A method for building up signal/power integrity models of active devices is presented in this papaper. The method is based on TDR measures taken at varying operating points of the device.
This document discusses myths and methods related to teaching writing in quantitative disciplines. It debunks myths that writing has no place in fields like mathematics, physics, and engineering. The document advocates that writing can be integrated into any course to help students communicate effectively in their discipline. It presents several low-stakes writing techniques, such as freewriting and microgenres, that can help students generate and develop ideas without pressure. The document also outlines a process for learning to write, including prewriting, organizing, drafting, and revising with feedback. It provides examples of writing assignments that integrate discipline-specific content. Overall, the document argues that writing instruction benefits critical thinking and learning, and that faculty are best equipped to integrate it
The document discusses various parts and formats of business letters, including the sender's address, date, inside address, salutation, body, closing, and enclosures. It provides details on how to write each part, such as including a title with the recipient's name in the inside address and salutation, and indicating enclosed documents below the closing. Proper formatting and structure is important for business letters to communicate information or requests effectively in a formal manner.
This document provides guidance on writing position papers for Model UN. It outlines objectives such as formally presenting a nation's position and unique solutions. Papers should be 1.5-2 pages double-spaced, use a serif font, and include basic identifying information. The style should use third-person to represent a country's views rather than first-person. An example format is given with background on the topic from the country's perspective and its official position and amenable solutions. Research should consider multiple perspectives and support positions with evidence like quotes, statistics, and documents. Plagiarism is strictly prohibited and all sources must be cited.
The document discusses different writing techniques including cause and effect, comparison and contrast, and analogy. Cause and effect examines why things happen and the consequences. Comparison and contrast analyzes the similarities and differences between two or more subjects. Analogy explains the unknown through familiar comparisons. Transition words and phrases are provided to help connect ideas for each technique. Examples are also given to illustrate their usage.
A position paper outlines an argument or viewpoint on a topic. It typically includes an introduction stating the position, several body paragraphs providing evidence and information to support the position, and a conclusion summarizing the key points. Position papers are used in global classrooms, when summarizing research, and in everyday life to help others understand a person's ideas on an issue. The body paragraphs present the current situation and the desired future situation, while the introduction and conclusion bookend the overall argument.
The document discusses the key components and structure of paragraphs. It defines a paragraph as a group of sentences that develops an idea. The main components are the topic sentence, supporting sentences, and concluding sentence. An effective paragraph has unity, coherence, and emphasis. It also maintains the principles of having a clear topic sentence that introduces the main idea and supporting sentences that develop and prove the topic sentence. Transitional elements like pronouns and conjunctions help connect sentences and ideas within a paragraph.
La Cura Summer School - How to: Position PaperNefula
A position paper presents an opinion on an issue and is used in academia, politics, and law. It is typically 1-2 pages and represents the position of a large organization on a specific topic and possible solutions. A position paper provides a description of the topic, the group's interests and policies, and a clear statement of its position and proposed actions. It aims to convince the audience that the group's opinion is valid by addressing all sides of the issue and providing supporting evidence.
Before debating, one must first determine a position. In the conference, you will be assigned a country. The position paper helps you learn the policies of the country and thus, be able to better defend it :)
This document discusses myths and methods related to teaching writing in quantitative disciplines. It debunks myths that writing has no place in fields like mathematics, physics, and engineering. The document advocates that writing can be integrated into any course to help students communicate effectively in their discipline. It presents several low-stakes writing techniques, such as freewriting and microgenres, that can help students generate and develop ideas without pressure. The document also outlines a process for learning to write, including prewriting, organizing, drafting, and revising with feedback. It provides examples of writing assignments that integrate discipline-specific content. Overall, the document argues that writing instruction benefits critical thinking and learning, and that faculty are best equipped to integrate it
The document discusses various parts and formats of business letters, including the sender's address, date, inside address, salutation, body, closing, and enclosures. It provides details on how to write each part, such as including a title with the recipient's name in the inside address and salutation, and indicating enclosed documents below the closing. Proper formatting and structure is important for business letters to communicate information or requests effectively in a formal manner.
This document provides guidance on writing position papers for Model UN. It outlines objectives such as formally presenting a nation's position and unique solutions. Papers should be 1.5-2 pages double-spaced, use a serif font, and include basic identifying information. The style should use third-person to represent a country's views rather than first-person. An example format is given with background on the topic from the country's perspective and its official position and amenable solutions. Research should consider multiple perspectives and support positions with evidence like quotes, statistics, and documents. Plagiarism is strictly prohibited and all sources must be cited.
