The butterfly life cycle consists of four stages: eggs hatch into caterpillars, caterpillars then form a pupa and undergo transformation, emerging as an adult butterfly ready to feed, lay eggs, and continue the cycle.
Butterflies go through four stages of development: eggs hatch into wormlike caterpillars that eat voraciously; caterpillars then form a pupa or chrysalis and undergo transformation; adult butterflies emerge from the chrysalis with wet wings that soon dry out, allowing the butterflies to fly off and complete the cycle by laying more eggs.
The document describes the life cycle of a butterfly in 4 stages:
1) Egg - A butterfly lays an egg on a plant leaf and the caterpillar grows inside.
2) Caterpillar - It eats leaves, grows and sheds its skin, and stores food before spinning a silk pad.
3) Pupa - The caterpillar forms a protective shell and becomes a pupa inside until it is ready to emerge.
4) Butterfly - It stretches its body and is ready to look for nectar from flowers.
The life cycle of a butterfly consists of four stages: egg, larva (caterpillar), pupa, and adult. Female butterflies lay eggs on host plants which hatch into caterpillars. Caterpillars are the feeding stage and grow rapidly by eating constantly. When fully grown, the caterpillar forms a pupa or chrysalis and undergoes metamorphosis without eating. An adult butterfly then emerges from the chrysalis ready to mate and lay eggs, completing the cycle.
Butterflies go through 4 stages in their life cycle: egg, caterpillar/larva, chrysalis/pupa, and butterfly/adult. As a caterpillar, it eats plants and rests; it then forms a chrysalis and transforms inside until a butterfly emerges; the new butterfly must then allow its wings to dry before it can fly.
The butterfly life cycle involves four stages: an egg, caterpillar, pupa, and adult butterfly. A butterfly first lays eggs on a plant leaf. The caterpillar hatches and eats leaves as it grows, shedding its skin several times. It then spins a silk pad and enters the pupa stage inside a protective shell. Finally, the adult butterfly emerges from the shell with wet wings and gulps air to expand and dry them before flying off to find nectar.
The document outlines the 4 stages in the life cycle of a butterfly:
1) Egg stage - Eggs are laid on leaves and take 1-3 weeks to develop into caterpillars.
2) Caterpillar or larva stage - The caterpillar emerges from the egg and eats voraciously, shedding its skin several times as it grows.
3) Pupa stage - The caterpillar forms a cocoon and undergoes metamorphosis within, emerging after weeks or months as a butterfly.
4) Adult stage - The butterfly emerges from its cocoon with wings and a familiar form, living on average only a few weeks before the cycle repeats.
The document summarizes the life cycle of a butterfly in 4 stages: egg, caterpillar/larva, chrysalis/pupa, and adult butterfly. It describes each stage in detail, from the egg being laid on a milkweed leaf and hatching, to the caterpillar eating leaves and molting its skin several times, forming a chrysalis around its body, and emerging as an adult butterfly after 2 weeks. Metamorphosis is defined as the physical changes some animals undergo to become adults. The adult butterfly stage is explained, including its body parts, wings, feeding using a proboscis, and tasting with its feet. Questions are included about identifying the stages in pictures.
This document provides information about butterflies, including their physical characteristics, eating habits, life cycles, habitats, and common species. It describes how butterflies have scales that give them color, a tubular tongue for drinking nectar, and antennae for smelling. The four stages of a butterfly's life cycle are the egg, caterpillar, pupa, and adult stages. Butterflies can live in various habitats around the world, including forests, deserts, prairies, and tropical rainforests. The document also includes pictures, videos, and external resources for learning more about butterflies.
Butterflies go through four stages of development: eggs hatch into wormlike caterpillars that eat voraciously; caterpillars then form a pupa or chrysalis and undergo transformation; adult butterflies emerge from the chrysalis with wet wings that soon dry out, allowing the butterflies to fly off and complete the cycle by laying more eggs.
The document describes the life cycle of a butterfly in 4 stages:
1) Egg - A butterfly lays an egg on a plant leaf and the caterpillar grows inside.
