My keynote at Velocity New York (#VelocityConf) on September 17, 2014. The failure of healthcare.gov was a textbook DevOps (or rather, lack of DevOps) case study. But it’s part of a wider pattern that reminds us that people should be at the heart of everything we build. In fact, getting the “people” part right is the key both to DevOps and great user experience design. It runs from the Internet of Things right through building government services that really work for citizens.
Oakland Public Ethics Commission: Transparency, Open Data, and Gov as PlatformTim O'Reilly
I spoke at the Oakland Public Ethics commission on June 25, 2013. I was trying to set some context about how the ideas of transparency, open data, and government platform should shape their thinking. This is a PDF with notes on my talking points below each slide.
An Operating System for the Real WorldTim O'Reilly
My keynote at the Concur #PerfectTrip Devcon on October 2, 2013. I talk about the "internet operating system," and how sensors are turning it into a real world operating system, with "context aware programming." I use this metaphor to give lessons from some projects and startups putting these principles to work, including Tripit, the Google Autonomous Vehicle, Square, Uber, and Google Now.
Open Data: From the Information Age to the Action Age (Keynote File)Tim O'Reilly
This is the presentation I made at the UK Department for International Aid/Omidyar Network OpenUp! conference in London on November 13, 2012. I talk about open government not as a platform for transparency or citizen engagement, but for a developer ecosystem building useful services. A video of this talk is available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=OIlxdpfu71o
Lessons from a Career Marketing Big IdeasTim O'Reilly
My talk at #BrooklynBeta on October 11, 2013. I talked about what I've learned from work on the commercialization of the web, open source, web 2.0, the maker movement, and open government. Key principles for online activists.
Reinventing Healthcare to Serve People, Not InstitutionsTim O'Reilly
My talk at South by Southwest on March 16, 2015. I use examples from consumer technology (the Apple Store, Uber/Lyft, and Google Now) to show where "the bar" is now for user experience, and what that should teach us about how to redesign healthcare. I also talk about the work of Code for America to debug the UX for CalFresh and MediCal.
Technology and Trust: The Challenge of 21st Century GovernmentTim O'Reilly
My talk at the 2013 Social Innovation Summit. Democracies get their strength from the people’s trust. When the interactions that people have with government are so divorced from how they live their lives, or are hard and unpleasant, what does that do to the trust that underlies our democracies? At Code for America, we try to restore trust in government by building interfaces to essential government services that are simple, beautiful, and easy to use.
We take four approaches: 1) we work directly with government officials (at the local level) to create the capacity inside government to build innovative solutions to hard problems; 2) we build communities of technologists and citizens who want to lend their skills to help build their governments; 3) we build tools that make citizen interactions with government easier, simpler, and more elegant, so that the experience of government is positive and breeds trust. 4) We incubate and accelerate civic startups to create new
economic models for those tools.
Don’t stop believing that government can work, and can be a force for good
Lessons from a career marketing big ideasTim O'Reilly
Slides from a talk I gave at the TED Fellows Retreat in Whistler, BC on August 18, 2013. It tells the history of my activism about the web, open source software, and open government, with an emphasis on lessons learned.
Oakland Public Ethics Commission: Transparency, Open Data, and Gov as PlatformTim O'Reilly
I spoke at the Oakland Public Ethics commission on June 25, 2013. I was trying to set some context about how the ideas of transparency, open data, and government platform should shape their thinking. This is a PDF with notes on my talking points below each slide.
An Operating System for the Real WorldTim O'Reilly
My keynote at the Concur #PerfectTrip Devcon on October 2, 2013. I talk about the "internet operating system," and how sensors are turning it into a real world operating system, with "context aware programming." I use this metaphor to give lessons from some projects and startups putting these principles to work, including Tripit, the Google Autonomous Vehicle, Square, Uber, and Google Now.
Open Data: From the Information Age to the Action Age (Keynote File)Tim O'Reilly
This is the presentation I made at the UK Department for International Aid/Omidyar Network OpenUp! conference in London on November 13, 2012. I talk about open government not as a platform for transparency or citizen engagement, but for a developer ecosystem building useful services. A video of this talk is available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=OIlxdpfu71o
Lessons from a Career Marketing Big IdeasTim O'Reilly
My talk at #BrooklynBeta on October 11, 2013. I talked about what I've learned from work on the commercialization of the web, open source, web 2.0, the maker movement, and open government. Key principles for online activists.
Reinventing Healthcare to Serve People, Not InstitutionsTim O'Reilly
My talk at South by Southwest on March 16, 2015. I use examples from consumer technology (the Apple Store, Uber/Lyft, and Google Now) to show where "the bar" is now for user experience, and what that should teach us about how to redesign healthcare. I also talk about the work of Code for America to debug the UX for CalFresh and MediCal.
Technology and Trust: The Challenge of 21st Century GovernmentTim O'Reilly
My talk at the 2013 Social Innovation Summit. Democracies get their strength from the people’s trust. When the interactions that people have with government are so divorced from how they live their lives, or are hard and unpleasant, what does that do to the trust that underlies our democracies? At Code for America, we try to restore trust in government by building interfaces to essential government services that are simple, beautiful, and easy to use.
We take four approaches: 1) we work directly with government officials (at the local level) to create the capacity inside government to build innovative solutions to hard problems; 2) we build communities of technologists and citizens who want to lend their skills to help build their governments; 3) we build tools that make citizen interactions with government easier, simpler, and more elegant, so that the experience of government is positive and breeds trust. 4) We incubate and accelerate civic startups to create new
economic models for those tools.
Don’t stop believing that government can work, and can be a force for good
Lessons from a career marketing big ideasTim O'Reilly
Slides from a talk I gave at the TED Fellows Retreat in Whistler, BC on August 18, 2013. It tells the history of my activism about the web, open source software, and open government, with an emphasis on lessons learned.
