Presentation based on the experiences of implementing a web mapping application using open source software stack and integrating with proprietary systems.
EDF2014: Kush Wadhwa, Senior Partner, Trilateral Research & Consulting: Addre...European Data Forum
Selected Talk by Kush Wadhwa, Senior Partner, Trilateral Research & Consulting at the European Data Forum 2014, 20 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Addressing risks and opportunities engendered by big data: The BYTE project
ETSI is working on several standards related to smart cities through various groups. These groups are developing standards for technologies like wireless connectivity, security, energy efficiency, and data management that are applicable to smart city initiatives. ETSI is also collaborating with external groups to further standardization efforts and help cities understand and apply relevant standards. The presentation provided an overview of ETSI's smart city-related groups and standards work.
- Europeana is a digital library that provides single access to European cultural heritage from over 1500 institutions containing over 20 million items.
- Previously, metadata was available under CC-BY-NC licenses, limiting reuse. Europeana is moving to adopt CC0, placing metadata in the public domain with no restrictions on use.
- Workshops identified risks but also significant rewards to open data, including benefits to users, cultural institutions, and businesses. A pilot project released 3.5 million records under CC0 with no issues.
The document summarizes Europeana's efforts to increase access to and reuse of cultural data. It discusses Europeana dropping restrictions on metadata licensing to allow more open reuse. Workshops and consultations were held with cultural institutions on risks and rewards of open licensing. As a result, Europeana will apply the CC0 public domain dedication to metadata from July 2012 onward to promote wider reuse. Pilot projects showed this caused no issues and unlocked social and commercial value from the open data.
EDF2014: Rüdiger Eichin, Research Manager at SAP AG, Germany: Deriving Value ...European Data Forum
Selected Talk by Rüdiger Eichin, Research Manager at SAP AG, Germany at the European Data Forum 2014, 20 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Deriving Value from Big Data for Enterprise Performance Management.
EDF2014: Nikolaos Loutas, Manager at PwC Belgium, Business Models for Linked ...European Data Forum
Selected Talk by Nikolaos Loutas, Manager at PwC Belgium at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Business Models for Linked Government Data: What lies beneath?
This document provides information about an upcoming webinar event called Big Data Pilot Demo Days that will showcase projects from the Big Data Value Public-Private Partnership (BDV PPP).
The webinar agenda includes:
1. An overview of the Big Data Pilot Demo Days joint effort
2. A presentation on requirements for the Danaos Real-Time Shipping Pilot use case
3. A demonstration of how the BigDataStack architecture meets those requirements
4. A live demonstration of the BigDataStack system in the Deepsea user interface
There will also be time for questions and answers. The webinar is one in a series that will feature different applications of BDV PPP
EDF2014: Kush Wadhwa, Senior Partner, Trilateral Research & Consulting: Addre...European Data Forum
Selected Talk by Kush Wadhwa, Senior Partner, Trilateral Research & Consulting at the European Data Forum 2014, 20 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Addressing risks and opportunities engendered by big data: The BYTE project
ETSI is working on several standards related to smart cities through various groups. These groups are developing standards for technologies like wireless connectivity, security, energy efficiency, and data management that are applicable to smart city initiatives. ETSI is also collaborating with external groups to further standardization efforts and help cities understand and apply relevant standards. The presentation provided an overview of ETSI's smart city-related groups and standards work.
- Europeana is a digital library that provides single access to European cultural heritage from over 1500 institutions containing over 20 million items.
- Previously, metadata was available under CC-BY-NC licenses, limiting reuse. Europeana is moving to adopt CC0, placing metadata in the public domain with no restrictions on use.
- Workshops identified risks but also significant rewards to open data, including benefits to users, cultural institutions, and businesses. A pilot project released 3.5 million records under CC0 with no issues.
The document summarizes Europeana's efforts to increase access to and reuse of cultural data. It discusses Europeana dropping restrictions on metadata licensing to allow more open reuse. Workshops and consultations were held with cultural institutions on risks and rewards of open licensing. As a result, Europeana will apply the CC0 public domain dedication to metadata from July 2012 onward to promote wider reuse. Pilot projects showed this caused no issues and unlocked social and commercial value from the open data.