2) Caterpillar - It eats leaves, grows and sheds its skin, and stores food before spinning a silk pad.
3) Pupa - The caterpillar forms a protective shell and becomes a pupa inside until it is ready to emerge.
4) Butterfly - It stretches its body and is ready to look for nectar from flowers.
The life cycle of a butterfly consists of four stages: egg, larva (caterpillar), pupa, and adult. Female butterflies lay eggs on host plants which hatch into caterpillars. Caterpillars are the feeding stage and grow rapidly by eating constantly. When fully grown, the caterpillar forms a pupa or chrysalis and undergoes metamorphosis without eating. An adult butterfly then emerges from the chrysalis ready to mate and lay eggs, completing the cycle.
Butterflies go through 4 stages in their life cycle: egg, caterpillar/larva, chrysalis/pupa, and butterfly/adult. As a caterpillar, it eats plants and rests; it then forms a chrysalis and transforms inside until a butterfly emerges; the new butterfly must then allow its wings to dry before it can fly.
The butterfly life cycle involves four stages: an egg, caterpillar, pupa, and adult butterfly. A butterfly first lays eggs on a plant leaf. The caterpillar hatches and eats leaves as it grows, shedding its skin several times. It then spins a silk pad and enters the pupa stage inside a protective shell. Finally, the adult butterfly emerges from the shell with wet wings and gulps air to expand and dry them before flying off to find nectar.
The document outlines the 4 stages in the life cycle of a butterfly:
1) Egg stage - Eggs are laid on leaves and take 1-3 weeks to develop into caterpillars.
2) Caterpillar or larva stage - The caterpillar emerges from the egg and eats voraciously, shedding its skin several times as it grows.
3) Pupa stage - The caterpillar forms a cocoon and undergoes metamorphosis within, emerging after weeks or months as a butterfly.
4) Adult stage - The butterfly emerges from its cocoon with wings and a familiar form, living on average only a few weeks before the cycle repeats.
The document summarizes the life cycle of a butterfly in 4 stages: egg, caterpillar/larva, chrysalis/pupa, and adult butterfly. It describes each stage in detail, from the egg being laid on a milkweed leaf and hatching, to the caterpillar eating leaves and molting its skin several times, forming a chrysalis around its body, and emerging as an adult butterfly after 2 weeks. Metamorphosis is defined as the physical changes some animals undergo to become adults. The adult butterfly stage is explained, including its body parts, wings, feeding using a proboscis, and tasting with its feet. Questions are included about identifying the stages in pictures.
This document provides information about butterflies, including their physical characteristics, eating habits, life cycles, habitats, and common species. It describes how butterflies have scales that give them color, a tubular tongue for drinking nectar, and antennae for smelling. The four stages of a butterfly's life cycle are the egg, caterpillar, pupa, and adult stages. Butterflies can live in various habitats around the world, including forests, deserts, prairies, and tropical rainforests. The document also includes pictures, videos, and external resources for learning more about butterflies.
The document describes the life cycle of a butterfly, which starts as an egg that hatches into a caterpillar. The caterpillar eats leaves as it grows and then forms a hard shell called a pupa. Inside the pupa, the caterpillar transforms into an adult butterfly, which emerges from the pupa. The life cycle of a butterfly involves complete metamorphosis, meaning the animal completely changes form during its development, unlike the incomplete metamorphosis of a chicken where it only changes in size as it grows.
The life cycle of a butterfly has four main stages: egg, caterpillar, chrysalis, and butterfly. In the egg stage, the butterfly lays eggs on leaves which hatch into caterpillars. Caterpillars spend their time eating leaves to grow, then form a chrysalis where their body dissolves and restructures into a butterfly. When emerged from the chrysalis, the butterfly's wings dry and strengthen until it can fly.
Butterflies undergo complete metamorphosis, starting as an egg laid on a leaf. The egg hatches into a caterpillar that molts several times as it eats milkweed leaves. When fully grown, the caterpillar forms a chrysalis and undergoes metamorphosis to become an adult butterfly. The new butterfly emerges with shriveled wings that it must pump full before it can fly in search of nectar.