Software Above the Level of a Single DeviceTim O'Reilly
My talk at the O'Reilly Solid Conference on May 22, 2014. I mostly talk about UI implications of the Internet of Things, but also about the need for interoperability.
World Government Summit on Open SourceTim O'Reilly
PDF of slides and notes from my keynote at Acquia's World Government Summit on Open Source in Washington DC October 11, 2012. I talk about how open source enabled the internet as a platform, and how it can enable government as a platform. I talk about examples from the internet and from Code for America's work with cities. I crib shamelessly from some of Jen Pahlka's talks about Code for America, and some of the lessons that can be taken from her work.
Open Data: From the Information Age to the Action Age (PDF with notes)Tim O'Reilly
This is the presentation I made at the UK Department for International Aid/Omidyar Network OpenUp! conference in London on November 13, 2012. I talk about open government not as a platform for transparency or citizen engagement, but for a developer ecosystem building useful services. A video of this talk is available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=OIlxdpfu71o
Government as a Platform: What We've Learned Since 2008 (ppt)Tim O'Reilly
My talk at the UK Government Digital Service Sprint 15 event in London, February 2, 2015. I talk about my idea of government as a platform, and what I've learned since I first articulated the idea, with specific reference to what the GDS has taught me about the idea.
Government For The People, By The People, In the 21st CenturyTim O'Reilly
My joint keynote with Jennifer Pahlka of Code for America at the Accela Engage conference in San Diego on August 5, 2014. We talk about current advances in technology, and how they call for anyone developing services to put their users at the center. In particular, we talk about how these lessons apply to government. Making government work by the people and for the people in a 21st century way is central to restoring faith in government.
My keynote at the Twilio developer conference on September 19, 2013 in San Francisco. Reflections on the internet as a platform, why applications like Square, Uber, and the Google autonomous vehicle tell us what that platform makes possible, and why it's imperative for entrepreneurs to create more value than they capture. I also talk about Code for America, government as platform, and Twilio for Good.
Government as a Platform: What We've Learned Since 2008 (pdf with notes)Tim O'Reilly
My talk at the UK Government Digital Service Sprint 15 event in London, February 2, 2015. I talk about my idea of government as a platform, and what I've learned since I first articulated the idea, with specific reference to what the GDS has taught me about the idea.
This is the pdf (with notes) of my slide deck from the Smart Disclosure Summit in Washington D.C. on March 30, 2012. Video will eventually be available.
This is the original keynote file for my talk at the Smart Disclosure Summit in Washington DC on March 30, 2012. I will upload a PDF with notes separately.
Some Context for Thinking About
Technology and Sustainability. A version of my "Towards a Global Brain" talk with a focus on sustainability, given at the Verge conference on the convergence of buildings, transportation, energy, and information, on March 15, 2012.
Technological Revolutions and Cultural Revolutions: OSCON 2014Tim O'Reilly
Open source, DevOps, cloud computing, and the internet of things don't just require new technology, they require new thinking about how society and business is to be organized. It's critical, therefore, to infuse the work that developers do with human values, and to build a world that we are proud of.
50 most memorable and inspirational quotes from SXSW 2015. Austin, TX. Enjoy!
This document is released under creative commons licence.
www.mediafeed.pl
Capturing Users / Using social, engagement and mobile to drive acquisition an...Volker Hirsch
The slides to my talk at StartUp Next Sofia (which I also gave at the LauncHub Long Weekend) - delivered on 29 and 30 November 2013 in Sofia, Bulgaria.
Towards a New Distributional EconomicsTim O'Reilly
A talk I gave on December 1, 2017 for a workshop on AI and the future of the economy organized by the OECD and the Berkeley Roundtable on the International Economy. In it, I explore implications of AI and internet-scale platforms for the design of markets, with the goal of starting a conversation about what we might call "distributional economics."
WTF - Why the Future Is Up to Us - pptx versionTim O'Reilly
This is the talk I gave January 12, 2017 at the G20/OECD Conference on the Digital Future in Berlin. I talk about fitness landscapes as applied to technology and business, the role of unchecked financialization in the state of our politics and economy, and why technology really wants to create jobs, not destroy them. (There is a separate PDF version, but some readers said the notes were too fuzzy to read.)
Today’s citizens have high expectations of authorities and public safety agencies, and where these expectations are not being met they are increasingly using the internet and smartphones for their own personal safety. A new Ericsson ConsumerLab report has investigated smartphone users’ views on public safety in five cities.
https://www.ericsson.com/consumerlab
Software Above the Level of a Single DeviceTim O'Reilly
My talk at the O'Reilly Solid Conference on May 22, 2014. I mostly talk about UI implications of the Internet of Things, but also about the need for interoperability.
World Government Summit on Open SourceTim O'Reilly
PDF of slides and notes from my keynote at Acquia's World Government Summit on Open Source in Washington DC October 11, 2012. I talk about how open source enabled the internet as a platform, and how it can enable government as a platform. I talk about examples from the internet and from Code for America's work with cities. I crib shamelessly from some of Jen Pahlka's talks about Code for America, and some of the lessons that can be taken from her work.
Open Data: From the Information Age to the Action Age (PDF with notes)Tim O'Reilly
This is the presentation I made at the UK Department for International Aid/Omidyar Network OpenUp! conference in London on November 13, 2012. I talk about open government not as a platform for transparency or citizen engagement, but for a developer ecosystem building useful services. A video of this talk is available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=OIlxdpfu71o
Government as a Platform: What We've Learned Since 2008 (ppt)Tim O'Reilly
My talk at the UK Government Digital Service Sprint 15 event in London, February 2, 2015. I talk about my idea of government as a platform, and what I've learned since I first articulated the idea, with specific reference to what the GDS has taught me about the idea.
Government For The People, By The People, In the 21st CenturyTim O'Reilly
My joint keynote with Jennifer Pahlka of Code for America at the Accela Engage conference in San Diego on August 5, 2014. We talk about current advances in technology, and how they call for anyone developing services to put their users at the center. In particular, we talk about how these lessons apply to government. Making government work by the people and for the people in a 21st century way is central to restoring faith in government.