EDF2014: Rüdiger Eichin, Research Manager at SAP AG, Germany: Deriving Value ...European Data Forum
Selected Talk by Rüdiger Eichin, Research Manager at SAP AG, Germany at the European Data Forum 2014, 20 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Deriving Value from Big Data for Enterprise Performance Management.
EDF2014: Nikolaos Loutas, Manager at PwC Belgium, Business Models for Linked ...European Data Forum
Selected Talk by Nikolaos Loutas, Manager at PwC Belgium at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Business Models for Linked Government Data: What lies beneath?
This document provides information about an upcoming webinar event called Big Data Pilot Demo Days that will showcase projects from the Big Data Value Public-Private Partnership (BDV PPP).
The webinar agenda includes:
1. An overview of the Big Data Pilot Demo Days joint effort
2. A presentation on requirements for the Danaos Real-Time Shipping Pilot use case
3. A demonstration of how the BigDataStack architecture meets those requirements
4. A live demonstration of the BigDataStack system in the Deepsea user interface
There will also be time for questions and answers. The webinar is one in a series that will feature different applications of BDV PPP
Re-Configuring Value Networks and Competition in Industrialized, Emerging and...Andreas Meiszner
The document discusses how information and communication technologies (ICT) are impacting and reconfiguring value networks. It provides examples of this reconfiguration in four sectors: 1) free and open source software, 2) energy and smart grids, 3) higher education, and 4) Industry 4.0 and 3D printing. The document suggests that ICT allows for new combinations of ideas, mixing and remixing in novel ways, and that economic growth occurs through rearranging resources in more valuable configurations.
This document summarizes funding opportunities for ICT projects in the Horizon 2020 framework program for 2014-2015. It outlines calls for big data, open data, and language technologies projects, including innovation actions to develop new solutions, research projects to advance technologies, and coordination actions. The goals are to help companies build innovative data products, address barriers to data reuse, and crack the language barrier in Europe to facilitate multilingual communication.
to build an Open Data ecosystem in our city.
Promote Open Data and Living Lab approach in our city.
Test new ways of involving citizens in the smart city development.
Learn from other cities experiences.
Contribute to the European Open Data movement.
Pilot Experience: Issy-les-Moulineaux
2nd Period Achievements
- Completed Closed User Group 1 & 2
- Completed Open User Group 1
- Published new datasets on data.issy.com
- Created first apps with our citizen developers
- Organized workshops to promote Open Data
- Contributed
The FITMAN project aims to test and validate the suitability of FI-WARE generic enablers through eleven industrial trials across three domains: smart factories, digital factories, and virtual factories. The trials involve 29 partners across 9 countries and have a budget of €18 million. The goals are to deploy FITMAN platforms using FI-WARE enablers for the trials, validate the platforms, and develop plans to expand platform usage in Phase 3 of the FI PPP program.
1. The document discusses the Decrypt NET Futures program which aims to make Europe a world leader in future internet technologies through industry-driven, societal-driven, and entrepreneurship-driven innovation.
2. The program will fund research and development of smart networks, 5G infrastructure, collective awareness platforms, and other technologies. It will support taking these technologies from research to validation to market through public-private partnerships.
3. The goals are to develop innovative internet services, support European businesses and entrepreneurs, create jobs, and drive economic growth through co-funding internet research and innovation.
EDF2013: Selected Talk, Ghislain Atemezing: Towards Interoperable Visualizati...European Data Forum
Selected talk of Ghislain Atemezing at the European Data Forum 2013, 10 April 2013 in Dublin, Ireland: Towards Interoperable Visualization Applications Over Linked Data
Information Communication Technology
Malaysia's Digital Economy: ICT
Business Information and Business Intelligence
Growth Hacking Economy System Concept
EDF2014: Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Directorate Ge...European Data Forum
Invited Talk of Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology: at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Public Sector Information (PSI) at European Commission (EC)
EDF2014: Talk of Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Direct...European Data Forum
Invited Talk of Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Collaborating on interoperability to achieve a Digital Single Market
EDF2014: Piek Vossen, Professor Computational Lexicology, VU University Amste...European Data Forum
Invited Talk of Piek Vossen, Professor Computational Lexicology, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: NewsReader: recording history by processing massive streams of daily news
This document discusses the evolution of data spaces from closed ecosystems to open ecosystems to federations of ecosystems. It defines key concepts of data spaces including their technological, business, and legal aspects. The document outlines an example data space in the mobility domain and describes the fundamentals of data spaces including roles, interactions, and activities. It analyzes how characteristics such as interoperability, sovereignty, and trust/security change as data spaces evolve from closed to open to federations. Finally, it poses questions about who will take on the federator role to coordinate ecosystems and what business models and regulatory implications this role may have.