The document describes and compares the life cycles of white-tailed deer and butterflies. For deer, newborn fawns drink milk from their mothers, then grow into yearlings over their first year before becoming adult deer. Butterfly life cycles begin with eggs that hatch into caterpillars, which eat leaves to grow and then form hard cocoons called pupae, within which they transform into adult butterflies.
The document describes the four stages of a butterfly's life cycle: an egg is laid on a leaf and hatches into a caterpillar, the caterpillar eats voraciously and then forms a chrysalis inside a cocoon for two weeks, emerging as a beautiful butterfly. Additional facts provided state that butterflies can see certain colors, have four wings and antennae to help them see, female butterflies are larger than males, and butterflies fly between flowers to eat nectar.
There are two types of metamorphosis - complete and incomplete. Incomplete metamorphosis has three stages: egg, nymph, and adult. Complete metamorphosis has four stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. Frogs undergo complete metamorphosis, starting as an egg then tadpole with gills and tail, developing into a form with lungs and legs, and finally emerging as an adult frog living on land.
This is my first slide show presentation in IT1 subject and it is entitled BUTTERFLY. I hope for those people who wants to able to view i wish you will like it.
The Life Cycle: The Stages of the Metamorphosis ProcessLorenKnights
The document describes the life cycle of butterflies through metamorphosis. It begins with an egg, which hatches into a caterpillar. The caterpillar feeds and grows, then forms a pupa or chrysalis. Inside the pupa, the caterpillar undergoes transformation and emerges as an adult butterfly. The adult's role is to mate and lay new eggs, continuing the cycle. The life cycle involves distinct stages of egg, larva (caterpillar), pupa, and adult.
Butterflies undergo a four stage metamorphosis process from egg to adult. The caterpillar eats constantly and molts its skin several times. It then forms a pupa where it rests without moving as its body transforms. Finally, the adult butterfly emerges from its cocoon with wet wings that soon dry and allow it to fly off and live the final adult stage.
This document summarizes the life cycles of various plants and animals. It discusses the stages of plant life cycles including seed, seedling, sapling and adult. It also outlines the life cycles of birds, reptiles, fish, mammals, insects like praying mantises and butterflies, and frogs. All of these life cycles involve stages of growth from birth to adulthood, with the goal of reproduction to continue the species.
The document summarizes the four life cycle phases of a butterfly:
1. Eggs are laid on leaves and hatch into caterpillars.
2. Caterpillars molt several times as they eat voraciously.
3. When fully grown, the caterpillar attaches itself and forms a chrysalis where it undergoes metamorphosis.
4. An adult butterfly emerges from the chrysalis with wet wings that soon harden and allow it to fly while feeding on nectar and searching for mates.
Learn about life cycle of animal.You can even know the information about it.My name is Krethaloshanan Vinnan Rao.Add me as friend in Facebook Vinnan Rao.I have 2 account.Add both.My ps3 name is Vinnan
The document discusses the life cycles of several insects:
- The grasshopper's life cycle has 3 stages - egg, nymph, and adult. The nymph hatches from the egg and grows wings as an adult over 4-7 weeks.
- The mosquito's life cycle has 4 stages - egg, larva, pupa, and adult. The larva hatches and grows in water before becoming a pupa then adult.
- The cockroach's life cycle mirrors the grasshopper's with 3 stages - egg, nymph, and adult. The nymph hatches and molts its skin 8 times before becoming an adult.
- The housefly's life cycle also has 4
This document describes the life cycles of chickens, butterflies, and mosquitoes. Chickens have a three stage life cycle of egg, chick, and chicken. Butterflies have a four stage life cycle of egg, caterpillar, pupa, and adult. Mosquitoes also have a four stage life cycle of egg, larva, pupa, and adult, and it is important to prevent mosquito breeding. The document requests comments on the next slide.
Butterflies have an amazing life cycle that transforms from caterpillar to butterfly, which is fascinating for children to learn about. Technology allows students to observe butterflies through videos, interactive books, live feeds, and songs without leaving the classroom. These technological resources engage students in different ways and help those who learn best through active participation rather than just reading textbooks.