The document discusses different writing techniques including cause and effect, comparison and contrast, and analogy. Cause and effect examines why things happen and the consequences. Comparison and contrast analyzes the similarities and differences between two or more subjects. Analogy explains the unknown through familiar comparisons. Transition words and phrases are provided to help connect ideas for each technique. Examples are also given to illustrate their usage.
A position paper outlines an argument or viewpoint on a topic. It typically includes an introduction stating the position, several body paragraphs providing evidence and information to support the position, and a conclusion summarizing the key points. Position papers are used in global classrooms, when summarizing research, and in everyday life to help others understand a person's ideas on an issue. The body paragraphs present the current situation and the desired future situation, while the introduction and conclusion bookend the overall argument.
The document discusses the key components and structure of paragraphs. It defines a paragraph as a group of sentences that develops an idea. The main components are the topic sentence, supporting sentences, and concluding sentence. An effective paragraph has unity, coherence, and emphasis. It also maintains the principles of having a clear topic sentence that introduces the main idea and supporting sentences that develop and prove the topic sentence. Transitional elements like pronouns and conjunctions help connect sentences and ideas within a paragraph.
La Cura Summer School - How to: Position PaperNefula
A position paper presents an opinion on an issue and is used in academia, politics, and law. It is typically 1-2 pages and represents the position of a large organization on a specific topic and possible solutions. A position paper provides a description of the topic, the group's interests and policies, and a clear statement of its position and proposed actions. It aims to convince the audience that the group's opinion is valid by addressing all sides of the issue and providing supporting evidence.
Before debating, one must first determine a position. In the conference, you will be assigned a country. The position paper helps you learn the policies of the country and thus, be able to better defend it :)
The document provides guidance on preparing for a Model United Nations (MUN) committee, including writing a position paper for one's assigned country. It recommends including an introduction with background on the issue and country's position, a main body with the country's actions and supporting evidence, and a conclusion with suggested solutions. The main body should comprehensively break down the issues and include the country's actions regarding the problem, supporting evidence/facts, and relevant UN actions/agreements.
Life is what you make it. The document provides advice on being happy, controlling one's speech, watching where one steps, and the legacy one leaves behind. It encourages turning tragedy into magic, striving for happiness by making the most of what comes, and being wary of the power of one's words to help or harm others. The overall message is to do right, be good, and consider how one will be remembered.
Each month, join us as we highlight and discuss hot topics ranging from the future of higher education to wearable technology, best productivity hacks and secrets to hiring top talent. Upload your SlideShares, and share your expertise with the world!
Not sure what to share on SlideShare?
SlideShares that inform, inspire and educate attract the most views. Beyond that, ideas for what you can upload are limitless. We’ve selected a few popular examples to get your creative juices flowing.
SlideShare is a global platform for sharing presentations, infographics, videos and documents. It has over 18 million pieces of professional content uploaded by experts like Eric Schmidt and Guy Kawasaki. The document provides tips for setting up an account on SlideShare, uploading content, optimizing it for searchability, and sharing it on social media to build an audience and reputation as a subject matter expert.
Spicy schematics facebook post collection 2012 13 (SWAN applications)Piero Belforte
This document contains a collection of 37 Facebook posts from the page "Spicy Schematics - ischematics.com" from 2012-2013 showcasing circuit simulations and models created using the Spicy Schematics SWAN simulation software. The posts include simulations of transmission lines, cables, amplifiers, oscillators, and digital circuits along with comparisons between different simulation methods. Many of the posts provide simulation results, diagrams, and discussion of modeling techniques.
This document should be very interesting to an engineer because it reports a not biased experimental validation of a predictive tool carried out by a customer for an actual multiboard avionics design. The general considerations are reported at the beginning of the document...the conclusion is that a tool like PRESTO can save up to a 30% in the development time of a system like this . I have other papers reporting validations but these refers to specific non production test vehicules. Then if you give a quick look to the rest of the doc you will have an idea of what is the level of compliance between measurements and predictions...some results are very close together and other shows differences up to 70% or so...but we as engineers we have always to consider the min-max spread of technical specs for digital components may be in order of 100% or more of typical value so it is a nonsense trying to achieve better compliance. Moreover the digital test patterns involved are not the actual ones , and this can make a significant difference, even if Presto was provided with a feature allowing the user to put in the model actual test patterns as input stimuli. Presto was a state-of-the art post -layout tool at this time and this thanks to both the simulation engine (SPRINT, the predecessor of DWS) and to the modeling techniques including PD planes. Extracted nets of up to hundreds of thousands of lines (circuital elements) were simulated in some tens of minutes on machines that were 1000 times slower than today PCs. A true CO-SIMULATION of SI , PI and EMC was performed...no other commercial tool was able to achieve this performance level.
