene
Historical studies of the Vilnius University (founded in 1579), enlisting subjects, names and facts sometimes cover a more vide range of the academic activities, including a description of academic respite. The leisure in 19th ct was much different from its forms in 21th. Here we would like to present a newspaper Wiadomosci Brukowe (Pavement News), issued during 1816–1822 in Vilnius. It was secretly published from the first issue. From 1817 it was issued by an informal society Rascals. The society itself deserves a special survey, but we would like to give only some facts: almost all members were the respectable professors of the university or honourable community representatives. The idea of a society was “humour and good temper”. The special fact about the society was secrecy – they used names from Lithuanian mythology to sign their articles in Wiadomosci Brukowe. Prof. Andrew Sniadecki (1768–1838) was one of the editors and author of many articles.
Wiadomosci Brukowe was a weekly satiric newspaper, first of such sort issues in Lithuania. It was founded by a Ignacy Emanuel Lachnicki (1793–1826) and Kazimir Kontrim (1777–1836), since 1817 was issued by a society Rascals. The newspaper was disseminated in Lithuania, Poland, Russia. Authors did their best to mock on the faults of a society, greed, drinking, etc. Their special gun was satire, sometimes it was very sharp. The paper will present content analysis of the newspaper, as a platform to comment latest events of society life, also including comments by University professors.
Rethinking Evaluation Metrics in Light of Flickr Commons: The Smithsonian Ins...Effie Kapsalis
This presentation examined how several institutions on Flickr Commons – the Library of Congress, the Powerhouse Museum, the Smithsonian, New York Public Library, and Cornell University Library – are navigating the concept of evaluation in an emerging arena where compelling statistics are often qualitative, difficult to gather, and ever-changing. The joint presentation looked at how these different institutions managed metrics and evaluation in highly collaborative Web spaces.
Wellcome Library’s Collections – An IntroductionLitSciMed .
The document provides an introduction to the collections of the Wellcome Library, including an overview of its origins and unifying themes. It describes Sir Henry Wellcome's extensive collections focusing on the history of medicine which formed the basis of the Library. The Library houses diverse special collections spanning from medieval texts to contemporary born-digital materials, covering topics from alchemy to psychiatry. It aims to balance representing notable figures with ordinary practitioners. The Library's online resources provide broad access to its collections.
The document summarizes the subject strengths of the Special Collections at Newcastle University Library. It lists the subject strengths as political history, social history, military history, history of medicine, and literature and literary arts. For each subject strength, it provides examples of relevant collections held in the Special Collections that support learning, teaching, research, innovation and engagement.
Almost Christmas | Introductory Remarks at Access to the World's ImagesIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Sylvia Van Peteghem
Ghent University
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Stuart Snydman
Stanford University Libraries
Introduction to the International Image Interoperability FrameworkIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Tom Cramer
Stanford University Libraries
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Glen Robson
National Library of Wales
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Emmanuelle Delmas-Glass
Yale Center for British Art
Challenges Displaying Complex Image Data: New Tech & Old InstitutionsIIIF_io
This document discusses the use of the IIIF standard to provide access to cultural heritage materials through digital images in several contexts:
- Manuscripts that have been disbound and are held in different institutions, allowing the leaves to be reassembled digitally.
- Historical documents like diaries that have undergone multiple digitization campaigns as imaging technology advanced, presenting different versions to users.
- Scholarly editions incorporating multi-spectral images of manuscript pages taken for text reconstruction.
- Representing pages that are known to exist but are lost or too fragile to digitize directly.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Rob Sanderson, Getty
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the New York Academy of Medicine in New York City on May 11, 2016.
Rob Sanderson
The Getty
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Presentation given by Tom Crane of Digirati
A presentation given as part of the Open Access panel at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Merete Sanderhoff
National Gallery of Denmark
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the New York Academy of Medicine in New York City on May 11, 2016.
Rob Sanderson
The Getty
Field evaluation of EdiTouch – the first tablet for SEN/SDL students (2014)Marco Iannacone
Digitally Different is an italian startup that produces EdiTouch the first software suite for simplified learning that leverage the capabilities of modern tablets to support young students with SEN /SLD
Here we are presenting the results of two years long scientific trial (2012-2014) with 400+ students who used our tablets at school and home for every studying activities.
