The document outlines a production schedule for recording radio advertisements at Ringwood School. On May 8th, students will record ads between 9:10-10:00 AM to encourage year 11 students to attend the sixth form and primary students to enroll in year 7. The recordings will take place in the school's geography conference room. Students are reminded to follow safety protocols and be careful with equipment during the session.
The document discusses various legal issues that may arise from creating a film and how to address them. It notes that filming actors requires signed permission forms. Any additional footage or media used needs permission from the copyright owners to avoid legal action. The creator owns intellectual property rights over the original film but must be careful not to infringe on others' copyrights. The film should serve the public interest by getting feedback to ensure it meets audience needs. Performance rights determine how and where the film can be publicly shown.
This document provides location scouting information for filming a movie. It describes several indoor and outdoor locations, including a living room, kitchen, hallway, bedroom, and outside of a house. It also describes a grocery store and bar that will be used for filming. For each location, it notes the available space, lighting, and any potential hazards to be aware of like sharp edges or fragile items. The goal is to scout locations that suit the film's story and characters while ensuring actor safety.
The document outlines a production schedule for recording radio advertisements at Ringwood School. On May 8th, students will record ads between 9:10-10:00 AM to encourage year 11 students to attend the sixth form and primary students to enroll in year 7. The recordings will take place in the school's geography conference room. Students are reminded to follow safety protocols and be careful with equipment during the session.
The document discusses various legal issues that may arise from creating a film and how to address them. It notes that filming actors requires signed permission forms. Any additional footage or media used needs permission from the copyright owners to avoid legal action. The creator owns intellectual property rights over the original film but must be careful not to infringe on others' copyrights. The film should serve the public interest by getting feedback to ensure it meets audience needs. Performance rights determine how and where the film can be publicly shown.
This document provides location scouting information for filming a movie. It describes several indoor and outdoor locations, including a living room, kitchen, hallway, bedroom, and outside of a house. It also describes a grocery store and bar that will be used for filming. For each location, it notes the available space, lighting, and any potential hazards to be aware of like sharp edges or fragile items. The goal is to scout locations that suit the film's story and characters while ensuring actor safety.
1) Ian returns home from a 5 month deployment, but seems distant from his wife Molly. He has flashbacks to his time at war and becomes aggressive towards Molly, physically assaulting her on two occasions.
2) Molly is left home alone for nights as Ian drinks at the pub. She becomes depressed and considers ending her life.
3) After overhearing a happy couple at the pub, Ian decides to try to reconcile with Molly. However, when he returns home he finds Molly dead in their bedroom from a bleach overdose.
- Ian returns home from a 5 month deployment but seems distant from his wife Molly. He has flashbacks to a traumatic event during his time abroad.
- Ian becomes aggressive towards Molly, physically assaulting her on two occasions. He spends nights drinking at the pub while leaving Molly locked at home with bruises.
- After overhearing a happy couple at the pub, Ian buys gifts for Molly hoping to reconcile. However, when he returns home he finds Molly dead in their bedroom from a bleach overdose, distraught over Ian's abuse.
- Ian returns home from a 5 month deployment with the army, but seems distant from his wife Molly. He has an aggressive outburst when she startles him.
- Ian becomes increasingly abusive and controlling of Molly. He threatens her not to tell anyone about the abuse.
- Molly is left home alone crying most nights while Ian drinks at the pub. She becomes depressed and struggles to want to live.
- After seeing a happy couple at the pub, Ian decides to buy Molly flowers to try to reconcile. However, when he returns home he finds Molly has committed suicide in their bedroom.
This document lists various risks identified for a film shoot and proposed solutions to mitigate each risk. The risks include slips and trips that could cause accidents, long shoots causing fatigue and mistakes, hot liquids spilling during scenes, heat stroke or hyperthermia while filming indoors, tripping over furniture in public locations, adverse weather conditions, aggression from the public while filming in locations, crew not being able to see while filming scenes, and again slips and trips over cables and props. For each risk, solutions are provided such as securing cables, taking breaks, staying hydrated, ensuring safe conditions indoors and outdoors, planning routes carefully, and making sure people and grounds are safe.