This can give you an idea of the capabilties of both DWS and related modeling methods like BTM ...the PI/SI examples I'm building up for Spicy SWAN are only a very small subset of the complexity Presto was able to deal with.
The document provides a history of Digital Wave Simulator (DWS) from its origins in the 1970s to the present. It details how DWS evolved from early digital wave algorithms developed by the author at CSELT to commercial programs like Sprint and Presto. It describes applications of DWS at companies like Cisco and the development of the THRIS and HiSAFE testing environments. Most recently, DWS has been incorporated into the Spicy SWAN hybrid simulation platform to provide circuit simulation capabilities. Over 500 person-years have been spent developing DWS and its applications for electronic design.
This brochure describes SPRINT, a general purpose circuit simulator developed by Piero Belforte in the late 1980s that was remarkably fast for its time. Belforte notes that SPRINT's simulation speed on workstations from that era would be around 10,000 times slower on modern personal computers, consistent with Moore's Law. Belforte also created the applications presented in the brochure using SPRINT. He later developed Digital Wave Simulator (DWS) based on SPRINT's algorithms to achieve even greater speed performance.
2013 06 tdr measurement and simulation of rg58 coaxial cable s-parameters_finalPiero Belforte
This document compares time domain measurements and simulations of S-parameters for a 1.83m RG58 coaxial cable. Measurements were taken using a TDR setup and compared to simulations using Spicy Swan, MC10, and Cable Studio circuit simulators. Good agreement was found between the measured and simulated waveforms for S11 and S21, though the simulations did not fully capture effects like distributed impedance discontinuities and dielectric losses in the real cable. Optimizing parameters like transmission line delay improved the match between simulated and measured results.
The document details the history of Digital Wave Simulator (DWS), a digital wave analysis simulation software developed by Piero Belforte beginning in the 1970s. It describes how DWS originated from Belforte's work using digital wave algorithms for electrical simulation. Belforte later founded HDT to develop DWS into a general purpose simulator called SPRINT. HDT also created PRESTO for post-layout simulation and collaborated with CSELT to develop THRIS, a hardware qualification tool that became an Italian telecom standard. After HDT closed, Belforte continued independent DWS development through his company SWAN. The document provides links to additional information, applications, publications and the manhours estimated to have been spent
We were pioneers: early applications of dwn simulations_2Piero Belforte
The early applications (1970s) of a revolutionary electrical circuit simulation method (DWN) are presented including device modelling and signal integrity driven design of high speed digital modules. These modules were utilized to develop the prototypes of digital switching systems deployed in Italian Telecom network in the 1970s.
Lsi Switching Networks (World Telecom Forum Geneva 1983)Piero Belforte
A new generation of LSI-based digital switching networks is presented. Thei application can cover
all practical needs for telecom exhanges from PABX to toll applications.
This document appears to be a set of slides from June 1995 authored by Piero Belforte. The slides are unlabeled and consist of the repeated text "Piero Belforte June 1995" across 20 pages, suggesting it is an incomplete or placeholder set of slides.
The document discusses various fault insertion trials and electromagnetic compatibility tests that were conducted on electronic boards and systems. This includes fault insertion studies on digital exchanges, ATM switches, optical modules, and other complex boards. Tests such as TDR analysis, emission mapping, spectrum analysis, and near field analysis were performed in laboratories to evaluate signal integrity and predict effects of faults. People and equipment involved in the tests are also mentioned, along with applications of fault insertion and modeling techniques.
Characterization And Modeling Of 1 Gbs Mcm Ieee Transactions On Computers Jun...Piero Belforte
The document lists the authors P. Belforte, F. Maggioni, and J. Torres and notes they published in the IEEE Transactions on Computers journal in June 1993, but does not provide any other context or summarized content.
This flyer promotes THRIS (The Human Rights Information System), an online database created by Piero Belforte containing information on human rights treaties and reporting procedures. The database provides details on core international human rights instruments, reporting calendars and guidelines, concluding observations and comments on country reports. Users can search for country reports and individual communications considered by UN treaty bodies.
The SWAN project is aimed to superfast circuit simulation for multigigabit applications without the issues of conventional simulators (Spice and similar).