The document describes the life cycle of a butterfly from egg to adult. It explains that the female butterfly lays eggs on a plant which hatch into wormlike caterpillars. The caterpillars molt and eat voraciously. They then form a chrysalis or cocoon and undergo a process where their body is liquefied and reassembled into an adult butterfly over 2-3 weeks. When ready, the adult butterfly emerges from the chrysalis with wings and is able to fly and reproduce, completing the cycle.
The document summarizes the life cycle of a butterfly in 4 stages:
1) Egg - The butterfly lays eggs on leaves
2) Caterpillar - The egg hatches and the caterpillar eats leaves as it grows
3) Pupa (chrysalis) - The caterpillar undergoes metamorphosis to change into a butterfly
4) Butterfly - The butterfly emerges from the chrysalis and flies around looking for nectar and laying more eggs.
The document discusses the life cycle of butterflies which includes four stages: egg, larva (caterpillar), pupa (cocoon), and butterfly. It notes that as adults, butterflies can live from one week to one year depending on the species. A special species, the monarch butterfly, migrates over 1,500 miles from Canada to Mexico each winter to stay warm. Butterflies eat nectar from flowers and help with pollination. There are over 20,000 different kinds of butterflies worldwide. Most butterflies fly between 5 and 12 miles per hour.
White-tailed deer have different life stages from fawn to yearling to adult. Fawns are born and drink milk from their mother to grow, looking similar to the mother. After a year, the young deer is called a yearling and continues to resemble the mother. Finally, the yearling grows into an adult deer.
The document describes the life cycles of several common insects, including grasshoppers, mosquitoes, cockroaches, houseflies, and mealworms. Each life cycle involves eggs hatching into larvae or nymphs, which grow and molt their exoskeleton before maturing into adults. The number of life stages and duration of each stage varies between species. Grasshoppers have three stages of egg, nymph, and adult, while mosquitoes and houseflies have four stages including pupa. Cockroaches and mealworms also go through egg, larva, pupa, and adult stages on their way to adulthood.
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.
[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.
The document describes the life cycle of a butterfly, which starts as an egg that hatches into a caterpillar. The caterpillar eats leaves as it grows and then forms a hard shell called a pupa. Inside the pupa, the caterpillar transforms into an adult butterfly, which emerges from the pupa. The life cycle of a butterfly involves complete metamorphosis, meaning the animal completely changes form during its development, unlike the incomplete metamorphosis of a chicken where it only changes in size as it grows.
The life cycle of a butterfly has four main stages: egg, caterpillar, chrysalis, and butterfly. In the egg stage, the butterfly lays eggs on leaves which hatch into caterpillars. Caterpillars spend their time eating leaves to grow, then form a chrysalis where their body dissolves and restructures into a butterfly. When emerged from the chrysalis, the butterfly's wings dry and strengthen until it can fly.
Butterflies undergo complete metamorphosis, starting as an egg laid on a leaf. The egg hatches into a caterpillar that molts several times as it eats milkweed leaves. When fully grown, the caterpillar forms a chrysalis and undergoes metamorphosis to become an adult butterfly. The new butterfly emerges with shriveled wings that it must pump full before it can fly in search of nectar.
The document describes and compares the life cycles of white-tailed deer and butterflies. For deer, newborn fawns drink milk from their mothers, then grow into yearlings over their first year before becoming adult deer. Butterfly life cycles begin with eggs that hatch into caterpillars, which eat leaves to grow and then form hard cocoons called pupae, within which they transform into adult butterflies.
The document describes the four stages of a butterfly's life cycle: an egg is laid on a leaf and hatches into a caterpillar, the caterpillar eats voraciously and then forms a chrysalis inside a cocoon for two weeks, emerging as a beautiful butterfly. Additional facts provided state that butterflies can see certain colors, have four wings and antennae to help them see, female butterflies are larger than males, and butterflies fly between flowers to eat nectar.