The document provides location scouting notes for filming a movie. It describes the living room, kitchen, hallway, bedroom, outside of the house, and a local grocery store as potential filming locations. For each location, it notes the available space, natural lighting, and any potential hazards that would need to be addressed for actor safety while filming.
1) Ian returns home from a 5 month deployment with the army to his wife Molly. However, he seems distant and troubled.
2) Ian has flashbacks to his time in the military and becomes aggressive towards Molly, physically assaulting her on two occasions.
3) Molly becomes depressed from Ian's abuse and is seen crying often. On a night when Ian is out drinking, Molly locks herself in their bedroom with a bottle of bleach.
The document discusses various legal issues that may arise from creating a film and how to address them, including:
- Copyrighting any original filmed footage to require permission to use it and give credit
- Obtaining signed permission forms from actors agreeing to be in the film and have it posted publicly
- Ensuring any additional footage, special effects, sound effects or music used have permission from the copyright owners to avoid legal action
- Protecting the film under intellectual property rights and exploring legal protections like royalties if others require payment to use parts of the film
- Screening the film for a focus group to ensure it meets public interest standards before release
- Controlling the performance rights to the film by managing where and
The document discusses several legal and ethical considerations for a short film project. It notes that as the film has a 15+ rating, swearing and violence must be limited, and torture or sex scenes are prohibited. It emphasizes following the guidelines of the British Board of Film Classification to help reach the intended target audience. It also addresses ensuring sensitive themes are handled appropriately, adding helplines, adhering to length and rights requirements for online uploads, and having a focus group review the film and script to avoid libel issues.
Holly Early will play the role of Molly, a 21-year-old vulnerable girl who is abused in the film. Holly studies performing arts and will be able to show the raw emotions of an abuse victim. As a key character, Molly will be in most scenes. Holly has worked with the director before and her strengths in acting vulnerable roles are known. Nathan Searle will play Ian, a 25-year-old soldier who dominates his relationship with Molly. Nathan also studies performing arts and can realistically portray his character. As Ian is a main character, he too will be in most scenes. Nathan has large feet, chest, and arms, so his costumes will need to be sized appropriately for his
This document outlines the production schedule and tasks for filming and post-production of a short film over several days in February and March. It details the dates, locations, crew and cast needed, props, costumes, and equipment required for each shoot. Post-production work includes uploading footage, editing in Premiere Pro and Audition, exporting the final film, and writing an evaluation.
The document provides costume and prop recommendations for characters Ian and Molly in an upcoming film. For Ian, a 25 year old army soldier, the summary recommends purchasing an army uniform from an army surplus store for scenes where Ian is on tour or returns from deployment. For scenes where Ian goes to the pub or relaxes at home, more casual clothing is suggested that shows off his tattoos and muscles. For Molly, a 21 year old who works at home, revealing white clothing and shoes are initially recommended to show she is happy with Ian. However, after he begins abusing her, darker, more covered clothing is suggested to show her loss of confidence and unhappiness. A photo frame of Ian and Molly and
This shooting script is for a short film titled "Un-Heard" and contains 109 shots describing scenes between characters Molly and Ian. It begins with Molly making tea while watching news of a terrorist attack. Ian then arrives home and reassures Molly before leaving for a work trip. Upon his return, flashbacks reveal that Ian has been abusive towards Molly. The script climaxes with Ian finding Molly dead by suicide in their bedroom after struggling with the abuse.
1) Ian returns home from a 5 month deployment with the army but seems distant from his girlfriend Molly. 2) Ian has an aggressive flashback that causes him to shove Molly against a wall. He threatens her not to tell anyone what happened. 3) Over subsequent nights, Ian's PTSD causes him to strangle and physically abuse Molly on multiple occasions. He often drinks at the pub to cope. 4) After overhearing a happy couple at the pub, Ian decides to buy gifts to reconcile with Molly. However, upon returning home he finds Molly's body in their bedroom, having taken her own life to escape Ian's abuse.
