information about types of gardens, formal gardens, famous gardens in india and their histoty.
importance of gardens
landscaping
Principles of a Formal Garden
Elements of a Formal Garden
Formal gardens may also draw inspiration from highly structured
Oriental gardens that date back over 3,000 years. Unlike European
classical gardens, the Oriental formal garden may or may not have a
strong structure
Timbers: Varieties of Indian timber, Characteristics and suitability
for different uses, Defects in timber, Diseases and decay in timber, Preservation and
Seasoning, Veneers, Fiber boards, Block boards
information about types of gardens, formal gardens, famous gardens in india and their histoty.
importance of gardens
landscaping
Principles of a Formal Garden
Elements of a Formal Garden
Formal gardens may also draw inspiration from highly structured
Oriental gardens that date back over 3,000 years. Unlike European
classical gardens, the Oriental formal garden may or may not have a
strong structure
Timbers: Varieties of Indian timber, Characteristics and suitability
for different uses, Defects in timber, Diseases and decay in timber, Preservation and
Seasoning, Veneers, Fiber boards, Block boards
Quality , Oak, Ash and Pine Furniture. Pine-Workshop Ltd will design and manufacture furniture to your specifications. Visit our showroom to see our high quality ranges of Oak, Ash and Pine furniture in Nottingham.
The observation of safety guidelines are essential to the well being of any worker and the productivity of the said workers. this presentation will offer a clear guideline for those within the building industry.
Encryption in Microsoft 365 - ExpertsLive Netherlands 2024Albert Hoitingh
In this session I delve into the encryption technology used in Microsoft 365 and Microsoft Purview. Including the concepts of Customer Key and Double Key Encryption.
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
Dev Dives: Train smarter, not harder – active learning and UiPath LLMs for do...UiPathCommunity
💥 Speed, accuracy, and scaling – discover the superpowers of GenAI in action with UiPath Document Understanding and Communications Mining™:
See how to accelerate model training and optimize model performance with active learning
Learn about the latest enhancements to out-of-the-box document processing – with little to no training required
Get an exclusive demo of the new family of UiPath LLMs – GenAI models specialized for processing different types of documents and messages
This is a hands-on session specifically designed for automation developers and AI enthusiasts seeking to enhance their knowledge in leveraging the latest intelligent document processing capabilities offered by UiPath.
Speakers:
👨🏫 Andras Palfi, Senior Product Manager, UiPath
👩🏫 Lenka Dulovicova, Product Program Manager, UiPath
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 3DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 3. In this session, we will cover desktop automation along with UI automation.
Topics covered:
UI automation Introduction,
UI automation Sample
Desktop automation flow
Pradeep Chinnala, Senior Consultant Automation Developer @WonderBotz and UiPath MVP
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey 2024 by 91mobiles.pdf91mobiles
91mobiles recently conducted a Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey in which we asked over 3,000 respondents about the TV they own, aspects they look at on a new TV, and their TV buying preferences.
Accelerate your Kubernetes clusters with Varnish CachingThijs Feryn
A presentation about the usage and availability of Varnish on Kubernetes. This talk explores the capabilities of Varnish caching and shows how to use the Varnish Helm chart to deploy it to Kubernetes.
This presentation was delivered at K8SUG Singapore. See https://feryn.eu/presentations/accelerate-your-kubernetes-clusters-with-varnish-caching-k8sug-singapore-28-2024 for more details.
GraphRAG is All You need? LLM & Knowledge GraphGuy Korland
Guy Korland, CEO and Co-founder of FalkorDB, will review two articles on the integration of language models with knowledge graphs.
1. Unifying Large Language Models and Knowledge Graphs: A Roadmap.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.08302
2. Microsoft Research's GraphRAG paper and a review paper on various uses of knowledge graphs:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/graphrag-unlocking-llm-discovery-on-narrative-private-data/
Kubernetes & AI - Beauty and the Beast !?! @KCD Istanbul 2024Tobias Schneck
As AI technology is pushing into IT I was wondering myself, as an “infrastructure container kubernetes guy”, how get this fancy AI technology get managed from an infrastructure operational view? Is it possible to apply our lovely cloud native principals as well? What benefit’s both technologies could bring to each other?
Let me take this questions and provide you a short journey through existing deployment models and use cases for AI software. On practical examples, we discuss what cloud/on-premise strategy we may need for applying it to our own infrastructure to get it to work from an enterprise perspective. I want to give an overview about infrastructure requirements and technologies, what could be beneficial or limiting your AI use cases in an enterprise environment. An interactive Demo will give you some insides, what approaches I got already working for real.