It is one of the widest research in Europe to scientifically verify the effectiveness of digital solutions to support dyslexic child.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Karen Estlund
Penn State University
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Mark Matienzo, Digital Public Library of America
Anna Naruta-Moya, Indigenous Digital Archive
Intervention de Stefanie Gehrke au Workshop "TEI and Neighbouring Standards" à la DiXiT Convention Week 2015 (Huygens ING, La Haye, 15 septembre 2015).
SharedCanvas: Collaborative Digital Facsimiles of Medieval ManuscriptsRobert Sanderson
The document presents SharedCanvas, a model for creating collaborative digital facsimiles of medieval manuscripts. It describes challenges in digitizing manuscripts, such as fragments, missing pages, and different page orders over time. The model represents each page as a "canvas" that can be painted with annotations linking to images, text, and other resources. Annotations are distributed across repositories using a publish-subscribe approach to enable customized views. The SharedCanvas model provides a coherent solution for collaboratively representing manuscript layouts and contents in a distributed way.
Mirador: A Cross-Repository Image Comparison and Annotation ToolIIIF_io
Mirador is an open-source, JavaScript-based tool for comparing and annotating images from multiple repositories. It allows users to view objects side by side without institutional barriers and collect annotations about several objects in one place. Mirador is compatible with the IIIF image and presentation APIs and various IIIF-compliant software. It has been developed since 2013 in a collaborative effort between several universities and is available on GitHub under an open source license.
This document summarizes Rob Sanderson's presentation on the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) Presentation API. The Presentation API provides a standard way to present digital objects by defining a shared canvas model and properties to describe images, structure, and metadata. It allows multiple images and formats to be displayed together on a single canvas for a richer user experience when viewing cultural heritage collections.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Michael Appleby
Yale University
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Petr Pridal
Klokan Technologies
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Simeon Warner
Cornell University
Almost Christmas | Introductory Remarks at Access to the World's ImagesIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Sylvia Van Peteghem
Ghent University
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Stuart Snydman
Stanford University Libraries
Introduction to the International Image Interoperability FrameworkIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Tom Cramer
Stanford University Libraries
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Glen Robson
National Library of Wales
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Emmanuelle Delmas-Glass
Yale Center for British Art
Challenges Displaying Complex Image Data: New Tech & Old InstitutionsIIIF_io
This document discusses the use of the IIIF standard to provide access to cultural heritage materials through digital images in several contexts:
- Manuscripts that have been disbound and are held in different institutions, allowing the leaves to be reassembled digitally.
- Historical documents like diaries that have undergone multiple digitization campaigns as imaging technology advanced, presenting different versions to users.
- Scholarly editions incorporating multi-spectral images of manuscript pages taken for text reconstruction.
- Representing pages that are known to exist but are lost or too fragile to digitize directly.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Rob Sanderson, Getty
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the New York Academy of Medicine in New York City on May 11, 2016.
Rob Sanderson
The Getty
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Presentation given by Tom Crane of Digirati
A presentation given as part of the Open Access panel at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Merete Sanderhoff
National Gallery of Denmark
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the New York Academy of Medicine in New York City on May 11, 2016.
Rob Sanderson
The Getty
Field evaluation of EdiTouch – the first tablet for SEN/SDL students (2014)Marco Iannacone
Digitally Different is an italian startup that produces EdiTouch the first software suite for simplified learning that leverage the capabilities of modern tablets to support young students with SEN /SLD
Here we are presenting the results of two years long scientific trial (2012-2014) with 400+ students who used our tablets at school and home for every studying activities.
It is one of the widest research in Europe to scientifically verify the effectiveness of digital solutions to support dyslexic child.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Karen Estlund
Penn State University
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Mark Matienzo, Digital Public Library of America
Anna Naruta-Moya, Indigenous Digital Archive
Intervention de Stefanie Gehrke au Workshop "TEI and Neighbouring Standards" à la DiXiT Convention Week 2015 (Huygens ING, La Haye, 15 septembre 2015).
SharedCanvas: Collaborative Digital Facsimiles of Medieval ManuscriptsRobert Sanderson
The document presents SharedCanvas, a model for creating collaborative digital facsimiles of medieval manuscripts. It describes challenges in digitizing manuscripts, such as fragments, missing pages, and different page orders over time. The model represents each page as a "canvas" that can be painted with annotations linking to images, text, and other resources. Annotations are distributed across repositories using a publish-subscribe approach to enable customized views. The SharedCanvas model provides a coherent solution for collaboratively representing manuscript layouts and contents in a distributed way.