The production plan outlines the cast, crew, budget, and schedule for the film. The main characters Molly and Ian will be played by Holly Early and Nathan Searle respectively and will be in most scenes. A couple played by Joe Manzi and Kat Douglas will be in one scene. Scott Renton will assist as crew. The £100 budget will cover props, makeup, and meals. Specific dates are allocated for storyboards, production schedule, uploading, and evaluation to suit the production needs. The film will launch in October 2020 to target winter audiences.
The production plan outlines the cast, crew, budget, and schedule for the filmmaker's short film. The main characters Molly and Ian will be played by Holly Early and Nathan Searle respectively. A couple played by Joe Manzi and Kat Douglas are also cast for one scene. Scott Renton will assist as crew. The £100 budget will cover props, makeup, and food for the cast and crew. Specific dates are allocated for storyboards, production schedule, uploading to YouTube, and an evaluation. The film will launch in October 2020 to target wider audiences during half term breaks. After feedback, some scenes will be simplified and actors will look more realistic as soldiers to improve believability. A contingency plan addresses potential issues
The document discusses the style, content, narrative structure, genre, and target audience of various media texts including the film American Sniper, the BBC TV series Line of Duty, BBC radio episodes, and the video game Metal Gear Solid. It analyzes each through the lens of relevant film and media theories. The styles range from standard film scripts to those more tailored for radio, TV, and video games. The genres and target audiences also vary across the different texts and formats.
The document outlines a marketing plan for two advertisements - one for the lower school and one for the sixth form - of Ringwood School.
The sixth form advertisement will be 40 seconds long and feature student testimonials promoting the school's success rates and opportunities. The lower school advertisement will be 30 seconds and use rhetorical questions to promote the school's facilities and extracurricular activities.
A budget of £2000 is allocated for producing and airing the advertisements in August 2019 to promote the upcoming open day events and spread awareness during the summer holidays when there are no other major events.
Enhanced Enterprise Intelligence with your personal AI Data Copilot.pdfGetInData
Recently we have observed the rise of open-source Large Language Models (LLMs) that are community-driven or developed by the AI market leaders, such as Meta (Llama3), Databricks (DBRX) and Snowflake (Arctic). On the other hand, there is a growth in interest in specialized, carefully fine-tuned yet relatively small models that can efficiently assist programmers in day-to-day tasks. Finally, Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) architectures have gained a lot of traction as the preferred approach for LLMs context and prompt augmentation for building conversational SQL data copilots, code copilots and chatbots.
In this presentation, we will show how we built upon these three concepts a robust Data Copilot that can help to democratize access to company data assets and boost performance of everyone working with data platforms.
Why do we need yet another (open-source ) Copilot?
How can we build one?
Architecture and evaluation
1) Ian returns home from a 5 month deployment, but seems distant from his wife Molly. He has flashbacks to his time at war and becomes aggressive towards Molly, physically assaulting her on two occasions.
2) Molly is left home alone for nights as Ian drinks at the pub. She becomes depressed and considers ending her life.
3) After overhearing a happy couple at the pub, Ian decides to try to reconcile with Molly. However, when he returns home he finds Molly dead in their bedroom from a bleach overdose.
- Ian returns home from a 5 month deployment but seems distant from his wife Molly. He has flashbacks to a traumatic event during his time abroad.
- Ian becomes aggressive towards Molly, physically assaulting her on two occasions. He spends nights drinking at the pub while leaving Molly locked at home with bruises.
- After overhearing a happy couple at the pub, Ian buys gifts for Molly hoping to reconcile. However, when he returns home he finds Molly dead in their bedroom from a bleach overdose, distraught over Ian's abuse.
- Ian returns home from a 5 month deployment with the army, but seems distant from his wife Molly. He has an aggressive outburst when she startles him.
- Ian becomes increasingly abusive and controlling of Molly. He threatens her not to tell anyone about the abuse.
- Molly is left home alone crying most nights while Ian drinks at the pub. She becomes depressed and struggles to want to live.
- After seeing a happy couple at the pub, Ian decides to buy Molly flowers to try to reconcile. However, when he returns home he finds Molly has committed suicide in their bedroom.