The logo of the SWAN PROJECT created by Piero Belforte (head of the Project) is shown.
Prediction of Pcb Radiated Emissions (Emc Symposium Zurich 1998)Piero Belforte
The paper shows the experimental validation of predictive results of radiated emissions of a multilayer pcb. The radiated field is calculated from simulated results of pcb signals obtained from DWN analysis of interconnects.
The document provides guidance on preparing for a Model United Nations (MUN) committee, including writing a position paper for one's assigned country. It recommends including an introduction with background on the issue and country's position, a main body with the country's actions and supporting evidence, and a conclusion with suggested solutions. The main body should comprehensively break down the issues and include the country's actions regarding the problem, supporting evidence/facts, and relevant UN actions/agreements.
Life is what you make it. The document provides advice on being happy, controlling one's speech, watching where one steps, and the legacy one leaves behind. It encourages turning tragedy into magic, striving for happiness by making the most of what comes, and being wary of the power of one's words to help or harm others. The overall message is to do right, be good, and consider how one will be remembered.
Each month, join us as we highlight and discuss hot topics ranging from the future of higher education to wearable technology, best productivity hacks and secrets to hiring top talent. Upload your SlideShares, and share your expertise with the world!
Not sure what to share on SlideShare?
SlideShares that inform, inspire and educate attract the most views. Beyond that, ideas for what you can upload are limitless. We’ve selected a few popular examples to get your creative juices flowing.
SlideShare is a global platform for sharing presentations, infographics, videos and documents. It has over 18 million pieces of professional content uploaded by experts like Eric Schmidt and Guy Kawasaki. The document provides tips for setting up an account on SlideShare, uploading content, optimizing it for searchability, and sharing it on social media to build an audience and reputation as a subject matter expert.
Spicy schematics facebook post collection 2012 13 (SWAN applications)Piero Belforte
This document contains a collection of 37 Facebook posts from the page "Spicy Schematics - ischematics.com" from 2012-2013 showcasing circuit simulations and models created using the Spicy Schematics SWAN simulation software. The posts include simulations of transmission lines, cables, amplifiers, oscillators, and digital circuits along with comparisons between different simulation methods. Many of the posts provide simulation results, diagrams, and discussion of modeling techniques.
This document should be very interesting to an engineer because it reports a not biased experimental validation of a predictive tool carried out by a customer for an actual multiboard avionics design. The general considerations are reported at the beginning of the document...the conclusion is that a tool like PRESTO can save up to a 30% in the development time of a system like this . I have other papers reporting validations but these refers to specific non production test vehicules. Then if you give a quick look to the rest of the doc you will have an idea of what is the level of compliance between measurements and predictions...some results are very close together and other shows differences up to 70% or so...but we as engineers we have always to consider the min-max spread of technical specs for digital components may be in order of 100% or more of typical value so it is a nonsense trying to achieve better compliance. Moreover the digital test patterns involved are not the actual ones , and this can make a significant difference, even if Presto was provided with a feature allowing the user to put in the model actual test patterns as input stimuli. Presto was a state-of-the art post -layout tool at this time and this thanks to both the simulation engine (SPRINT, the predecessor of DWS) and to the modeling techniques including PD planes. Extracted nets of up to hundreds of thousands of lines (circuital elements) were simulated in some tens of minutes on machines that were 1000 times slower than today PCs. A true CO-SIMULATION of SI , PI and EMC was performed...no other commercial tool was able to achieve this performance level.
This can give you an idea of the capabilties of both DWS and related modeling methods like BTM ...the PI/SI examples I'm building up for Spicy SWAN are only a very small subset of the complexity Presto was able to deal with.
The document provides a history of Digital Wave Simulator (DWS) from its origins in the 1970s to the present. It details how DWS evolved from early digital wave algorithms developed by the author at CSELT to commercial programs like Sprint and Presto. It describes applications of DWS at companies like Cisco and the development of the THRIS and HiSAFE testing environments. Most recently, DWS has been incorporated into the Spicy SWAN hybrid simulation platform to provide circuit simulation capabilities. Over 500 person-years have been spent developing DWS and its applications for electronic design.
This brochure describes SPRINT, a general purpose circuit simulator developed by Piero Belforte in the late 1980s that was remarkably fast for its time. Belforte notes that SPRINT's simulation speed on workstations from that era would be around 10,000 times slower on modern personal computers, consistent with Moore's Law. Belforte also created the applications presented in the brochure using SPRINT. He later developed Digital Wave Simulator (DWS) based on SPRINT's algorithms to achieve even greater speed performance.