There are two types of metamorphosis - complete and incomplete. Incomplete metamorphosis has three stages: egg, nymph, and adult. Complete metamorphosis has four stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. Frogs undergo complete metamorphosis, starting as an egg then tadpole with gills and tail, developing into a form with lungs and legs, and finally emerging as an adult frog living on land.
This is my first slide show presentation in IT1 subject and it is entitled BUTTERFLY. I hope for those people who wants to able to view i wish you will like it.
The Life Cycle: The Stages of the Metamorphosis ProcessLorenKnights
The document describes the life cycle of butterflies through metamorphosis. It begins with an egg, which hatches into a caterpillar. The caterpillar feeds and grows, then forms a pupa or chrysalis. Inside the pupa, the caterpillar undergoes transformation and emerges as an adult butterfly. The adult's role is to mate and lay new eggs, continuing the cycle. The life cycle involves distinct stages of egg, larva (caterpillar), pupa, and adult.
Butterflies undergo a four stage metamorphosis process from egg to adult. The caterpillar eats constantly and molts its skin several times. It then forms a pupa where it rests without moving as its body transforms. Finally, the adult butterfly emerges from its cocoon with wet wings that soon dry and allow it to fly off and live the final adult stage.
This document summarizes the life cycles of various plants and animals. It discusses the stages of plant life cycles including seed, seedling, sapling and adult. It also outlines the life cycles of birds, reptiles, fish, mammals, insects like praying mantises and butterflies, and frogs. All of these life cycles involve stages of growth from birth to adulthood, with the goal of reproduction to continue the species.
The document summarizes the four life cycle phases of a butterfly:
1. Eggs are laid on leaves and hatch into caterpillars.
2. Caterpillars molt several times as they eat voraciously.
3. When fully grown, the caterpillar attaches itself and forms a chrysalis where it undergoes metamorphosis.
4. An adult butterfly emerges from the chrysalis with wet wings that soon harden and allow it to fly while feeding on nectar and searching for mates.
Learn about life cycle of animal.You can even know the information about it.My name is Krethaloshanan Vinnan Rao.Add me as friend in Facebook Vinnan Rao.I have 2 account.Add both.My ps3 name is Vinnan
The document discusses the life cycles of several insects:
- The grasshopper's life cycle has 3 stages - egg, nymph, and adult. The nymph hatches from the egg and grows wings as an adult over 4-7 weeks.
- The mosquito's life cycle has 4 stages - egg, larva, pupa, and adult. The larva hatches and grows in water before becoming a pupa then adult.
- The cockroach's life cycle mirrors the grasshopper's with 3 stages - egg, nymph, and adult. The nymph hatches and molts its skin 8 times before becoming an adult.
- The housefly's life cycle also has 4
This document describes the life cycles of chickens, butterflies, and mosquitoes. Chickens have a three stage life cycle of egg, chick, and chicken. Butterflies have a four stage life cycle of egg, caterpillar, pupa, and adult. Mosquitoes also have a four stage life cycle of egg, larva, pupa, and adult, and it is important to prevent mosquito breeding. The document requests comments on the next slide.
Butterflies have an amazing life cycle that transforms from caterpillar to butterfly, which is fascinating for children to learn about. Technology allows students to observe butterflies through videos, interactive books, live feeds, and songs without leaving the classroom. These technological resources engage students in different ways and help those who learn best through active participation rather than just reading textbooks.
The document describes the life cycle of a butterfly from egg to adult. It explains that the female butterfly lays eggs on a plant which hatch into wormlike caterpillars. The caterpillars molt and eat voraciously. They then form a chrysalis or cocoon and undergo a process where their body is liquefied and reassembled into an adult butterfly over 2-3 weeks. When ready, the adult butterfly emerges from the chrysalis with wings and is able to fly and reproduce, completing the cycle.
The document summarizes the life cycle of a butterfly in 4 stages:
1) Egg - The butterfly lays eggs on leaves
2) Caterpillar - The egg hatches and the caterpillar eats leaves as it grows
3) Pupa (chrysalis) - The caterpillar undergoes metamorphosis to change into a butterfly
4) Butterfly - The butterfly emerges from the chrysalis and flies around looking for nectar and laying more eggs.