EDF2014: Talk of Ksenia Petrichenko, Building Policy Analyst, Global Building...European Data Forum
Invited Talk of Ksenia Petrichenko, Building Policy Analyst, Global Buildings Performance Network at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Making a ‘black box’ transparent: role of the open data in the building sector
EDF2014: BIG - NESSI Networking Session: Nuria de Lama, Representative to the...European Data Forum
BIG - NESSI Networking Session, Talk by Nuria de Lama, Representative to the European Commission, Research & Innovation ATOS, Spain at the European Data Forum 2014, 20 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Towards a Big Data Public Private Partnership
This document provides an overview of the role of ICT in Horizon 2020, the EU's research and innovation funding programme for 2014-2020. Key points include:
- ICT will contribute to several of Horizon 2020's priorities, including industrial leadership, excellent science, and tackling societal challenges.
- ICT is highlighted as important for areas like health, energy, transport, smart cities, and security.
- New funding instruments are introduced, like the Open Disruptive Innovation Scheme to support innovative SMEs and the Future and Emerging Technologies (FET) program.
- An overview is given of how ICT relates to each of Horizon 2020's pillars and societal challenge areas.
EDF2014: Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Directorate Ge...European Data Forum
PPP on Data & Executive Panel on Big Data, Introduction by Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology at the European Data Forum 2014, 20 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Towards a Data Value Chain Partership in Europe.
EDF2014: Christian Lindemann, Wolters Kluwer Germany & Christian Dirschl, Wol...European Data Forum
Invited Talk by Christian Lindemann, Wolters Kluwer Germany & Christian Dirschl, Wolters Kluwer Germany at the European Data Forum 2014, 20 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Linked Data and Open Government Data as part of the business strategy of Wolters Kluwer Germany.
Open innovation towards_smarter_cities_ossusereb85c4
This document provides a summary of the Open Innovation 2013 yearbook. It discusses open innovation in three parts:
1) Policy development - It discusses the European Commission's innovation strategies and frameworks for open innovation ecosystems. It argues for a European model for startups.
2) Trends and country reports - It explores open innovation trends towards smarter cities, collaborative innovation ecosystems for societal challenges, and innovating with the public sector.
3) Interesting cases and examples - It highlights several case studies on topics like open innovation in smart cities, participative innovation, smarter water management, open data, crowdsourcing, and regional innovation ecosystems. It also discusses the FI-WARE Open Innovation Lab.
The
AGI2011- Paper On Open Source Software Standards Integrationtuffoura
The document discusses London Borough of Hackney's adoption of an open source software stack for their web mapping application, Map.Hackney 2.0. The stack includes GeoServer, OpenLayers, Extjs, GeoExt and other open source tools to allow sharing of geographic information across the borough. The open source approach replaced a proprietary software solution and achieved cost savings while providing improved integration, sharing and management of geographic data for council operations. Challenges were faced but benefits were realized, and the shift towards open source represents a new era and model for the borough.
Jenkins has a strong plugin ecosystem that allows it to be customized and expanded. This document discusses several Jenkins plugins:
- The Global Build Stats plugin provides consolidated views and charts of build results, durations, and other metrics over various time periods.
- The SCM Sync Configuration plugin synchronizes Jenkins configuration files with source control for backup and traceability. It currently supports one-way sync from Jenkins to SVN repositories.
- The Plugin Compatibility Tester checks for backward incompatibilities between plugins and Jenkins core versions by compiling and testing plugins against different core versions.