My keynote at the Twilio developer conference on September 19, 2013 in San Francisco. Reflections on the internet as a platform, why applications like Square, Uber, and the Google autonomous vehicle tell us what that platform makes possible, and why it's imperative for entrepreneurs to create more value than they capture. I also talk about Code for America, government as platform, and Twilio for Good.
Government as a Platform: What We've Learned Since 2008 (pdf with notes)Tim O'Reilly
My talk at the UK Government Digital Service Sprint 15 event in London, February 2, 2015. I talk about my idea of government as a platform, and what I've learned since I first articulated the idea, with specific reference to what the GDS has taught me about the idea.
This is the pdf (with notes) of my slide deck from the Smart Disclosure Summit in Washington D.C. on March 30, 2012. Video will eventually be available.
This is the original keynote file for my talk at the Smart Disclosure Summit in Washington DC on March 30, 2012. I will upload a PDF with notes separately.
Some Context for Thinking About
Technology and Sustainability. A version of my "Towards a Global Brain" talk with a focus on sustainability, given at the Verge conference on the convergence of buildings, transportation, energy, and information, on March 15, 2012.
Technological Revolutions and Cultural Revolutions: OSCON 2014Tim O'Reilly
Open source, DevOps, cloud computing, and the internet of things don't just require new technology, they require new thinking about how society and business is to be organized. It's critical, therefore, to infuse the work that developers do with human values, and to build a world that we are proud of.
50 most memorable and inspirational quotes from SXSW 2015. Austin, TX. Enjoy!
This document is released under creative commons licence.
www.mediafeed.pl
Capturing Users / Using social, engagement and mobile to drive acquisition an...Volker Hirsch
The slides to my talk at StartUp Next Sofia (which I also gave at the LauncHub Long Weekend) - delivered on 29 and 30 November 2013 in Sofia, Bulgaria.
Towards a New Distributional EconomicsTim O'Reilly
A talk I gave on December 1, 2017 for a workshop on AI and the future of the economy organized by the OECD and the Berkeley Roundtable on the International Economy. In it, I explore implications of AI and internet-scale platforms for the design of markets, with the goal of starting a conversation about what we might call "distributional economics."
WTF - Why the Future Is Up to Us - pptx versionTim O'Reilly
This is the talk I gave January 12, 2017 at the G20/OECD Conference on the Digital Future in Berlin. I talk about fitness landscapes as applied to technology and business, the role of unchecked financialization in the state of our politics and economy, and why technology really wants to create jobs, not destroy them. (There is a separate PDF version, but some readers said the notes were too fuzzy to read.)
Today’s citizens have high expectations of authorities and public safety agencies, and where these expectations are not being met they are increasingly using the internet and smartphones for their own personal safety. A new Ericsson ConsumerLab report has investigated smartphone users’ views on public safety in five cities.
https://www.ericsson.com/consumerlab
My talk to the joint OECD/G20 German Presidency conference on digitalization in Berlin on January 12, 2017. Fitness landscapes as applied to technology, business, and the economy. Note that the fitness landscape slides will not be animated in this PDF, which I shared this way so that you could see my narrative in the speaker notes. While it has some slides in common with my White House Frontiers conference talk, it includes a bunch of other material.
Ericsson Technology Review: Evolving LTE to fit the 5G future Ericsson
Operators have no reason to be concerned about the future of LTE in a 5G world – its upcoming releases (Rel-14 and Rel-15) are intended to deliver on the most important 5G requirements. They will include enhancements to user data rates and system capacity with FD-MIMO, improved support for unlicensed operations, and latency reduction in both control and user planes. LTE will also be modified to address new use cases such as massive machine type communication, critical communications and intelligent transport systems. Both LTE Rel-14 (scheduled for completion in March 2017) and the strong ambitions for LTE Rel-15 indicate that a smooth transition from LTE to 5G through 5G plug-ins is the best course of action.
The official Ogilvy Key Digital Trends for 2017. A yearly trend report outlining both where we believe the digital and social landscape is headed and what brands and agency partners should do about it. By Marshall Manson and James Whatley
We’re all camping at UX Camp West, so I thought I’d use the metaphor of a tent to share with you my view on the field of User Experience. I will describe the 7 poles of the tent's structure (research, design, evaluation, implementation, business, strategy, and management) and show you some random objects that I found in its corners. It is my goal that afterwards, we can all appreciate the beauty of the big tent, and realise how we contribute to a happy stay.
Feb 2013 Webinar: How to get the most from your research budget. Find out how to determine what you really need to know. Learn how to define your approach, assemble the best research team, and then interpret the data to help you refine your lead generation, branding, and product development programs.
A recent study from the Deloitte University Leadership Center for Inclusion and law professor Kenji Yoshino reveals widespread instances of "covering," the process by which individuals downplay their differences relative to mainstream perceptions, in ways costly to productivity and sense of self at work. According to Uncovering Talent: A New Model for Inclusion, three out of four say they cover their identity; and, surprisingly, half of straight white male respondents report hiding their authentic selves on the job.
Read the full report: http://www2.deloitte.com/us/en/pages/about-deloitte/articles/deloitte-university-leadership-center-for-inclusion.html
Do More. Do things that were previously impossible!Tim O'Reilly
My keynote at SxSW Interactive on March 9, 2018. I tackle the job of the entrepreneur to redraw the map, and not to accept the idea that technology will put people out of work rather than creating new kinds of prosperity. I try to provide a call to action to throw off the shackles of the old world and to build a new one. So many companies play defense. Cut costs, watch the competition, follow best practices. Great entrepreneurs like Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk play offense. They see the world with fresh eyes, taking off the blinders that keep companies using technology to make slight improvements to existing products and practices, rather than imagining the world as it could be, given the new capabilities that technology has given us.
Slides from my DevOpsExpo London talk "From oops to NoOps".