This document lists various risks identified for a film shoot and proposed solutions to mitigate each risk. The risks include slips and trips that could cause accidents, long shoots causing fatigue and mistakes, hot liquids spilling during scenes, heat stroke or hyperthermia while filming indoors, tripping over furniture in public locations, adverse weather conditions, aggression from the public while filming in locations, crew not being able to see while filming scenes, and again slips and trips over cables and props. For each risk, solutions are provided such as securing cables, taking breaks, staying hydrated, ensuring safe conditions indoors and outdoors, planning routes carefully, and making sure people and grounds are safe.
The document provides location scouting notes for filming a movie. It describes the living room, kitchen, hallway, bedroom, outside of the house, and a local grocery store as potential filming locations. For each location, it notes the available space, natural lighting, and any potential hazards that would need to be addressed for actor safety while filming.
1) Ian returns home from a 5 month deployment with the army to his wife Molly. However, he seems distant and troubled.
2) Ian has flashbacks to his time in the military and becomes aggressive towards Molly, physically assaulting her on two occasions.
3) Molly becomes depressed from Ian's abuse and is seen crying often. On a night when Ian is out drinking, Molly locks herself in their bedroom with a bottle of bleach.
The document discusses various legal issues that may arise from creating a film and how to address them, including:
- Copyrighting any original filmed footage to require permission to use it and give credit
- Obtaining signed permission forms from actors agreeing to be in the film and have it posted publicly
- Ensuring any additional footage, special effects, sound effects or music used have permission from the copyright owners to avoid legal action
- Protecting the film under intellectual property rights and exploring legal protections like royalties if others require payment to use parts of the film
- Screening the film for a focus group to ensure it meets public interest standards before release
- Controlling the performance rights to the film by managing where and
The document discusses several legal and ethical considerations for a short film project. It notes that as the film has a 15+ rating, swearing and violence must be limited, and torture or sex scenes are prohibited. It emphasizes following the guidelines of the British Board of Film Classification to help reach the intended target audience. It also addresses ensuring sensitive themes are handled appropriately, adding helplines, adhering to length and rights requirements for online uploads, and having a focus group review the film and script to avoid libel issues.
Holly Early will play the role of Molly, a 21-year-old vulnerable girl who is abused in the film. Holly studies performing arts and will be able to show the raw emotions of an abuse victim. As a key character, Molly will be in most scenes. Holly has worked with the director before and her strengths in acting vulnerable roles are known. Nathan Searle will play Ian, a 25-year-old soldier who dominates his relationship with Molly. Nathan also studies performing arts and can realistically portray his character. As Ian is a main character, he too will be in most scenes. Nathan has large feet, chest, and arms, so his costumes will need to be sized appropriately for his
This document outlines the production schedule and tasks for filming and post-production of a short film over several days in February and March. It details the dates, locations, crew and cast needed, props, costumes, and equipment required for each shoot. Post-production work includes uploading footage, editing in Premiere Pro and Audition, exporting the final film, and writing an evaluation.
The document provides costume and prop recommendations for characters Ian and Molly in an upcoming film. For Ian, a 25 year old army soldier, the summary recommends purchasing an army uniform from an army surplus store for scenes where Ian is on tour or returns from deployment. For scenes where Ian goes to the pub or relaxes at home, more casual clothing is suggested that shows off his tattoos and muscles. For Molly, a 21 year old who works at home, revealing white clothing and shoes are initially recommended to show she is happy with Ian. However, after he begins abusing her, darker, more covered clothing is suggested to show her loss of confidence and unhappiness. A photo frame of Ian and Molly and
This shooting script is for a short film titled "Un-Heard" and contains 109 shots describing scenes between characters Molly and Ian. It begins with Molly making tea while watching news of a terrorist attack. Ian then arrives home and reassures Molly before leaving for a work trip. Upon his return, flashbacks reveal that Ian has been abusive towards Molly. The script climaxes with Ian finding Molly dead by suicide in their bedroom after struggling with the abuse.