Re-Configuring Value Networks and Competition in Industrialized, Emerging and...Andreas Meiszner
The document discusses how information and communication technologies (ICT) are impacting and reconfiguring value networks. It provides examples of this reconfiguration in four sectors: 1) free and open source software, 2) energy and smart grids, 3) higher education, and 4) Industry 4.0 and 3D printing. The document suggests that ICT allows for new combinations of ideas, mixing and remixing in novel ways, and that economic growth occurs through rearranging resources in more valuable configurations.
This document summarizes funding opportunities for ICT projects in the Horizon 2020 framework program for 2014-2015. It outlines calls for big data, open data, and language technologies projects, including innovation actions to develop new solutions, research projects to advance technologies, and coordination actions. The goals are to help companies build innovative data products, address barriers to data reuse, and crack the language barrier in Europe to facilitate multilingual communication.
to build an Open Data ecosystem in our city.
Promote Open Data and Living Lab approach in our city.
Test new ways of involving citizens in the smart city development.
Learn from other cities experiences.
Contribute to the European Open Data movement.
Pilot Experience: Issy-les-Moulineaux
2nd Period Achievements
- Completed Closed User Group 1 & 2
- Completed Open User Group 1
- Published new datasets on data.issy.com
- Created first apps with our citizen developers
- Organized workshops to promote Open Data
- Contributed
The FITMAN project aims to test and validate the suitability of FI-WARE generic enablers through eleven industrial trials across three domains: smart factories, digital factories, and virtual factories. The trials involve 29 partners across 9 countries and have a budget of €18 million. The goals are to deploy FITMAN platforms using FI-WARE enablers for the trials, validate the platforms, and develop plans to expand platform usage in Phase 3 of the FI PPP program.
1. The document discusses the Decrypt NET Futures program which aims to make Europe a world leader in future internet technologies through industry-driven, societal-driven, and entrepreneurship-driven innovation.
2. The program will fund research and development of smart networks, 5G infrastructure, collective awareness platforms, and other technologies. It will support taking these technologies from research to validation to market through public-private partnerships.
3. The goals are to develop innovative internet services, support European businesses and entrepreneurs, create jobs, and drive economic growth through co-funding internet research and innovation.
EDF2013: Selected Talk, Ghislain Atemezing: Towards Interoperable Visualizati...European Data Forum
Selected talk of Ghislain Atemezing at the European Data Forum 2013, 10 April 2013 in Dublin, Ireland: Towards Interoperable Visualization Applications Over Linked Data
Information Communication Technology
Malaysia's Digital Economy: ICT
Business Information and Business Intelligence
Growth Hacking Economy System Concept
EDF2014: Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Directorate Ge...European Data Forum
Invited Talk of Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology: at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Public Sector Information (PSI) at European Commission (EC)
EDF2014: Talk of Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Direct...European Data Forum
Invited Talk of Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Collaborating on interoperability to achieve a Digital Single Market
EDF2014: Piek Vossen, Professor Computational Lexicology, VU University Amste...European Data Forum
Invited Talk of Piek Vossen, Professor Computational Lexicology, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: NewsReader: recording history by processing massive streams of daily news
This document discusses the evolution of data spaces from closed ecosystems to open ecosystems to federations of ecosystems. It defines key concepts of data spaces including their technological, business, and legal aspects. The document outlines an example data space in the mobility domain and describes the fundamentals of data spaces including roles, interactions, and activities. It analyzes how characteristics such as interoperability, sovereignty, and trust/security change as data spaces evolve from closed to open to federations. Finally, it poses questions about who will take on the federator role to coordinate ecosystems and what business models and regulatory implications this role may have.
EDF2014: Talk of Ksenia Petrichenko, Building Policy Analyst, Global Building...European Data Forum
Invited Talk of Ksenia Petrichenko, Building Policy Analyst, Global Buildings Performance Network at the European Data Forum 2014, 19 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Making a ‘black box’ transparent: role of the open data in the building sector
EDF2014: BIG - NESSI Networking Session: Nuria de Lama, Representative to the...European Data Forum
BIG - NESSI Networking Session, Talk by Nuria de Lama, Representative to the European Commission, Research & Innovation ATOS, Spain at the European Data Forum 2014, 20 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Towards a Big Data Public Private Partnership
This document provides an overview of the role of ICT in Horizon 2020, the EU's research and innovation funding programme for 2014-2020. Key points include:
- ICT will contribute to several of Horizon 2020's priorities, including industrial leadership, excellent science, and tackling societal challenges.