Mirador: A Cross-Repository Image Comparison and Annotation ToolIIIF_io
Mirador is an open-source, JavaScript-based tool for comparing and annotating images from multiple repositories. It allows users to view objects side by side without institutional barriers and collect annotations about several objects in one place. Mirador is compatible with the IIIF image and presentation APIs and various IIIF-compliant software. It has been developed since 2013 in a collaborative effort between several universities and is available on GitHub under an open source license.
This document summarizes Rob Sanderson's presentation on the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) Presentation API. The Presentation API provides a standard way to present digital objects by defining a shared canvas model and properties to describe images, structure, and metadata. It allows multiple images and formats to be displayed together on a single canvas for a richer user experience when viewing cultural heritage collections.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Michael Appleby
Yale University
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Petr Pridal
Klokan Technologies
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Simeon Warner
Cornell University
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Rob Sanderson
Stanford University Libraries
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
David Haskiya
Europeana
IIIF and the Digital Public Library of AmericaIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Mark Matienzo
Digital Public Library of America
IIIF as an Enabler to Interoperability within a Single InstitutionIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the New York Academy of Medicine in New York City on May 11, 2016.
Randy Stern
Harvard University
Leaflet-IIIF: Plugins and Extensibility with IIIFIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the New York Academy of Medicine in New York City on May 11, 2016.
Jack Reed
Stanford University Libraries
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Tom Cramer
Stanford University Libraries
Introduction to the International Image Interoperability FrameworkIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Tom Cramer
Stanford University Libraries
Non-Scholarly Use Cases or Fun and Games with IIIFIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Jeff Steward, Harvard Art Museums
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Michael Appleby and Emmanuelle Delmas-Glass
Yale Center for British Art
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Presentation given by Tom Crane of Digirati
Fueling AI with Great Data with Airbyte WebinarZilliz
This talk will focus on how to collect data from a variety of sources, leveraging this data for RAG and other GenAI use cases, and finally charting your course to productionalization.
"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
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.
HCL Notes and Domino License Cost Reduction in the World of DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-and-domino-license-cost-reduction-in-the-world-of-dlau/
The introduction of DLAU and the CCB & CCX licensing model caused quite a stir in the HCL community. As a Notes and Domino customer, you may have faced challenges with unexpected user counts and license costs. You probably have questions on how this new licensing approach works and how to benefit from it. Most importantly, you likely have budget constraints and want to save money where possible. Don’t worry, we can help with all of this!
We’ll show you how to fix common misconfigurations that cause higher-than-expected user counts, and how to identify accounts which you can deactivate to save money. There are also frequent patterns that can cause unnecessary cost, like using a person document instead of a mail-in for shared mailboxes. We’ll provide examples and solutions for those as well. And naturally we’ll explain the new licensing model.
Join HCL Ambassador Marc Thomas in this webinar with a special guest appearance from Franz Walder. It will give you the tools and know-how to stay on top of what is going on with Domino licensing. You will be able lower your cost through an optimized configuration and keep it low going forward.
These topics will be covered
- Reducing license cost by finding and fixing misconfigurations and superfluous accounts
- How do CCB and CCX licenses really work?
- Understanding the DLAU tool and how to best utilize it
- Tips for common problem areas, like team mailboxes, functional/test users, etc
- Practical examples and best practices to implement right away
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.
5th LF Energy Power Grid Model Meet-up SlidesDanBrown980551
5th Power Grid Model Meet-up
It is with great pleasure that we extend to you an invitation to the 5th Power Grid Model Meet-up, scheduled for 6th June 2024. This event will adopt a hybrid format, allowing participants to join us either through an online Mircosoft Teams session or in person at TU/e located at Den Dolech 2, Eindhoven, Netherlands. The meet-up will be hosted by Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e), a research university specializing in engineering science & technology.
Power Grid Model
The global energy transition is placing new and unprecedented demands on Distribution System Operators (DSOs). Alongside upgrades to grid capacity, processes such as digitization, capacity optimization, and congestion management are becoming vital for delivering reliable services.
Power Grid Model is an open source project from Linux Foundation Energy and provides a calculation engine that is increasingly essential for DSOs. It offers a standards-based foundation enabling real-time power systems analysis, simulations of electrical power grids, and sophisticated what-if analysis. In addition, it enables in-depth studies and analysis of the electrical power grid’s behavior and performance. This comprehensive model incorporates essential factors such as power generation capacity, electrical losses, voltage levels, power flows, and system stability.
Power Grid Model is currently being applied in a wide variety of use cases, including grid planning, expansion, reliability, and congestion studies. It can also help in analyzing the impact of renewable energy integration, assessing the effects of disturbances or faults, and developing strategies for grid control and optimization.