The document discusses the life cycle of butterflies which includes four stages: egg, larva (caterpillar), pupa (cocoon), and butterfly. It notes that as adults, butterflies can live from one week to one year depending on the species. A special species, the monarch butterfly, migrates over 1,500 miles from Canada to Mexico each winter to stay warm. Butterflies eat nectar from flowers and help with pollination. There are over 20,000 different kinds of butterflies worldwide. Most butterflies fly between 5 and 12 miles per hour.
White-tailed deer have different life stages from fawn to yearling to adult. Fawns are born and drink milk from their mother to grow, looking similar to the mother. After a year, the young deer is called a yearling and continues to resemble the mother. Finally, the yearling grows into an adult deer.
The document describes the life cycles of several common insects, including grasshoppers, mosquitoes, cockroaches, houseflies, and mealworms. Each life cycle involves eggs hatching into larvae or nymphs, which grow and molt their exoskeleton before maturing into adults. The number of life stages and duration of each stage varies between species. Grasshoppers have three stages of egg, nymph, and adult, while mosquitoes and houseflies have four stages including pupa. Cockroaches and mealworms also go through egg, larva, pupa, and adult stages on their way to adulthood.
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.
[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.
From Natural Language to Structured Solr Queries using LLMsSease
This talk draws on experimentation to enable AI applications with Solr. One important use case is to use AI for better accessibility and discoverability of the data: while User eXperience techniques, lexical search improvements, and data harmonization can take organizations to a good level of accessibility, a structural (or “cognitive” gap) remains between the data user needs and the data producer constraints.
That is where AI – and most importantly, Natural Language Processing and Large Language Model techniques – could make a difference. This natural language, conversational engine could facilitate access and usage of the data leveraging the semantics of any data source.
The objective of the presentation is to propose a technical approach and a way forward to achieve this goal.
The key concept is to enable users to express their search queries in natural language, which the LLM then enriches, interprets, and translates into structured queries based on the Solr index’s metadata.
This approach leverages the LLM’s ability to understand the nuances of natural language and the structure of documents within Apache Solr.
The LLM acts as an intermediary agent, offering a transparent experience to users automatically and potentially uncovering relevant documents that conventional search methods might overlook. The presentation will include the results of this experimental work, lessons learned, best practices, and the scope of future work that should improve the approach and make it production-ready.
Discover top-tier mobile app development services, offering innovative solutions for iOS and Android. Enhance your business with custom, user-friendly mobile applications.
The Microsoft 365 Migration Tutorial For Beginner.pptxoperationspcvita
This presentation will help you understand the power of Microsoft 365. However, we have mentioned every productivity app included in Office 365. Additionally, we have suggested the migration situation related to Office 365 and how we can help you.
You can also read: https://www.systoolsgroup.com/updates/office-365-tenant-to-tenant-migration-step-by-step-complete-guide/
AppSec PNW: Android and iOS Application Security with MobSFAjin Abraham
Mobile Security Framework - MobSF is a free and open source automated mobile application security testing environment designed to help security engineers, researchers, developers, and penetration testers to identify security vulnerabilities, malicious behaviours and privacy concerns in mobile applications using static and dynamic analysis. It supports all the popular mobile application binaries and source code formats built for Android and iOS devices. In addition to automated security assessment, it also offers an interactive testing environment to build and execute scenario based test/fuzz cases against the application.
This talk covers:
Using MobSF for static analysis of mobile applications.
Interactive dynamic security assessment of Android and iOS applications.
Solving Mobile app CTF challenges.
Reverse engineering and runtime analysis of Mobile malware.
How to shift left and integrate MobSF/mobsfscan SAST and DAST in your build pipeline.
Connector Corner: Seamlessly power UiPath Apps, GenAI with prebuilt connectorsDianaGray10
Join us to learn how UiPath Apps can directly and easily interact with prebuilt connectors via Integration Service--including Salesforce, ServiceNow, Open GenAI, and more.
The best part is you can achieve this without building a custom workflow! Say goodbye to the hassle of using separate automations to call APIs. By seamlessly integrating within App Studio, you can now easily streamline your workflow, while gaining direct access to our Connector Catalog of popular applications.