They tell you in these conferences that DevOps is not about tools, but about culture. And they are partially right. I am going to tell you that it’s not only about culture or tools but also abstractions.
It is a lot about how you see software and its value. About our mental model of what software is: how it runs, evolves, and interacts with the other facets of an enterprise.
We used to view software as code. As a state of code. Now we think about software as change, as a flow. A dynamic system where people, machines, and processes interact continuously.
At Platform.sh we spend a bunch of time asking ourselves not “How do you build?” - or even “How do you build consistently?” - but rather “What does it mean to consistently build in a world where change is good?” A world that lets you push security fixes into production as soon as they’re available because you don’t want to be an Equifax but you do want stability.
In this presentation, I will go over what we think software is and why having the right ideas about software will help you get your culture right and your tooling aligned, as well as gain in productivity, and general happiness and well-being.
It's Not About Technology (pdf with Notes)Tim O'Reilly
My talk at Velocity 2015 Optimized Business Day. I talk about the imperative to use technology to empower workers, not replace them. This isn't just for highly paid knowledge workers. Finding ways to put everyone to work productively is one of the great challenges of the 21st century. Bonus: a great segment from Steven Vincent Benet's poem John Brown's Body.
Why Everyone Needs DevOps Now: My Fourteen Year Journey Studying High Perform...Akamai Technologies
How do great IT organizations simultaneously deliver stellar service levels and fast flow of new features into production? It requires creating a “super-tribe”, where development, test, IT operations and information security genuinely work together to solve business objectives as opposed to throwing each under the bus. In this talk, Gene Kim will describe what successful development organization transformations look like, and how they were achieved from a Dev and Ops perspective. Drawing upon a 14 year study of high performing IT organizations, Gene will share the best known methods, recipes and case studies of how to implement successful DevOps-style transformations. See Gene Kim's Edge Presentation: http://www.akamai.com/html/custconf/edgetv-developers.html#gene-kim
The Akamai Edge Conference is a gathering of the industry revolutionaries who are committed to creating leading edge experiences, realizing the full potential of what is possible in a Faster Forward World. From customer innovation stories, industry panels, technical labs, partner and government forums to Web security and developers' tracks, there’s something for everyone at Edge 2013.
Learn more at http://www.akamai.com/edge
World Government Summit on Open Source (keynote file)Tim O'Reilly
This is the keynote file for my talk at the Acquia World Government Summit on Open Source. I talked about the role of open source in the internet, and the role it can play in government.
A recap of interesting points and quotes from the May 2024 WSO2CON opensource application development conference. Focuses primarily on keynotes and panel sessions.
The Second Machine Age - an industrial revolution powered by digital technolo...Ben Gilchriest
There have been two big turning points in human history. The first was the industrial revolution, where machines replaced muscle power. The Second Machine Age is the time when machines are now able to take over a lot of cognitive tasks that humans can do. In this Capgemini interview with Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee, authors of the recent book "The Second Machine Age" (www.secondmachineage.com), we get a summary view of what the 2nd Machine Age is, what it means for established companies, and how they should react.
I throughly recommend reading this book. It's an excellent summary of the impact and importance of digital and why it's important for companies to do more.
My talk for TechStars at Techweek Kansas City in October 2018. While this is a talk based on my book WTF?, it is fairly different from many of the others that I've posted here, in that it focuses specifically on parts of the book that contain advice for entrepreneurs, rather than on the broader questions of technology and the economy. As always, look at the speaker notes for
From DevOps culture to retrospectives, see what you can expect to learn — and who you'll be learning from — at PuppetConf 2016 in San Diego. Learn more and register at https://puppet.com/puppetconf/.
The following document was elaborated by InPeople Consulting & UpsideRisks as a consecuence of the participation at the Conference Exponential Finance and their own research.
Design for the Network - IA Summit, March 2014Matthew Milan
A talk about the evolving relationship between networks, software and systems and the implications for contemporary and emerging design practice.
Include
Mastering the demons of our own designTim O'Reilly
My talk about lessons for government from high tech algorithmic systems, given as part of the Harvard Science and Democracy lecture series on April 21, 2021. Download ppt for speaker's notes.
What's Wrong with the Silicon Valley Growth Model (Extended UCL Lecture)Tim O'Reilly
A three part lecture for the Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose at University College London. I talk about how the Silicon Valley growth model is leading from value creation to rent extraction, then about how public policy shapes our markets and what public policy students can learn from technology platforms (both what they do right and how they go wrong), and finally, I touch on some of the great mission-driven goals that could replace "increasing corporate profits" as the guiding objective of our economy.
Learning in the Age of Knowledge on DemandTim O'Reilly
The London Black Cab driver's exam, "The Knowledge of the Streets and Monuments of London," is one of the most difficult exams in the world, requiring drivers to become a human GPS. With today's tools, the smartphone and the right app turns anyone into the equivalent of a human GPS. I've been asking myself how this concept applies to the field of online learning, particularly in my own field of programming and related IT skills. How should we rethink learning in the age of knowledge on demand? My keynote at the EdCrunch conference in Moscow on October 1, 2019. As always, download the PPT to read the detailed script in the speaker notes below each slide.
What's Wrong With Silicon Valley's Growth ModelTim O'Reilly
A talk I gave on the oreilly.com live training platform on January 22, 2020, focusing on the way that many Silicon Valley startups are designed to be financial instruments rather than real companies. They are gaming the financial system, much like the CDOs that fueled the 2009 financial crash. I talk about the rise of profitless IPOs, and contrast that with the huge profits of the last wave of Silicon Valley giants. In many ways, it is an extended meditation on Benjamin Graham's famous statement, "In the short term, the market is a voting machine, but in the long term it is a weighing machine."