- ICT is highlighted as important for areas like health, energy, transport, smart cities, and security.
- New funding instruments are introduced, like the Open Disruptive Innovation Scheme to support innovative SMEs and the Future and Emerging Technologies (FET) program.
- An overview is given of how ICT relates to each of Horizon 2020's pillars and societal challenge areas.
EDF2014: Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Directorate Ge...European Data Forum
PPP on Data & Executive Panel on Big Data, Introduction by Marta Nagy-Rothengass, Head of Unit Data Value Chain, Directorate General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology at the European Data Forum 2014, 20 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Towards a Data Value Chain Partership in Europe.
EDF2014: Christian Lindemann, Wolters Kluwer Germany & Christian Dirschl, Wol...European Data Forum
Invited Talk by Christian Lindemann, Wolters Kluwer Germany & Christian Dirschl, Wolters Kluwer Germany at the European Data Forum 2014, 20 March 2014 in Athens, Greece: Linked Data and Open Government Data as part of the business strategy of Wolters Kluwer Germany.
Open innovation towards_smarter_cities_ossusereb85c4
This document provides a summary of the Open Innovation 2013 yearbook. It discusses open innovation in three parts:
1) Policy development - It discusses the European Commission's innovation strategies and frameworks for open innovation ecosystems. It argues for a European model for startups.
2) Trends and country reports - It explores open innovation trends towards smarter cities, collaborative innovation ecosystems for societal challenges, and innovating with the public sector.
3) Interesting cases and examples - It highlights several case studies on topics like open innovation in smart cities, participative innovation, smarter water management, open data, crowdsourcing, and regional innovation ecosystems. It also discusses the FI-WARE Open Innovation Lab.
The
AGI2011- Paper On Open Source Software Standards Integrationtuffoura
The document discusses London Borough of Hackney's adoption of an open source software stack for their web mapping application, Map.Hackney 2.0. The stack includes GeoServer, OpenLayers, Extjs, GeoExt and other open source tools to allow sharing of geographic information across the borough. The open source approach replaced a proprietary software solution and achieved cost savings while providing improved integration, sharing and management of geographic data for council operations. Challenges were faced but benefits were realized, and the shift towards open source represents a new era and model for the borough.
Jenkins has a strong plugin ecosystem that allows it to be customized and expanded. This document discusses several Jenkins plugins:
- The Global Build Stats plugin provides consolidated views and charts of build results, durations, and other metrics over various time periods.
- The SCM Sync Configuration plugin synchronizes Jenkins configuration files with source control for backup and traceability. It currently supports one-way sync from Jenkins to SVN repositories.
- The Plugin Compatibility Tester checks for backward incompatibilities between plugins and Jenkins core versions by compiling and testing plugins against different core versions.
10 Insightful Quotes On Designing A Better Customer ExperienceYuan Wang
In an ever-changing landscape of one digital disruption after another, companies and organisations are looking for new ways to understand their target markets and engage them better. Increasingly they invest in user experience (UX) and customer experience design (CX) capabilities by working with a specialist UX agency or developing their own UX lab. Some UX practitioners are touting leaner and faster ways of developing customer-centric products and services, via methodologies such as guerilla research, rapid prototyping and Agile UX. Others seek innovation and fulfilment by spending more time in research, being more inclusive, and designing for social goods.
Experience is more than just an interface. It is a relationship, as well as a series of touch points between your brand and your customer. Here are our top 10 highlights and takeaways from the recent UX Australia conference to help you transform your customer experience design.
For full article, continue reading at https://yump.com.au/10-ways-supercharge-customer-experience-design/
http://inarocket.com
Learn BEM fundamentals as fast as possible. What is BEM (Block, element, modifier), BEM syntax, how it works with a real example, etc.
How to Build a Dynamic Social Media PlanPost Planner
Stop guessing and wasting your time on networks and strategies that don’t work!
Join Rebekah Radice and Katie Lance to learn how to optimize your social networks, the best kept secrets for hot content, top time management tools, and much more!
Watch the replay here: bit.ly/socialmedia-plan
Lightning Talk #9: How UX and Data Storytelling Can Shape Policy by Mika Aldabaux singapore
How can we take UX and Data Storytelling out of the tech context and use them to change the way government behaves?