We’ll discuss and demo the benefits of UiPath Apps and connectors including:
Creating a compelling user experience for any software, without the limitations of APIs.
Accelerating the app creation process, saving time and effort
Enjoying high-performance CRUD (create, read, update, delete) operations, for
seamless data management.
Speakers:
Russell Alfeche, Technology Leader, RPA at qBotic and UiPath MVP
Charlie Greenberg, host
QA or the Highway - Component Testing: Bridging the gap between frontend appl...zjhamm304
These are the slides for the presentation, "Component Testing: Bridging the gap between frontend applications" that was presented at QA or the Highway 2024 in Columbus, OH by Zachary Hamm.
LF Energy Webinar: Carbon Data Specifications: Mechanisms to Improve Data Acc...DanBrown980551
This LF Energy webinar took place June 20, 2024. It featured:
-Alex Thornton, LF Energy
-Hallie Cramer, Google
-Daniel Roesler, UtilityAPI
-Henry Richardson, WattTime
In response to the urgency and scale required to effectively address climate change, open source solutions offer significant potential for driving innovation and progress. Currently, there is a growing demand for standardization and interoperability in energy data and modeling. Open source standards and specifications within the energy sector can also alleviate challenges associated with data fragmentation, transparency, and accessibility. At the same time, it is crucial to consider privacy and security concerns throughout the development of open source platforms.
This webinar will delve into the motivations behind establishing LF Energy’s Carbon Data Specification Consortium. It will provide an overview of the draft specifications and the ongoing progress made by the respective working groups.
Three primary specifications will be discussed:
-Discovery and client registration, emphasizing transparent processes and secure and private access
-Customer data, centering around customer tariffs, bills, energy usage, and full consumption disclosure
-Power systems data, focusing on grid data, inclusive of transmission and distribution networks, generation, intergrid power flows, and market settlement data
Northern Engraving | Nameplate Manufacturing Process - 2024Northern Engraving
Manufacturing custom quality metal nameplates and badges involves several standard operations. Processes include sheet prep, lithography, screening, coating, punch press and inspection. All decoration is completed in the flat sheet with adhesive and tooling operations following. The possibilities for creating unique durable nameplates are endless. How will you create your brand identity? We can help!
"Scaling RAG Applications to serve millions of users", Kevin GoedeckeFwdays
How we managed to grow and scale a RAG application from zero to thousands of users in 7 months. Lessons from technical challenges around managing high load for LLMs, RAGs and Vector databases.
Northern Engraving | Modern Metal Trim, Nameplates and Appliance PanelsNorthern Engraving
What began over 115 years ago as a supplier of precision gauges to the automotive industry has evolved into being an industry leader in the manufacture of product branding, automotive cockpit trim and decorative appliance trim. Value-added services include in-house Design, Engineering, Program Management, Test Lab and Tool Shops.
"$10 thousand per minute of downtime: architecture, queues, streaming and fin...Fwdays
Direct losses from downtime in 1 minute = $5-$10 thousand dollars. Reputation is priceless.
As part of the talk, we will consider the architectural strategies necessary for the development of highly loaded fintech solutions. We will focus on using queues and streaming to efficiently work and manage large amounts of data in real-time and to minimize latency.
We will focus special attention on the architectural patterns used in the design of the fintech system, microservices and event-driven architecture, which ensure scalability, fault tolerance, and consistency of the entire system.
What is an RPA CoE? Session 1 – CoE VisionDianaGray10
In the first session, we will review the organization's vision and how this has an impact on the COE Structure.
Topics covered:
• The role of a steering committee
• How do the organization’s priorities determine CoE Structure?
Speaker:
Chris Bolin, Senior Intelligent Automation Architect Anika Systems
This talk will cover ScyllaDB Architecture from the cluster-level view and zoom in on data distribution and internal node architecture. In the process, we will learn the secret sauce used to get ScyllaDB's high availability and superior performance. We will also touch on the upcoming changes to ScyllaDB architecture, moving to strongly consistent metadata and tablets.