Google handles over 3 billion searches a day, Amazon offers a storefront with 600 million unique items, Facebook users post 6 billion pieces of content sailing, all with the aid of complex algorithmic systems that respond to a constant influx of new data, adversarial activity by those trying to game the system, and changing preferences of users. These systems represent breakthroughs in the governance of complex, interacting systems, with algorithms that must be constantly updated to respond to rapidly changing conditions. The economy as a whole is also full of complex, interacting systems, but we still try to manage those systems with 20th century tools and processes. This talk explores what we can learn from technology platforms about new approaches that the Fed might take to improve its historical mission using the tools of agile development, big data, and artificial intelligence. My talk at the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank FedAgile conference on November 7, 2018. Download the PPT file to read the narrative in the speaker notes. (I wish slideshare did a better job of displaying these, but they don't.)
My plenary talk to the California Workforce Association Conference in Monterey, CA, on September 5, 2018. I talked about the role of technology to augment people rather than replace them from my book WTF? What's the Future and Why It's Up to Us, and my ideas about AI and distributional economics, in the context of today's education and workforce development systems. I also summarize some of the work Code for America has been doing on the current state of the California Workforce Development ecosystem.
My keynote at OSCON 2018 in Portland. What I love about open source software, and what that teaches us about how we can have a better future by the better design of online marketplaces and the algorithms that manage them - and our entire economy. The narrative is in the speaker notes.
My keynote at the 2018 New Profit Gathering of Leaders conference in Boston on May 17, 2018. I talk about the lessons from technology platforms, how they teach us what is wrong with our economy, and the possibilities of AI for creating better, fairer, more effective decisions about "who gets what and why" in the economy.
Slides from my talk at the Price Waterhouse Coopers Deals Exchange conference on April 26, 2018. I talk about algorithmically manage, internet-scale networks and how they are changing the very nature of the economy, the shape of companies, and the competencies that are required for 21st century success. There are many similar themes to other talks, but this is tailored to a business audience, and very specifically to one concerned with how to do M&A in an age of dominant platforms.
My keynote at the Open Exchange Summit in Nashville on April 18, 2018. I talk about the implications for many different kinds of companies of the fact that increasingly large segments of our economy are being dominated by algorithmically managed network marketplaces.
Yet another version of my book talk, this time at Harvard Business School, on March 28, 2018. This one had fewer slides with less connecting narrative so that I could spend more time interacting with the audience. I think it went pretty well. As usual, the speaker notes contain the narrative that goes with the slides, which are mostly images.
We Get What We Ask For: Towards a New Distributional EconomicsTim O'Reilly
My keynote at the Venturebeat Blueprint conference in Reno, NV on March 6, 2018. The bad maps that are holding us back from building a better world. Technology need not eliminate jobs. It could be helping us tackle the world's great problems, and helping design marketplaces that ensure a more equitable distribution of the proceeds from doing so. The narrative that goes with the deck is in the speaker notes. There is also a summary and link to the video at https://venturebeat.com/2018/03/06/tim-oreilly-to-tech-companies-use-a-i-to-do-more-than-cut-costs/
We forget that when technology destroy, it helps us to create new ones, as long as we remember that the point isn't just cost-reduction, but doing things that were previously impossible! That means both solving hard problems, and pairing technology with people in ways that play to the strengths of each. My keynote at Strata+Hadoop World London, May 2017.
This is my March 8, 2001 pitch to Jeff Bezos on why Amazon ought to offer web services. I'm uploading it now because I'm referencing it in my forthcoming book, WTF: What's the Future and Why It's Up To Us, due from Harper Business in October 2017, and want people to be able to take a look at it. This is of historical interest only.
A somewhat longer version of my Frontiers talk about technology and the future of the economy, with additional material pitched to an audience of Internet operators at Apricot 2017, in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam on February 27, 2017
My talk at the White House Frontiers Conference at CMU on October 13, 2016. I was one of the warmup acts for the President, talking about why we should embrace an AI future. Full text can be seen here
The AIs Are Not Taking Our Jobs...They Are Changing ThemTim O'Reilly
My talk at the Web Summit in Dublin on November 6, 2014. Reflections on the notion that AI will take away jobs, and our need to recognize and redefine the human role in the applications we build. Covers many of the same ideas as my "Internet of Things and Humans" talk, but from a slightly different angle.
Code reviews are vital for ensuring good code quality. They serve as one of our last lines of defense against bugs and subpar code reaching production.
Yet, they often turn into annoying tasks riddled with frustration, hostility, unclear feedback and lack of standards. How can we improve this crucial process?
In this session we will cover:
- The Art of Effective Code Reviews
- Streamlining the Review Process
- Elevating Reviews with Automated Tools
By the end of this presentation, you'll have the knowledge on how to organize and improve your code review proces
In software engineering, the right architecture is essential for robust, scalable platforms. Wix has undergone a pivotal shift from event sourcing to a CRUD-based model for its microservices. This talk will chart the course of this pivotal journey.
Event sourcing, which records state changes as immutable events, provided robust auditing and "time travel" debugging for Wix Stores' microservices. Despite its benefits, the complexity it introduced in state management slowed development. Wix responded by adopting a simpler, unified CRUD model. This talk will explore the challenges of event sourcing and the advantages of Wix's new "CRUD on steroids" approach, which streamlines API integration and domain event management while preserving data integrity and system resilience.
Participants will gain valuable insights into Wix's strategies for ensuring atomicity in database updates and event production, as well as caching, materialization, and performance optimization techniques within a distributed system.
Join us to discover how Wix has mastered the art of balancing simplicity and extensibility, and learn how the re-adoption of the modest CRUD has turbocharged their development velocity, resilience, and scalability in a high-growth environment.
Large Language Models and the End of ProgrammingMatt Welsh
Talk by Matt Welsh at Craft Conference 2024 on the impact that Large Language Models will have on the future of software development. In this talk, I discuss the ways in which LLMs will impact the software industry, from replacing human software developers with AI, to replacing conventional software with models that perform reasoning, computation, and problem-solving.