Showcasing the truth is the highest goal of data storytelling. Because the design of a chart can affect the interpretation of data in a major way, one must wield visual tools with care and deliberation. Using quantitative facts to evoke an emotional response is best achieved with the combination of UX and data storytelling.
The document discusses how personalization and dynamic content are becoming increasingly important on websites. It notes that 52% of marketers see content personalization as critical and 75% of consumers like it when brands personalize their content. However, personalization can create issues for search engine optimization as dynamic URLs and content are more difficult for search engines to index than static pages. The document provides tips for SEOs to help address these personalization and SEO challenges, such as using static URLs when possible and submitting accurate sitemaps.
This document summarizes a study of CEO succession events among the largest 100 U.S. corporations between 2005-2015. The study analyzed executives who were passed over for the CEO role ("succession losers") and their subsequent careers. It found that 74% of passed over executives left their companies, with 30% eventually becoming CEOs elsewhere. However, companies led by succession losers saw average stock price declines of 13% over 3 years, compared to gains for companies whose CEO selections remained unchanged. The findings suggest that boards generally identify the most qualified CEO candidates, though differences between internal and external hires complicate comparisons.
ICT research in the context of European Union
CASE SUMMER SCHOOL ON APPLIED SOFTWARE ENGINEERING
APPLIED SOFTWARE PROCESS MANAGEMENT AND TESTING
JULY 6-10, 2009, BOZEN/BOLZANO, ITALY
The document presents an overview of a proposed smart city framework to address barriers to effective smart city solutions. It discusses convening an international working group to develop a consensus framework with common architectural features and principles to enable interoperable smart city applications. The goal is a composable framework that allows continuous integration of new functions. The working group will analyze existing architectures and standards to identify pivotal points of interoperability. It will include participants from industry, government, and academia worldwide and produce a technical white paper on consensus architectural principles.
Cultivating Sustainable Software For ResearchNeil Chue Hong
Keynote given at the NSF Cyberinfrastructure Software and Sustainability Workshop, March 26th-27th 2009, Indianapolis.
Exploration of software sustainability based on experiences from UK.
Research Software Sustainability takes a VillageCarole Goble
1. Research software sustainability requires communities to support development and maintenance over time.
2. Strong communities cultivate relationships between developers, users, and other stakeholders to establish trust and shared responsibility for software.
3. Maintaining communities requires ongoing efforts like change management, skills development, and cultivating relationships that span organizational boundaries. Funders can support these community efforts.
The document discusses access control for geospatial data using Shibboleth federated identity management. It summarizes work done in the ESDIN project to set up a prototype Shibboleth federation between national mapping agencies. It also describes an OGC interoperability experiment where several software vendors modified their OWS clients to work with Shibboleth single sign-on. The document concludes by discussing potential next steps, such as establishing an INSPIRE Shibboleth federation and holding a workshop at the INSPIRE conference.
- The document summarizes a workshop about using Shibboleth federations to securely access spatial data infrastructure (SDI) resources through web services.
- An interoperability experiment was conducted where several organizations modified their web service client software to work with Shibboleth single sign-on across administrative domains.
- The experiment demonstrated that using Shibboleth to securely access web feature and map services through single sign-on is practical and does not require major software changes. This could help address interoperability barriers for cross-border applications needing to access protected spatial resources.
The document summarizes a workshop on using Shibboleth federations to securely access spatial data infrastructure (SDI) resources. It describes an interoperability experiment conducted by the Open Geospatial Consortium to test modifying open source clients to access web services secured by Shibboleth. Several organizations demonstrated desktop and browser-based clients accessing web feature and map services hosted in test identity federations. The experiment showed securing SDI resources with Shibboleth is practical and could help address cross-border data sharing challenges.
Presentation of main traits of the present and future AT ecosystem in Europe. The importance of a interoperable accessibility API is pointed out and the need of an European centralised portal of initiative to develop a more dynamic market is introduced.