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
Connector Corner: Automate dynamic content and events by pushing a buttonDianaGray10
Here is something new! In our next Connector Corner webinar, we will demonstrate how you can use a single workflow to:
Create a campaign using Mailchimp with merge tags/fields
Send an interactive Slack channel message (using buttons)
Have the message received by managers and peers along with a test email for review
But there’s more:
In a second workflow supporting the same use case, you’ll see:
Your campaign sent to target colleagues for approval
If the “Approve” button is clicked, a Jira/Zendesk ticket is created for the marketing design team
But—if the “Reject” button is pushed, colleagues will be alerted via Slack message
Join us to learn more about this new, human-in-the-loop capability, brought to you by Integration Service connectors.
And...
Speakers:
Akshay Agnihotri, Product Manager
Charlie Greenberg, Host
3. Classification of trees
Coniferous trees generally have narrow, hard
leaves that are known as scales or needles,
depending on their shape. Nearly all of them are
evergreen.
Conifers do not have true flowers; instead, they
produce cones.
5. Pine (pinua/pino)
Persist ence evergreen
Arrangement Clusters of
three
Type simple
Shape needle-like
Margin entire
Text ure Vertical
cracking
Scientific name: Pinus radiata
6. Fir (izeia/abeto)
Persist ence evergreen
Arrangement alternate
Type simple
Shape needle-like
Margin entire
Text ure
(Young)
smooth
older scaly
Scientific name: Abies alba
7. Cedar (zedroa/cedro)
Persist ence evergreen
Arrangement whorled
Type simple
Shape needle-like
Margin entire
Text ure Vertical
cracking
Scientific name: Cedros atlantica
8. Yew (hagina/tejo)
Persist ence evergreen
Arrangement alternate
Type simple
Shape needle-like
Margin entire
Text ure Smooth
peeling
Scientific name: Taxux baccata
11. Lawson cypress (Lawson altzifrea/ciprés de Lawson)
Persist ence evergreen
Arrangement opposite
Type simple
Shape scale-like
Margin
Text ure Vertical
cracking
Scientific name: Chamaecyparis lawsoniana
12. Broadleaved trees with compound leaves
Serrate
(scaly) Service tree
(scaly) Elder
(vertical cracking) Ash
(smooth) Rowan
Horse chestnut
Entire
(linear) Mimosa
(ovate-lanceolate) Walnut
(ovate) Black locust
Tree of heaven
(lanceolate) Honey locust
13. Service tree (gurbe/ serbal)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement opposite
Type Compound
(up to 21 leaflets)
Shape lanceolate
Margin serrate
Text ure scaly
Scientific name: Sorbus domestica
14. Elder (intsusa beltza/saúco)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement opposite
Type Compound
(5-7 leaflets up
to 20 cm long)
Shape lanceolate
Margin serrate
Text ure scaly
Scientific name: Sambucus nigra
15. Ash (lizarra/freno)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement opposite
Type Compound
(up to 13 leaflets,
each 10 cm long)
Shape lanceolate
Margin serrate
Text ure Vertical
cracking
Scientific name: Fraxinus excelsior
16. Rowan (otsolizarra/serbal de los cazadores)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement opposite
Type Compound
(up to 15 leaflets)
Shape lanceolate
Margin serrate
Text ure smooth
Scientific name: Sorbus aucuparia
18. Mimosa (mimosa/mimosa)
Persist ence evergreen
Arrangement alternate
Type Compound
25-40 pairs of leaflets)
Shape linear
Margin entire
Text ure smooth
Scientific name: Acacia dealbata
When flowering in late winter
20. Black locust (Sasiarkazia/falsa acacia)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement opposite
Type Compound
(13-25 leaflets)
Shape ovate
Margin entire
Text ure Vertical
cracking
Scientific name: Robinia pseudoacacia
21. Tree of the heaven (ailantoa/ailanto)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type Compound
(15 or more pair
of leaflets)
Shape ovate
Margin entire
Text ure Vertical
cracking
Scientific name: Ailanthus altissima
22. Honey locust (akazia hiruarantza/acacia de tres púas)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type Compound
(10-17 pair of leaflets)
Shape lanceolate
Margin entire
Text ure scaly
Scientific name: gleditsia triacanthos