Custom Healthcare Software for Managing Chronic Conditions and Remote Patient...Mind IT Systems
Healthcare providers often struggle with the complexities of chronic conditions and remote patient monitoring, as each patient requires personalized care and ongoing monitoring. Off-the-shelf solutions may not meet these diverse needs, leading to inefficiencies and gaps in care. It’s here, custom healthcare software offers a tailored solution, ensuring improved care and effectiveness.
Gamify Your Mind; The Secret Sauce to Delivering Success, Continuously Improv...Shahin Sheidaei
Games are powerful teaching tools, fostering hands-on engagement and fun. But they require careful consideration to succeed. Join me to explore factors in running and selecting games, ensuring they serve as effective teaching tools. Learn to maintain focus on learning objectives while playing, and how to measure the ROI of gaming in education. Discover strategies for pitching gaming to leadership. This session offers insights, tips, and examples for coaches, team leads, and enterprise leaders seeking to teach from simple to complex concepts.
Top Features to Include in Your Winzo Clone App for Business Growth (4).pptxrickgrimesss22
Discover the essential features to incorporate in your Winzo clone app to boost business growth, enhance user engagement, and drive revenue. Learn how to create a compelling gaming experience that stands out in the competitive market.
Exploring Innovations in Data Repository Solutions - Insights from the U.S. G...Globus
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has made substantial investments in meeting evolving scientific, technical, and policy driven demands on storing, managing, and delivering data. As these demands continue to grow in complexity and scale, the USGS must continue to explore innovative solutions to improve its management, curation, sharing, delivering, and preservation approaches for large-scale research data. Supporting these needs, the USGS has partnered with the University of Chicago-Globus to research and develop advanced repository components and workflows leveraging its current investment in Globus. The primary outcome of this partnership includes the development of a prototype enterprise repository, driven by USGS Data Release requirements, through exploration and implementation of the entire suite of the Globus platform offerings, including Globus Flow, Globus Auth, Globus Transfer, and Globus Search. This presentation will provide insights into this research partnership, introduce the unique requirements and challenges being addressed and provide relevant project progress.
Check out the webinar slides to learn more about how XfilesPro transforms Salesforce document management by leveraging its world-class applications. For more details, please connect with sales@xfilespro.com
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Understanding Globus Data Transfers with NetSageGlobus
NetSage is an open privacy-aware network measurement, analysis, and visualization service designed to help end-users visualize and reason about large data transfers. NetSage traditionally has used a combination of passive measurements, including SNMP and flow data, as well as active measurements, mainly perfSONAR, to provide longitudinal network performance data visualization. It has been deployed by dozens of networks world wide, and is supported domestically by the Engagement and Performance Operations Center (EPOC), NSF #2328479. We have recently expanded the NetSage data sources to include logs for Globus data transfers, following the same privacy-preserving approach as for Flow data. Using the logs for the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) as an example, this talk will walk through several different example use cases that NetSage can answer, including: Who is using Globus to share data with my institution, and what kind of performance are they able to achieve? How many transfers has Globus supported for us? Which sites are we sharing the most data with, and how is that changing over time? How is my site using Globus to move data internally, and what kind of performance do we see for those transfers? What percentage of data transfers at my institution used Globus, and how did the overall data transfer performance compare to the Globus users?
Software Engineering, Software Consulting, Tech Lead.
Spring Boot, Spring Cloud, Spring Core, Spring JDBC, Spring Security,
Spring Transaction, Spring MVC,
Log4j, REST/SOAP WEB-SERVICES.
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How Recreation Management Software Can Streamline Your Operations.pptxwottaspaceseo
Recreation management software streamlines operations by automating key tasks such as scheduling, registration, and payment processing, reducing manual workload and errors. It provides centralized management of facilities, classes, and events, ensuring efficient resource allocation and facility usage. The software offers user-friendly online portals for easy access to bookings and program information, enhancing customer experience. Real-time reporting and data analytics deliver insights into attendance and preferences, aiding in strategic decision-making. Additionally, effective communication tools keep participants and staff informed with timely updates. Overall, recreation management software enhances efficiency, improves service delivery, and boosts customer satisfaction.
AI Pilot Review: The World’s First Virtual Assistant Marketing SuiteGoogle
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See My Other Reviews Article:
(1) TubeTrivia AI Review: https://sumonreview.com/tubetrivia-ai-review
(2) SocioWave Review: https://sumonreview.com/sociowave-review
(3) AI Partner & Profit Review: https://sumonreview.com/ai-partner-profit-review
(4) AI Ebook Suite Review: https://sumonreview.com/ai-ebook-suite-review
SOCRadar Research Team: Latest Activities of IntelBrokerSOCRadar
The European Union Agency for Law Enforcement Cooperation (Europol) has suffered an alleged data breach after a notorious threat actor claimed to have exfiltrated data from its systems. Infamous data leaker IntelBroker posted on the even more infamous BreachForums hacking forum, saying that Europol suffered a data breach this month.
The alleged breach affected Europol agencies CCSE, EC3, Europol Platform for Experts, Law Enforcement Forum, and SIRIUS. Infiltration of these entities can disrupt ongoing investigations and compromise sensitive intelligence shared among international law enforcement agencies.
However, this is neither the first nor the last activity of IntekBroker. We have compiled for you what happened in the last few days. To track such hacker activities on dark web sources like hacker forums, private Telegram channels, and other hidden platforms where cyber threats often originate, you can check SOCRadar’s Dark Web News.
Stay Informed on Threat Actors’ Activity on the Dark Web with SOCRadar!
Cyaniclab : Software Development Agency Portfolio.pdfCyanic lab
CyanicLab, an offshore custom software development company based in Sweden,India, Finland, is your go-to partner for startup development and innovative web design solutions. Our expert team specializes in crafting cutting-edge software tailored to meet the unique needs of startups and established enterprises alike. From conceptualization to execution, we offer comprehensive services including web and mobile app development, UI/UX design, and ongoing software maintenance. Ready to elevate your business? Contact CyanicLab today and let us propel your vision to success with our top-notch IT solutions.