2009 11 17 Transforming The At Ecosystemguest7e87f9
The document discusses the assistive technology ecosystem and argues that it is critical to transform the ecosystem. Currently, the assistive technology market is fragmented due to different national systems and policies, and assistive technology companies struggle due to an inability to address the entire value chain. However, technological trends such as the integration of assistive technologies into mainstream operating systems and a universal accessibility API could help create a more cohesive ecosystem. The document suggests establishing a thematic network and European pilot portal to help coordinate research projects, foster interoperability, and increase awareness.
The document discusses the assistive technology ecosystem and argues that it is critical to transform the ecosystem. Currently, the assistive technology market is fragmented due to different national systems and policies, and assistive technology companies struggle due to an inability to address the entire value chain. However, technological trends such as the integration of assistive technologies into mainstream operating systems and a universal accessibility API could help create a more cohesive ecosystem. The document suggests establishing a thematic network and European pilot portal to help coordinate research projects and increase awareness, as well as fostering international cooperation through workshops and an open alliance.
Slides from Mr. Georgios Tselentis, EC, DG CONNECT, Net Futures, Experimental Platforms.
Presented at CSC 2016, session2: Open Session on IoT Large Scale Pilots for Reference Zones in EU cities.
Open source presentation enterprise ireland 2010Tim Willoughby
This document discusses open source software use in local government. It notes that many local authorities are ending agreements with Microsoft and exploring open source alternatives. It identifies potential areas to replace proprietary software, such as desktop applications, operating systems, servers, and data services. It provides examples of commonly used open source software and adoption rates. It argues that open source can provide quality applications at low or no cost, while allowing for customization and faster development. The document advocates adopting open standards and considering both open source and commercial options to balance costs and meet needs.
Open source & mobility in europe white paperFabMob
This white paper discusses the potential of open source to drive innovation in mobility across Europe. It argues that open source can [1] bring useful resources to entrepreneurs, [2] help change mobility behaviors through a network of pioneers, and [3] reduce costs for individual actors. Several examples are given of open source projects in automotive, transportation, and mobility more broadly. The document advocates that European governments allocate public funds to produce open resources in sustainable mobility areas.
This document discusses open source software. It defines open source software as software where the source code is available to the public with a license that allows users to study, change and distribute the software. Open source software originated from the free software movement in 1983 and aims to enhance user freedoms. While common in the early computing era, open source software declined in popularity in the 1970s but has since grown with thousands of projects today. The document discusses how open source software functions by providing access to source code files before compilation. It also outlines some values of open source software like transparency and collaboration. Potential benefits of open source projects include problem solving, signaling quality, and self-production. Challenges include motivation and coordination problems across contributors.
OSGi DevCon - Innovation Through an Apps Competitionmfrancis
By David Foote (CTO of the Hitachi division responsible for telecom and networking products and technology in the Americas )
or . . . . how some of the basic principles of Johnny Appleseed (educate, motivate, promulgate, innovate) were achieved when we helped create and implement an OSGi-based application development competition at a top 10 science and engineering university. This presentation will summarize: a) the inception of the competition; b) the roles of the major participants; c) the process of educating the students and professors on OSGi; d) feedback from the students and professors on the process, the competition and their assessment of the OSGi environment; e) how the competition took advantage of other wider R&D activities in the university community especially for health/wellness technology, smart home technology and human factors research; f) some examples of the creative apps generated by the teams; g) lessons learned: how well (or not) the senior level and graduate level students in the competiting teams learned and applied OSGi development principles as well as implemented compliant apps; . . . and finally . . . h) how the lessons learned can be used to help promote and expand the adoption of OSGi in the wider apps development and software development communities.
fsdfgList of Course Work Subjects
S.NO SEM SUBJECT CODE SUBJECT TITLE ELECTIVE/CORE CREDIT
1 1 22MC202 MACHINE LEARNING
TECHNIQUES CORE 3
2 1 22PRM01
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY AND
IPR CORE 3
3 1 22MC302
ADVANCED ARTIFICIAL
INTELLIGENCE ELECTIVE 3
4 3 22MC209 ADVANCED INTERNET OF THINGS CORE 3
5 3
22PVD30 SYSTEM LEVEL HARDWARE SOFTWARE CODESIGN ELECTIVE 3
6 3 22MC324
INFORMATION RETRIEVAL
TECHNIQUES ELECTIVE 3
22MC202 MACHINE LEARNING TECHNIQUES
Course Objective 1. To introduce students to the basic concepts and techniques of Machine Learning.