2013 06 tdr measurement and simulation of rg58 coaxial cable s-parameters_finalPiero Belforte
This document compares time domain measurements and simulations of S-parameters for a 1.83m RG58 coaxial cable. Measurements were taken using a TDR setup and compared to simulations using Spicy Swan, MC10, and Cable Studio circuit simulators. Good agreement was found between the measured and simulated waveforms for S11 and S21, though the simulations did not fully capture effects like distributed impedance discontinuities and dielectric losses in the real cable. Optimizing parameters like transmission line delay improved the match between simulated and measured results.
The document details the history of Digital Wave Simulator (DWS), a digital wave analysis simulation software developed by Piero Belforte beginning in the 1970s. It describes how DWS originated from Belforte's work using digital wave algorithms for electrical simulation. Belforte later founded HDT to develop DWS into a general purpose simulator called SPRINT. HDT also created PRESTO for post-layout simulation and collaborated with CSELT to develop THRIS, a hardware qualification tool that became an Italian telecom standard. After HDT closed, Belforte continued independent DWS development through his company SWAN. The document provides links to additional information, applications, publications and the manhours estimated to have been spent
We were pioneers: early applications of dwn simulations_2Piero Belforte
The early applications (1970s) of a revolutionary electrical circuit simulation method (DWN) are presented including device modelling and signal integrity driven design of high speed digital modules. These modules were utilized to develop the prototypes of digital switching systems deployed in Italian Telecom network in the 1970s.
Lsi Switching Networks (World Telecom Forum Geneva 1983)Piero Belforte
A new generation of LSI-based digital switching networks is presented. Thei application can cover
all practical needs for telecom exhanges from PABX to toll applications.
This document appears to be a set of slides from June 1995 authored by Piero Belforte. The slides are unlabeled and consist of the repeated text "Piero Belforte June 1995" across 20 pages, suggesting it is an incomplete or placeholder set of slides.
The document discusses various fault insertion trials and electromagnetic compatibility tests that were conducted on electronic boards and systems. This includes fault insertion studies on digital exchanges, ATM switches, optical modules, and other complex boards. Tests such as TDR analysis, emission mapping, spectrum analysis, and near field analysis were performed in laboratories to evaluate signal integrity and predict effects of faults. People and equipment involved in the tests are also mentioned, along with applications of fault insertion and modeling techniques.
Characterization And Modeling Of 1 Gbs Mcm Ieee Transactions On Computers Jun...Piero Belforte
The document lists the authors P. Belforte, F. Maggioni, and J. Torres and notes they published in the IEEE Transactions on Computers journal in June 1993, but does not provide any other context or summarized content.
This flyer promotes THRIS (The Human Rights Information System), an online database created by Piero Belforte containing information on human rights treaties and reporting procedures. The database provides details on core international human rights instruments, reporting calendars and guidelines, concluding observations and comments on country reports. Users can search for country reports and individual communications considered by UN treaty bodies.
The SWAN project is aimed to superfast circuit simulation for multigigabit applications without the issues of conventional simulators (Spice and similar).
The logo of the SWAN PROJECT created by Piero Belforte (head of the Project) is shown.
Prediction of Pcb Radiated Emissions (Emc Symposium Zurich 1998)Piero Belforte
The paper shows the experimental validation of predictive results of radiated emissions of a multilayer pcb. The radiated field is calculated from simulated results of pcb signals obtained from DWN analysis of interconnects.
Simulation of Lossy Interconnections using Digital Wave Network (Iscas 1982,...Piero Belforte
This paper presents an early extension of the DWN method to the simulation of lossy interconnections between digital devices and systems. Several actual applications are reported with comparison to measures.
MIXED MODE SIMULATION OF HIGH SPEED BOARDS USING DWSPiero Belforte
An example of how DWS can deal with mixed mode (electrical,timing, logic) is shown in this paper. The clock frequency limits due to layout an timing issues can be determined by simulation and an optimization of max frequency of operation can be performed by simulation.
New Method For Electrical Simulation Using Digital Wave Filters(It, Alta Freq...Piero Belforte
A revolutionary method for very fast and accurate cicuit simulation is presented.
The method is based on building up an equivalent DSP representation of the circuit
using wave variables (DWN, Digital Wave Network).
Early Signal Integrity applications including TDR-based modeling of high-speed digital devices are presented.
Skybuffer SAM4U tool for SAP license adoptionTatiana Kojar
Manage and optimize your license adoption and consumption with SAM4U, an SAP free customer software asset management tool.