What to expect
For the upcoming meetup we are organizing, we have an exciting lineup of activities planned:
-Insightful presentations covering two practical applications of the Power Grid Model.
-An update on the latest advancements in Power Grid -Model technology during the first and second quarters of 2024.
-An interactive brainstorming session to discuss and propose new feature requests.
-An opportunity to connect with fellow Power Grid Model enthusiasts and users.
"Choosing proper type of scaling", Olena SyrotaFwdays
Imagine an IoT processing system that is already quite mature and production-ready and for which client coverage is growing and scaling and performance aspects are life and death questions. The system has Redis, MongoDB, and stream processing based on ksqldb. In this talk, firstly, we will analyze scaling approaches and then select the proper ones for our system.
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/temporal-event-neural-networks-a-more-efficient-alternative-to-the-transformer-a-presentation-from-brainchip/
Chris Jones, Director of Product Management at BrainChip , presents the “Temporal Event Neural Networks: A More Efficient Alternative to the Transformer” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
The expansion of AI services necessitates enhanced computational capabilities on edge devices. Temporal Event Neural Networks (TENNs), developed by BrainChip, represent a novel and highly efficient state-space network. TENNs demonstrate exceptional proficiency in handling multi-dimensional streaming data, facilitating advancements in object detection, action recognition, speech enhancement and language model/sequence generation. Through the utilization of polynomial-based continuous convolutions, TENNs streamline models, expedite training processes and significantly diminish memory requirements, achieving notable reductions of up to 50x in parameters and 5,000x in energy consumption compared to prevailing methodologies like transformers.
Integration with BrainChip’s Akida neuromorphic hardware IP further enhances TENNs’ capabilities, enabling the realization of highly capable, portable and passively cooled edge devices. This presentation delves into the technical innovations underlying TENNs, presents real-world benchmarks, and elucidates how this cutting-edge approach is positioned to revolutionize edge AI across diverse applications.
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).
The Microsoft 365 Migration Tutorial For Beginner.pptxoperationspcvita
This presentation will help you understand the power of Microsoft 365. However, we have mentioned every productivity app included in Office 365. Additionally, we have suggested the migration situation related to Office 365 and how we can help you.
You can also read: https://www.systoolsgroup.com/updates/office-365-tenant-to-tenant-migration-step-by-step-complete-guide/
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 .
HCL Notes und Domino Lizenzkostenreduzierung in der Welt von DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-und-domino-lizenzkostenreduzierung-in-der-welt-von-dlau/
DLAU und die Lizenzen nach dem CCB- und CCX-Modell sind für viele in der HCL-Community seit letztem Jahr ein heißes Thema. Als Notes- oder Domino-Kunde haben Sie vielleicht mit unerwartet hohen Benutzerzahlen und Lizenzgebühren zu kämpfen. Sie fragen sich vielleicht, wie diese neue Art der Lizenzierung funktioniert und welchen Nutzen sie Ihnen bringt. Vor allem wollen Sie sicherlich Ihr Budget einhalten und Kosten sparen, wo immer möglich. Das verstehen wir und wir möchten Ihnen dabei helfen!
Wir erklären Ihnen, wie Sie häufige Konfigurationsprobleme lösen können, die dazu führen können, dass mehr Benutzer gezählt werden als nötig, und wie Sie überflüssige oder ungenutzte Konten identifizieren und entfernen können, um Geld zu sparen. Es gibt auch einige Ansätze, die zu unnötigen Ausgaben führen können, z. B. wenn ein Personendokument anstelle eines Mail-Ins für geteilte Mailboxen verwendet wird. Wir zeigen Ihnen solche Fälle und deren Lösungen. Und natürlich erklären wir Ihnen das neue Lizenzmodell.
Nehmen Sie an diesem Webinar teil, bei dem HCL-Ambassador Marc Thomas und Gastredner Franz Walder Ihnen diese neue Welt näherbringen. Es vermittelt Ihnen die Tools und das Know-how, um den Überblick zu bewahren. Sie werden in der Lage sein, Ihre Kosten durch eine optimierte Domino-Konfiguration zu reduzieren und auch in Zukunft gering zu halten.
Diese Themen werden behandelt
- Reduzierung der Lizenzkosten durch Auffinden und Beheben von Fehlkonfigurationen und überflüssigen Konten
- Wie funktionieren CCB- und CCX-Lizenzen wirklich?