In 2015, I used to write extensions for Joomla, WordPress, phpBB3, etc and I ...Juraj Vysvader
In 2015, I used to write extensions for Joomla, WordPress, phpBB3, etc and I didn't get rich from it but it did have 63K downloads (powered possible tens of thousands of websites).
top nidhi software solution freedownloadvrstrong314
This presentation emphasizes the importance of data security and legal compliance for Nidhi companies in India. It highlights how online Nidhi software solutions, like Vector Nidhi Software, offer advanced features tailored to these needs. Key aspects include encryption, access controls, and audit trails to ensure data security. The software complies with regulatory guidelines from the MCA and RBI and adheres to Nidhi Rules, 2014. With customizable, user-friendly interfaces and real-time features, these Nidhi software solutions enhance efficiency, support growth, and provide exceptional member services. The presentation concludes with contact information for further inquiries.
Paketo Buildpacks : la meilleure façon de construire des images OCI? DevopsDa...Anthony Dahanne
Les Buildpacks existent depuis plus de 10 ans ! D’abord, ils étaient utilisés pour détecter et construire une application avant de la déployer sur certains PaaS. Ensuite, nous avons pu créer des images Docker (OCI) avec leur dernière génération, les Cloud Native Buildpacks (CNCF en incubation). Sont-ils une bonne alternative au Dockerfile ? Que sont les buildpacks Paketo ? Quelles communautés les soutiennent et comment ?
Venez le découvrir lors de cette session ignite
Paketo Buildpacks : la meilleure façon de construire des images OCI? DevopsDa...
By People, For People
1. By People, For People
Tim O’Reilly
Velocity New York
September 17, 2014
#VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
The title of this talk is lifted from Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, by way of the Code for America mission statement, but it’s a great way to think about one of the
most important problems facing technologists today.
2. “We know about all these new technologies. What we
don’t know is how to organize ourselves to use them
effectively.”
- An IT executive at Fidelity, during Q&A
after a talk I gave there in 2008
#VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
It is well expressed by this quote from an IT executive at Fidelity investments, during a Q&A after a talk I gave there in 2008. “We know about all these new
technologies. What we don’t know is how to organize ourselves to use them effectively.”
3. #VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
Because of course, every new technology involves massive changes in how people are organized. From factory assembly lines....
10. Are New Ways of Organizing People
#VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
are all based on new ways of using technology to organize people and the work that they do for each other.
Think about how Uber and the Apple Store have both completely rethought the workflow of their respective industries - hailing a cab,
and the retail store - by using the sensors and connectivity of smartphones to augment and empower the people using them. In a way, these services are
actually made OF PEOPLE and computers in a new kind of symbiosis.
But I expect that the Fidelity executive was thinking of something closer to the world most of you live in.
11. #VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
The world of DevOps. Which is about a profound technology change - the move to the cloud and software as a service - but as you know, and as you can see
from the titles of various O’Reilly ebooks on the topic, is also deeply about people and culture. @oreillymedia, http://oreilly.com
12. Von Kempelen's Mechanical Turk
Wednesday, September 17, 14
After all, one of the key things that corporations and developers have had to learn is that software applications are no longer artifacts. They are business
processes, with people still inside them. Oh wait, they are also made of people.
I first started talking about this idea back in 1998, when I wrote a paper about the importance of “scripting languages” like Perl and Python. http://
oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/perl/news/importance_0498.html They were taking over, I thought, because of the way that web applications were different from
previous generations of applications. They were changing all the time.
Then, in 2003, I hit upon the notion that Von Kempelen’s mechanical Turk as a wonderful metaphor for the difference between web applications and the
previous generation of PC or enterprise applications. For those who don’t know about it, the Mechanical Turk was a 19th century hoax that purported to be a
robotic chess master, but in fact had a human hidden inside the machine. It struck me that this metaphor was one of the great secrets that distinguished web
applications from all prior applications. The humans were still inside - the developers changing the code every day, not in massive periodic software releases;
the use of new collective intelligence techniques to harvest data from users; new ways of coordinating work - from Wikipedia, to GitHub, to Uber and AirBnb. I
could talk for hours about all the implications, from the rise of cloud computing to the importance of dynamic languages, and now, increasingly, functional
languages, and the importance of data in all modern applications. (By the way, his slide is actually taken from an All-Hands presentation I gave to Amazon in
2003, where I made the point that every Amazon employee was, in some sense, inside the application. Jeff took the idea in a very different direction, of
course, realizing he could build a system to engage people outside the company in the vast machine he was building. He is a genius at thinking through
hidden implications of any idea he comes across.)
But let me focus in on this notion of DevOps - that it is how you develop and manage software in the age where software is a process and a performance, not
an artifact - and how it has had a big impact in today’s world.
13. Rescuing healthcare.gov
A team of engineers. They came in and worked tech
wizardry, right?
Maybe some of that, but a lot of the work was debugging the
communications failures that led the contractors to build
software components that didn’t work together.
#VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
You heard from Mikey Dickerson, one of the key players in the healthcare.gov rescue. (That’s him, third from the right, on the cover of Time.) I was struck by
Mikey’s story, the first time I heard it, about what a classic version of the DevOps story this was.
14. 17 hour days
100 days straight
Standup meetings focused on why people weren’t
able to keep the promises they’d made to each other
#VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Mikey Dickerson
Google Site Reliability Engineer
Wednesday, September 17, 14
15. #VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
It was right out of the Phoenix Project!
(If you want to understand more about that cultural revolution, this book is a great read - a novelized version of how DevOps was
brought to a failed IT project in a big manufacturing company.)
16. Emergent Enterprise
“Promise theory doesn’t naively assume that all promises will be kept. Humans break their promises
all the time; machines (which can also be agents in a network of promises) just break. But with
promise theory, agents are aware of the commitments they’re making, and their promises are more
likely to reflect what they’re capable of performing. ...