1) Ian returns home from a 5 month deployment with the army but seems distant from his girlfriend Molly. 2) Ian has an aggressive flashback that causes him to shove Molly against a wall. He threatens her not to tell anyone what happened. 3) Over subsequent nights, Ian's PTSD causes him to strangle and physically abuse Molly on multiple occasions. He often drinks at the pub to cope. 4) After overhearing a happy couple at the pub, Ian decides to buy gifts to reconcile with Molly. However, upon returning home he finds Molly's body in their bedroom, having taken her own life to escape Ian's abuse.
The production plan outlines the cast, crew, budget, and schedule for the film. The main characters Molly and Ian will be played by Holly Early and Nathan Searle respectively and will be in most scenes. A couple played by Joe Manzi and Kat Douglas will be in one scene. Scott Renton will assist as crew. The £100 budget will cover props, makeup, and meals. Specific dates are allocated for storyboards, production schedule, uploading, and evaluation to suit the production needs. The film will launch in October 2020 to target winter audiences.
The production plan outlines the cast, crew, budget, and schedule for the filmmaker's short film. The main characters Molly and Ian will be played by Holly Early and Nathan Searle respectively. A couple played by Joe Manzi and Kat Douglas are also cast for one scene. Scott Renton will assist as crew. The £100 budget will cover props, makeup, and food for the cast and crew. Specific dates are allocated for storyboards, production schedule, uploading to YouTube, and an evaluation. The film will launch in October 2020 to target wider audiences during half term breaks. After feedback, some scenes will be simplified and actors will look more realistic as soldiers to improve believability. A contingency plan addresses potential issues
The document discusses the style, content, narrative structure, genre, and target audience of various media texts including the film American Sniper, the BBC TV series Line of Duty, BBC radio episodes, and the video game Metal Gear Solid. It analyzes each through the lens of relevant film and media theories. The styles range from standard film scripts to those more tailored for radio, TV, and video games. The genres and target audiences also vary across the different texts and formats.
The document outlines a marketing plan for two advertisements - one for the lower school and one for the sixth form - of Ringwood School.
The sixth form advertisement will be 40 seconds long and feature student testimonials promoting the school's success rates and opportunities. The lower school advertisement will be 30 seconds and use rhetorical questions to promote the school's facilities and extracurricular activities.
A budget of £2000 is allocated for producing and airing the advertisements in August 2019 to promote the upcoming open day events and spread awareness during the summer holidays when there are no other major events.
Enhanced Enterprise Intelligence with your personal AI Data Copilot.pdfGetInData
Recently we have observed the rise of open-source Large Language Models (LLMs) that are community-driven or developed by the AI market leaders, such as Meta (Llama3), Databricks (DBRX) and Snowflake (Arctic). On the other hand, there is a growth in interest in specialized, carefully fine-tuned yet relatively small models that can efficiently assist programmers in day-to-day tasks. Finally, Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) architectures have gained a lot of traction as the preferred approach for LLMs context and prompt augmentation for building conversational SQL data copilots, code copilots and chatbots.
In this presentation, we will show how we built upon these three concepts a robust Data Copilot that can help to democratize access to company data assets and boost performance of everyone working with data platforms.
Why do we need yet another (open-source ) Copilot?
How can we build one?
Architecture and evaluation
Analysis insight about a Flyball dog competition team's performanceroli9797
Insight of my analysis about a Flyball dog competition team's last year performance. Find more: https://github.com/rolandnagy-ds/flyball_race_analysis/tree/main
Predictably Improve Your B2B Tech Company's Performance by Leveraging DataKiwi Creative
Harness the power of AI-backed reports, benchmarking and data analysis to predict trends and detect anomalies in your marketing efforts.
Peter Caputa, CEO at Databox, reveals how you can discover the strategies and tools to increase your growth rate (and margins!).
From metrics to track to data habits to pick up, enhance your reporting for powerful insights to improve your B2B tech company's marketing.
- - -
This is the webinar recording from the June 2024 HubSpot User Group (HUG) for B2B Technology USA.
Watch the video recording at https://youtu.be/5vjwGfPN9lw
Sign up for future HUG events at https://events.hubspot.com/b2b-technology-usa/
End-to-end pipeline agility - Berlin Buzzwords 2024Lars Albertsson
We describe how we achieve high change agility in data engineering by eliminating the fear of breaking downstream data pipelines through end-to-end pipeline testing, and by using schema metaprogramming to safely eliminate boilerplate involved in changes that affect whole pipelines.