SAM4U, an SAP complimentary software asset management tool for customers, delivers a detailed and well-structured overview of license inventory and usage with a user-friendly interface. We offer a hosted, cost-effective, and performance-optimized SAM4U setup in the Skybuffer Cloud environment. You retain ownership of the system and data, while we manage the ABAP 7.58 infrastructure, ensuring fixed Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and exceptional services through the SAP Fiori interface.
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/how-axelera-ai-uses-digital-compute-in-memory-to-deliver-fast-and-energy-efficient-computer-vision-a-presentation-from-axelera-ai/
Bram Verhoef, Head of Machine Learning at Axelera AI, presents the “How Axelera AI Uses Digital Compute-in-memory to Deliver Fast and Energy-efficient Computer Vision” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
As artificial intelligence inference transitions from cloud environments to edge locations, computer vision applications achieve heightened responsiveness, reliability and privacy. This migration, however, introduces the challenge of operating within the stringent confines of resource constraints typical at the edge, including small form factors, low energy budgets and diminished memory and computational capacities. Axelera AI addresses these challenges through an innovative approach of performing digital computations within memory itself. This technique facilitates the realization of high-performance, energy-efficient and cost-effective computer vision capabilities at the thin and thick edge, extending the frontier of what is achievable with current technologies.
In this presentation, Verhoef unveils his company’s pioneering chip technology and demonstrates its capacity to deliver exceptional frames-per-second performance across a range of standard computer vision networks typical of applications in security, surveillance and the industrial sector. This shows that advanced computer vision can be accessible and efficient, even at the very edge of our technological ecosystem.
FREE A4 Cyber Security Awareness Posters-Social Engineering part 3Data Hops
Free A4 downloadable and printable Cyber Security, Social Engineering Safety and security Training Posters . Promote security awareness in the home or workplace. Lock them Out From training providers datahops.com
[OReilly Superstream] Occupy the Space: A grassroots guide to engineering (an...Jason Yip
The typical problem in product engineering is not bad strategy, so much as “no strategy”. This leads to confusion, lack of motivation, and incoherent action. The next time you look for a strategy and find an empty space, instead of waiting for it to be filled, I will show you how to fill it in yourself. If you’re wrong, it forces a correction. If you’re right, it helps create focus. I’ll share how I’ve approached this in the past, both what works and lessons for what didn’t work so well.
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.
"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.
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.
Programming Foundation Models with DSPy - Meetup SlidesZilliz
Prompting language models is hard, while programming language models is easy. In this talk, I will discuss the state-of-the-art framework DSPy for programming foundation models with its powerful optimizers and runtime constraint system.
Have you ever been confused by the myriad of choices offered by AWS for hosting a website or an API?
Lambda, Elastic Beanstalk, Lightsail, Amplify, S3 (and more!) can each host websites + APIs. But which one should we choose?
Which one is cheapest? Which one is fastest? Which one will scale to meet our needs?
Join me in this session as we dive into each AWS hosting service to determine which one is best for your scenario and explain why!
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.
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.
Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing.pdfssuserfac0301
Read Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing to gain insights on AI adoption in the manufacturing industry, such as:
1. How quickly AI is being implemented in manufacturing.
2. Which barriers stand in the way of AI adoption.
3. How data quality and governance form the backbone of AI.
4. Organizational processes and structures that may inhibit effective AI adoption.
6. Ideas and approaches to help build your organization's AI strategy.
Digital Marketing Trends in 2024 | Guide for Staying AheadWask
https://www.wask.co/ebooks/digital-marketing-trends-in-2024
Feeling lost in the digital marketing whirlwind of 2024? Technology is changing, consumer habits are evolving, and staying ahead of the curve feels like a never-ending pursuit. This e-book is your compass. Dive into actionable insights to handle the complexities of modern marketing. From hyper-personalization to the power of user-generated content, learn how to build long-term relationships with your audience and unlock the secrets to success in the ever-shifting digital landscape.
How information systems are built or acquired puts information, which is what they should be about, in a secondary place. Our language adapted accordingly, and we no longer talk about information systems but applications. Applications evolved in a way to break data into diverse fragments, tightly coupled with applications and expensive to integrate. The result is technical debt, which is re-paid by taking even bigger "loans", resulting in an ever-increasing technical debt. Software engineering and procurement practices work in sync with market forces to maintain this trend. This talk demonstrates how natural this situation is. The question is: can something be done to reverse the trend?