- Verstehen des DLAU-Tools und wie man es am besten nutzt
- Tipps für häufige Problembereiche, wie z. B. Team-Postfächer, Funktions-/Testbenutzer usw.
- Praxisbeispiele und Best Practices zum sofortigen Umsetzen
How to Interpret Trends in the Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart.pdfChart Kalyan
A Mix Chart displays historical data of numbers in a graphical or tabular form. The Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart specifically shows the results of a sequence of numbers over different periods.
zkStudyClub - LatticeFold: A Lattice-based Folding Scheme and its Application...Alex Pruden
Folding is a recent technique for building efficient recursive SNARKs. Several elegant folding protocols have been proposed, such as Nova, Supernova, Hypernova, Protostar, and others. However, all of them rely on an additively homomorphic commitment scheme based on discrete log, and are therefore not post-quantum secure. In this work we present LatticeFold, the first lattice-based folding protocol based on the Module SIS problem. This folding protocol naturally leads to an efficient recursive lattice-based SNARK and an efficient PCD scheme. LatticeFold supports folding low-degree relations, such as R1CS, as well as high-degree relations, such as CCS. The key challenge is to construct a secure folding protocol that works with the Ajtai commitment scheme. The difficulty, is ensuring that extracted witnesses are low norm through many rounds of folding. We present a novel technique using the sumcheck protocol to ensure that extracted witnesses are always low norm no matter how many rounds of folding are used. Our evaluation of the final proof system suggests that it is as performant as Hypernova, while providing post-quantum security.
Paper Link: https://eprint.iacr.org/2024/257
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.
Freshworks Rethinks NoSQL for Rapid Scaling & Cost-Efficiency
Access to the Wellcome Library, with IIIF
1. Access to the Wellcome Library, with IIIF
Christy Henshaw, May 2016
@Chenshaw, @WellcomeDigital, @WellcomeLibrary
2. The Wellcome Library
We are one of the world's major resources for the study of medical history. We
also offer a growing collection of material relating to contemporary medicine and
biomedical science in society.
3. Our Vision
To provide a first-class physical research destination focused on our unique
collections, and creating a free and unrestricted digital library focused on cultural
contexts of health
4. Scale and scope
>25 million images and growing
• 19.5 million book pages (books, serials, grey literature)
• 6 million images from early printed books, archives, artworks,
manuscripts, prints, slides
• 700 hours of video
Editor's Notes
Show manuscripts and C+D index lists, click on images and show the resulting high resolution file as served up by IIIF
MOH reports – show use of text and data “annotations” made possible by sharing the images and the data in a standardised way. We are only part-way there – the images and text data are available, but we haven’t yet made the statistical data available as annotations on the pages. We have a crowdsourcing project with Zooniverse about to start, adding semantic information to the text of the reports – this kind of data can also be made available in a standardised way, as annotations.
We have hundreds of recipe manuscripts we plan to digitise and transcribe, via crowdsourcing. As with the previous example, this data can be stored as annotations and made available via IIIF services. When it comes to crowdsourcing, IIIF has more to offer than just serving up the data – it can also facilitate collaborative crowdsourcing projects, and ensure efficient use of tools and platforms. Rather than relying on silos of content with a lot of different webpages and input interfaces, IIIF-compliant crowdsourcing platforms could draw on any IIIF collection, allowing content owners to work together in a far more joined-up way than is currently possible.
Using the IIIF authentication standard, we can control access to our content when need be. For example, we digitise a lot of 20th century personal and organisation archives at a scale that means we can’t thoroughly vet each and every piece of paper for privacy or protected information under the data protection act. Just in case something slips through, a click-through like this ensures that we are letting our users know that they have a duty of care around any private or protected information they might find. These controls will still function even if the content is used elsewhere, via our IIIF services, which means we can share a lot more of our digitised archives than we normally would.
Another useful feature of IIIF is the ability to group items into collections. We use “collection” in two different ways: as a by-product of the digitisation process (such as grouping multiple volumes of a single work, or issues of a journal), or built on the fly according to specific categories such as “topic”, “author” or “type of thing”. IIIF collections provide a very handy way of curating a collection and then sharing that collection in a standardised way that allows tools and interfaces to display it. You can display these in a gallery, or just add it to your collection of “special stuff”.
For example, we can display digitised content on this sandbox page which tests ways of grouping our library items under different categories in a programmatic way. We are incorporating subject heading definitions with Wikipedia entries with our own catalogue data with IIIF collections to make this page work.