A quick poll on agility in changing pipelines from end to end indicated a huge span in capabilities. For the question "How long time does it take for all downstream pipelines to be adapted to an upstream change," the median response was 6 months, but some respondents could do it in less than a day. When quantitative data engineering differences between the best and worst are measured, the span is often 100x-1000x, sometimes even more.
A long time ago, we suffered at Spotify from fear of changing pipelines due to not knowing what the impact might be downstream. We made plans for a technical solution to test pipelines end-to-end to mitigate that fear, but the effort failed for cultural reasons. We eventually solved this challenge, but in a different context. In this presentation we will describe how we test full pipelines effectively by manipulating workflow orchestration, which enables us to make changes in pipelines without fear of breaking downstream.
Making schema changes that affect many jobs also involves a lot of toil and boilerplate. Using schema-on-read mitigates some of it, but has drawbacks since it makes it more difficult to detect errors early. We will describe how we have rejected this tradeoff by applying schema metaprogramming, eliminating boilerplate but keeping the protection of static typing, thereby further improving agility to quickly modify data pipelines without fear.
Global Situational Awareness of A.I. and where its headedvikram sood
You can see the future first in San Francisco.
Over the past year, the talk of the town has shifted from $10 billion compute clusters to $100 billion clusters to trillion-dollar clusters. Every six months another zero is added to the boardroom plans. Behind the scenes, there’s a fierce scramble to secure every power contract still available for the rest of the decade, every voltage transformer that can possibly be procured. American big business is gearing up to pour trillions of dollars into a long-unseen mobilization of American industrial might. By the end of the decade, American electricity production will have grown tens of percent; from the shale fields of Pennsylvania to the solar farms of Nevada, hundreds of millions of GPUs will hum.
The AGI race has begun. We are building machines that can think and reason. By 2025/26, these machines will outpace college graduates. By the end of the decade, they will be smarter than you or I; we will have superintelligence, in the true sense of the word. Along the way, national security forces not seen in half a century will be un-leashed, and before long, The Project will be on. If we’re lucky, we’ll be in an all-out race with the CCP; if we’re unlucky, an all-out war.
Everyone is now talking about AI, but few have the faintest glimmer of what is about to hit them. Nvidia analysts still think 2024 might be close to the peak. Mainstream pundits are stuck on the wilful blindness of “it’s just predicting the next word”. They see only hype and business-as-usual; at most they entertain another internet-scale technological change.
Before long, the world will wake up. But right now, there are perhaps a few hundred people, most of them in San Francisco and the AI labs, that have situational awareness. Through whatever peculiar forces of fate, I have found myself amongst them. A few years ago, these people were derided as crazy—but they trusted the trendlines, which allowed them to correctly predict the AI advances of the past few years. Whether these people are also right about the next few years remains to be seen. But these are very smart people—the smartest people I have ever met—and they are the ones building this technology. Perhaps they will be an odd footnote in history, or perhaps they will go down in history like Szilard and Oppenheimer and Teller. If they are seeing the future even close to correctly, we are in for a wild ride.
Let me tell you what we see.
The Building Blocks of QuestDB, a Time Series Databasejavier ramirez
Talk Delivered at Valencia Codes Meetup 2024-06.
Traditionally, databases have treated timestamps just as another data type. However, when performing real-time analytics, timestamps should be first class citizens and we need rich time semantics to get the most out of our data. We also need to deal with ever growing datasets while keeping performant, which is as fun as it sounds.
It is no wonder time-series databases are now more popular than ever before. Join me in this session to learn about the internal architecture and building blocks of QuestDB, an open source time-series database designed for speed. We will also review a history of some of the changes we have gone over the past two years to deal with late and unordered data, non-blocking writes, read-replicas, or faster batch ingestion.
06-04-2024 - NYC Tech Week - Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
Round table discussion of vector databases, unstructured data, ai, big data, real-time, robots and Milvus.
A lively discussion with NJ Gen AI Meetup Lead, Prasad and Procure.FYI's Co-Found