2. To have a thorough understanding of the Supervised and Unsupervised learning techniques
3. To implement linear and non-linear learning models
4. To implement distance-based clustering techniques
5. To understand graphical models of machine learning algorithms
Unit I FUNDAMENTALS OF MACHINE LEARNING 9
Learning – Types of Machine Learning – Supervised Learning – The Brain and the Neuron – Design a Learning System – Perspectives and Issues in Machine Learning – Concept Learning Task – Concept Learning as Search – Finding a Maximally Specific Hypothesis – Version Spaces and the Candidate Elimination Algorithm – Linear Discriminants – Perceptron – Linear Separability – Linear regression.
Unit II LINEAR MODELS 9
Multi-layer Perceptron – Going Forwards – Going Backwards: Back Propagation Error – Multi-layer Perceptron in Practice – Examples of using the MLP – Overview – Deriving Back-Propagation – Radial Basis Functions and Splines – Concepts – RBF Network – Curse of Dimensionality – Interpolations and Basis Functions – Support Vector Machines
Unit III DISTANCE-BASED MODELS 9
Nearest neighbor models – K-means – clustering around medoids – silhouettes – hierarchical clustering
– Density based methods- Grid based methods- Advanced cluster analysis- k-d trees – locality sensitive hashing – non-parametric regression – bagging and random forests – boosting – meta learning
Unit IV
TREE AND RULE MODELS
9
Decision trees – learning decision trees – ranking and probability estimation trees – regression trees
– clustering trees – learning ordered rule lists – learning unordered rule lists – descriptive rule
learning – Mining Frequent patterns, Association and Correlations, advanced association rule techniques-first order rule learning
Unit V
REINFORCEMENT LEARNING AND GRAPHICAL MODELS
9
Reinforcement Learning – Overview – Getting Lost Example – Markov Decision Process, Markov Chain Monte Carlo Methods – Sampling – Proposal Distribution – Markov Chain Monte Carlo – Graphical Models – Bayesian Networks – Markov Random Fields – Hidden Markov Models –
Tracking Methods.
TOTAL HOURS: 45 PERIODS
CO1 Understanding distinguish between, supervised, unsupervised and semi- supervised learning
CO2 Apply the appropriate machine learning strategy for any given problem
Course Outcome
CO3 Suggestion of using supervised, unsupervised or semi-superv
Open Source project failure often stems from not setting clear objectives or having a shared vision from the start. That said there are many success stories, including two well known Statistical examples: Demetra; and Eurostat SDMX tools (SDMX-RI). However, in all these examples there was at first a founding organisation/entity that created the right environment for its successful path into a new paradigm. In the context of my presentation this being the Statistical Information System Collaboration Community (SIS-CC / http://siscc.oecd.org).
Presented at the International Marketing and Output DataBase Conference, Gozd Martuljek, September 18 - 22, 2016.
Open Source and its role in a new IT ecosystemBruno von Rotz
Bob Gett presents Optaros' view on how Open Source influences the overall IT eco system and how it's a key ingredient of many of the new business models we currenlty see developing
Similar to AGI2011-Open Source Software Stack & Standards - Integration and Geographic Information for Everyone By Anthony Tuffour (20)
AGI2011-Open Source Software Stack & Standards - Integration and Geographic Information for Everyone By Anthony Tuffour
1. Open Source Software Stack & Standards - Integration And Geographic Information For Everyone. By: Anthony Tuffour BSc, MSc GIS Technical Manager London Borough of Hackney Date:21/09/2011
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4. The Concept of Open Source Software “ OSS is a term for software published under licenses that do not give any private intellectual property rights to the developers” (Osterloh & Rota, 2007). Contributions to the development process are made by enthusiastic volunteers, non-paid members of the OSS community investing their free time and private resources for a common good in software development. Underpinning Theory is Innovation model: “Private – Collective model”
In an era of the “source” (open, cloud, localism) we have seen the power of the willingness of the masses – i.e. Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Bahrain etc to die for their brothers and sisters. The same is replicated in the technologies of the commons where conventional and traditions market systems have been defied.