23. Broadleaved trees with simple lobed leaves
Opposite Marple, Sycamore
Alternate
(Smooth)
(entire/serrate) Fig tree
(fan shape) Gingko
(smooth with diamonds) White poplar
(peeling) London plante
(Vertical cracking)
(entire) Oak, Tulip tree
(serrate) Hawthorn
(Scaly) Sweet Gum
24. Marple (astigarra/arce)
Persist ence decidious
Arrangement opposite
Type Simple
(up to 10 cm wide)
Shape star-shaped
Margin Lobed entire
Text ure scaly
Scientific name: Acer campestre
25. Sycamore (astigar zuria/falso plátano)
Persist ence decidious
Arrangement opposite
Type simple (8-15 cm)
Shape star-shaped
Margin Lobed entire
(3-5 lobes)
Text ure scaly
Scientific name: Acer pseudoplatanusNote: Its leaves are very
similar to those of the
London plante's
26. Fig tree (pikondoa/higuera)
Persist ence decidious
Arrangement alternate
Type Simple (10-20 cm)
Shape ovate
Margin Lobed serrate
Lobed entire
(3-7 lobes)
Text ure smooth
Scientific name: ficus carica
27. Ginkgo (ginkgo/ginkgo)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type Simple (5-10 cm)
Shape fan
Margin Lobed
(2)/entire
Scientific name: Ginkgo biloba
Text ure
(Young)
smooth
older vertical
cracking
28. White poplar (zurzuria/álamo blanco)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type Simple
(up to 10 cm long)
Shape star-shaped
Margin lobed sinuate
(5-3 lobes)
Text ure Smooth with
diamonds
Scientific name: populus alba
29. London plante (platanondoa/plátano)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type Simple
(up to 20 cm long)
Shape star-shaped
Margin lobed
Text ure peeling
Scientific name: platanus hispanica
30. Oak (haritza/roble)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type simple
Shape ovate
Margin Lobed/entire
Text ure Vertical
cracking/ scaly
Scientific name: Quercus robur
31. Tulip tree
(idi-bihotz arbola/tulipero de Virginia)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type simple (7-12 cm)
Shape lobed
(4 pointed lobes)
Margin entire
Text ure Vertical cracking
Scientific name: Liriodentron tulipifera
32. Hawthorn (elorri zuria/espino albar)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type Simple
(up to 5 cm long)
Shape oval
Margin Lobed/serrate
(3 or 5 lobes)
Text ure Vertical
cracking
Scientific name: Crataegus monogyna
33. Sweet gum (Likidanbar/liquidambar)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type Simple
(up to 15 cm long)
Shape star-shaped
Margin Lobed/serrate
Text ure scaly
In autumn
Scientific name: Liquidambar styraciflua
34. Broadleaved trees with simple
unlobed evergreen leaves
evergreen
(scaly)
(lanciolate) Holm oak
(ovate-lanciolate) Kermes oak
(smooth)
(ovate) Magnolia
(ovate toothed) Holly
(lanceolate) Laurel
(peeling) Gum tree
(vertical cracking) Privet, Olive tree
(irregular vertical cracking) Cork oak
35. Holm oak (artea/encina)
Persist ence evergreen
Arrangement alternate
Type Simple
(up to 10 cm long)
Shape laceolate
Margin serrate/entire
Text ure scaly
Scientific name: Quercus ilex
36. Kermes oak (abaritza/coscoja)
Persist ence evergreen
Arrangement alternate
Type simple
Shape Lanceolate/ovate
Margin serrate
Text ure scaly
Scientific name: Quercus coccifera
47. Poplar (makala/chopo)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type simple
Shape ovate
heart-shaped
Margin serrate
Text ure irregular vertical
cracking
Scientific name: Populus nigra
48. Judas tree (amodio-zuhaitz/árbol del amor)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type simple (7-12 cm)
Shape heart-shaped
Margin entire
Text ure scaly
Scientific name: Cercis siliquastrum
In spring
49. Elm (zumarra/olmo)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type simple
Shape ovate
Margin serrate
Text ure Vertical craking
Scientific name: Olmus minor
50. Japanese Cherry
(gereziondo japoniar/ciruelo japonés)
Persist ence deciduous
Arrangement alternate
Type simple
Shape ovate,
lanceolate
Margin serrate
Text ure smooth
Scientific name: Prunus serrulata
In spring
51. Cherry plum (gerezi-aranondoa/ciruelo de Pisardi)
Persist ence decidous
Arrangement alternate
Type Simple (2-7 cm)
Shape ovate
Margin serrate
Text ure smooth
Scientific name: Prunus cerasifera Pissardii