... we know the estimates were made with accurate information by the agent responsible, not by
external wishful thinkers without a clue.
And a well-formed network of promises includes contingencies and backups. What happens if Actor A
doesn’t deliver on promise X? It may be counterintuitive, but a web of promises exposes its weak
links much more readily than a top-down chain of command. Networks of promises provide services
that are more robust and reliable than command and control management pushed down from above.”
#VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
It also has powerful echoes of what Mark Burgess calls Promise Theory. Mark Burgess wrote...
“External wishful thinkers without a clue.” That’s a pretty good summary of a lot of government officials and corporate executives!
17. Of course, what Mikey found out was that
healthcare.gov was designed and delivered by a
system that doesn’t allow developers to make
promises to each other, or to operations engineers,
or to end users. Instead, all of the promises were
from policy makers and politicians to other policy
makers and politicians, and were handed down
from on-high through hard-coded specifications
and waterfall project management methodologies.
What the healthcare.gov rescue team brought was
a cultural revolution...
Which is only beginning!!!
#VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
18. DevOps
“…it’s not about making developers and sysadmins report to
the same VP. It’s not about automating all your configuration
procedures. It’s not about tipping up a Jenkins server, or
running your applications in the cloud, or releasing your
code on Github. It’s not even about letting your developers
deploy their code to a PaaS. The true essence of DevOps is
empathy.”
Jeff Sussna, “Empathy: The Essence of DevOps”
#VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
The other great statement about the role of humans in DevOps came from Jeff Sussna, who wrote, in a blog post entitled “Empathy: The Essence of
DevOps”...
19. “…one privilege the insured and well-off have is to excuse the
terrible quality of services the government routinely delivers to
the poor. Too often, the press ignores — or simply never knows —
the pain and trouble of interfacing with government
bureaucracies that the poor struggle with daily.”
— Ezra Klein
#VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
I want to take this empathy idea a bit further. One of the most important pieces about the healthcare.gov rescue was written by Washington Post
columnist (now vox.com founder) Ezra Klein. He wrote about how healthcare.gov was not an exception, but the rule, when it came to government
services.
20. #VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
And that brings me to the work we do at Code for America (codeforamerica.org). We engage civic hackers around the world to help local governments find
solutions to thorny problems. One of our programs sends small fellowship teams - essentially, a civic startup in a box - to work with a city for a year. Last year,
one of the Fellowship teams went to work in partnership with the Human Services Agency in San Francisco on a problem with Food Stamps - now known as
the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. It turns out that one third of food stamp clients were being unnecessarily cut from benefits due to
bureaucratic snafus. Essentially, they’d failed to properly fill out a necessary form or to submit it on time.
Fellows went to work on this problem last year,
21. #VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
Recently, I heard an eye opening segment on the radio show Marketplace. Do you know that a huge proportion of food stamp dollars
are spent at stores like Walmart between midnight and 1 am on the one night that people’s SNAP cards are electronically refilled?
Who goes food shopping at midnight? People who haven’t eaten for a few days, that’s who. So it really matters when you show up at the front of the line, and
suddenly your SNAP card doesn’t work because you didn’t know how to respond to a letter you received in the mail.
22. #VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
These letters can be truly confusing. Aha, missed that QR7, did you?
The fellows replaced them with a text message saying, essentially, “There’s a problem with your benefits. Call the office.”
23. “User needs. An empathetic service would ground itself in the concrete needs of concrete people. It’s
not about innovation, big data, government-as-a-platform, transparency, crowd-funding, open data,
or civic tech. It’s about people. Learning to prioritize people and their needs will be a long slog. It’s
the kind of change that happens slowly, one person at a time. But we should start.”
#VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
Jake Solomon, one of the Fellows, wrote an amazing piece about his experience, entitled People, Not Data. In it, he describes the problem: nobody who was
implementing the program had ever themselves tried to comply with the rules and to respond to the instructions, until the Code for America fellows did that. As
Jake said, “User needs...”
24. Empathy
#VelocityConf @VelocityConf @timoreilly
Wednesday, September 17, 14
There’s that word again.
There’s a lot of talk in Silicon Valley about measuring and paying attention to users. We talk about Lean Startup and “Growth Hacking.” But there’s a big
difference between paying attention to user behavior so you can exploit it - say to drive ad clicks on in-app purchases - and paying attention to it so you can
make a real difference in the lives of real people.
25. @timoreilly
Government can work
for the people,
by the people,
in the 21st century,
if we make it so.
Wednesday, September 17, 14
And that leads me to the mission statement that serves as our sort of North Star, our guiding light, at Code for America.
26. @timoreilly
for the people
Wednesday, September 17, 14
Of the people, for the people, by the people isn’t just a dusty line from the Gettysburg address. Most of the people I’ve met who work in government
went into public service in the first place because of what this line represents: they wanted to serve the public. But Jen Pahlka, the founder and executive
director of Code for America, has another way to say this, which I am repeating for you here, using her slides… “For the people”
27. @timoreilly
for people
Wednesday, September 17, 14
also really means FOR PEOPLE. That’s what Jake Solomon was talking about in his work on Human Services in San Francisco. And it’s also what you
should be thinking about in every application you deliver.
28. by people
Wednesday, September 17, 14
I haven’t talked as much today about the notion of “by the people,” but if you’ve followed my work for the past decade, you know that I’ve talked nearly
incessantly about the role of collective intelligence, expressed either explicitly through new forms of cooperation, or implicitly by the data we contribute
simply by interacting with modern applications, or increasingly, implicitly, via the data shadows we leave with sensor-driven applications. And as I hinted at
in the first part of this talk, modern services are made not only of computer programs but literally “of people.”
29. @timoreilly
Build 21st century services
of people,
by people,
for people
Wednesday, September 17, 14
Taken together, I think that this is a pretty good mission statement for people outside government too! Technology trends tells us that we still
will build services of people, and by people when we are using 21st century technology, but it’s essential that we also build services for
people.