HWBOT compiled an infographic on the overclocking activities at the 2014 Computex tradeshow. It includes figures on the events, LN2 usage, world records, livestream and more.
Report of the HWBOT Rookie Rumble #19 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 350 overclockers during a three week period in June.
More info: http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/rookie_rumble_19
This year has been very exciting for PC enthusiasts with six processor launches in less than ten months. The new processors feature up to eighteen overclockable cores which is significantly more than last year’s flagship ten-core model. The extra cores present new challenges for overclockers on both mainstream and high-end desktop platforms. In this panel we discuss the ins and outs of multi-core overclocking and show you a live demo of an 18-core system pushed to its limits.
Slidedeck from panel discussion at PAX Australia 2017
HWBOT X San Pedro Sula Event Report (June 10, 2017)HWBOT
For the first time in Honduras, the first Amateur Overclocking Tournament will be held. This event took place in June at the San Pedro Sula University, which has provided us with support for what is Overclocking Community that Is being formed in the country.
http://x.hwbot.org/event/first-amateur-2017-overclocking-tournament/
On November 12th and 13th the FFOC (French Federation of Overclocking) held their first ever solo overclocking event in France. Dubbed the Atelier Overclocking and PC Building event, it was in fact also the very first HWBOT X event to take place in France. The event offered PC building classes plus a chance to engage in some competitive overclocking. It took place at Gamer’s Assembly Halloween Edition, a smaller version of the world LAN Party that played a pivotal part of the HWBOT World Tour earlier this year.
The HWBOT St.Benoit event was sponsored by HWBOT and Seasonic and hosted in the city of St. Benoit not far from Poitiers in France. Doors opened on Friday 11th when gamers, overclockers and enthusiasts were invited to get into in the venue and begin setting up in preparation for the two days to come. The doors were then opened on Saturday morning and remained open until 5pm on Sunday.
More information: http://x.hwbot.org/blog/hwbot-x-st-benoit-france-november-2016/
PAX Australia 2016 Panel "Pushing Limits: Going Beyond 8 GHz"HWBOT
The simplest and easiest way to understand a very general concept of overclocking is that of increasing the processor frequency to improve performance. The lucky few among you may have a system that runs at 5GHz or above. Extreme overclockers however, go well beyond that limit.
On November 4th 2016, Australian Overclockers held a public panel at the PAX AUS 2016 event at the Melbourne Convention center. Hosted at the Wombat Theater the panel will discuss the difficulties encountered when overclocking beyond 8GHz and will include an impressive live demo of an LN2 cooled overclocked system running at 8GHz!
http://x.hwbot.org/event/pax-aus-2016-panel-pushing-limits-overclocking-beyond-8-ghz/
It’s that time of the year again when overclocking teams on HWBOT start eyeing the HWBOT Team Cup, the ultimate prize in team-oriented overlocking. It’s a contest that pits dozens of teams of overclockers against each other with a total of thirty stages that covers virtually every hardware category imaginable.
Running throughout the months of July, August and September, the HWBOT Team Cup is surely the truest test of competitive team overclocking, requiring the broadest possible array of skill sets with overlockers invited to bench on everything from the latest Skylake and Haswell-E platforms to legacy Intel and AMD platforms including stages devoted to DDR2 and DDR tweaking as well as two newly devised ‘Dogpile’ stages that require you to make as many submission as possible on as many CPUs as possible.
This year’s contest involves five separate challenges or sub-competitions as we refer to them, each with an historical epoch in mind. Contest categories include Current Generation, Modern, Legacy, Vintage and Dogpile. Let’s look at the stages in more detail regarding specific hardware limitations and benchmarks.
This report summarizes GPUPI benchmarking statistics and hardware usage trends among overclockers from November 2014 to August 2016. It finds that the Core i7 4790K and GeForce GTX 980 Ti are the most commonly used CPU and GPU. The report also analyzes benchmark submissions, user leagues, web traffic, benchmark versions, cooling methods, frequencies, motherboard brands and models. The data comes from the thousands of submissions made to the HWBOT GPUPI benchmarks over this time period.
Report of the HWBOT Rookie Rumble #19 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 350 overclockers during a three week period in June.
More info: http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/rookie_rumble_19
This year has been very exciting for PC enthusiasts with six processor launches in less than ten months. The new processors feature up to eighteen overclockable cores which is significantly more than last year’s flagship ten-core model. The extra cores present new challenges for overclockers on both mainstream and high-end desktop platforms. In this panel we discuss the ins and outs of multi-core overclocking and show you a live demo of an 18-core system pushed to its limits.
Slidedeck from panel discussion at PAX Australia 2017
HWBOT X San Pedro Sula Event Report (June 10, 2017)HWBOT
For the first time in Honduras, the first Amateur Overclocking Tournament will be held. This event took place in June at the San Pedro Sula University, which has provided us with support for what is Overclocking Community that Is being formed in the country.
http://x.hwbot.org/event/first-amateur-2017-overclocking-tournament/
On November 12th and 13th the FFOC (French Federation of Overclocking) held their first ever solo overclocking event in France. Dubbed the Atelier Overclocking and PC Building event, it was in fact also the very first HWBOT X event to take place in France. The event offered PC building classes plus a chance to engage in some competitive overclocking. It took place at Gamer’s Assembly Halloween Edition, a smaller version of the world LAN Party that played a pivotal part of the HWBOT World Tour earlier this year.
The HWBOT St.Benoit event was sponsored by HWBOT and Seasonic and hosted in the city of St. Benoit not far from Poitiers in France. Doors opened on Friday 11th when gamers, overclockers and enthusiasts were invited to get into in the venue and begin setting up in preparation for the two days to come. The doors were then opened on Saturday morning and remained open until 5pm on Sunday.
More information: http://x.hwbot.org/blog/hwbot-x-st-benoit-france-november-2016/
PAX Australia 2016 Panel "Pushing Limits: Going Beyond 8 GHz"HWBOT
The simplest and easiest way to understand a very general concept of overclocking is that of increasing the processor frequency to improve performance. The lucky few among you may have a system that runs at 5GHz or above. Extreme overclockers however, go well beyond that limit.
On November 4th 2016, Australian Overclockers held a public panel at the PAX AUS 2016 event at the Melbourne Convention center. Hosted at the Wombat Theater the panel will discuss the difficulties encountered when overclocking beyond 8GHz and will include an impressive live demo of an LN2 cooled overclocked system running at 8GHz!
http://x.hwbot.org/event/pax-aus-2016-panel-pushing-limits-overclocking-beyond-8-ghz/
It’s that time of the year again when overclocking teams on HWBOT start eyeing the HWBOT Team Cup, the ultimate prize in team-oriented overlocking. It’s a contest that pits dozens of teams of overclockers against each other with a total of thirty stages that covers virtually every hardware category imaginable.
Running throughout the months of July, August and September, the HWBOT Team Cup is surely the truest test of competitive team overclocking, requiring the broadest possible array of skill sets with overlockers invited to bench on everything from the latest Skylake and Haswell-E platforms to legacy Intel and AMD platforms including stages devoted to DDR2 and DDR tweaking as well as two newly devised ‘Dogpile’ stages that require you to make as many submission as possible on as many CPUs as possible.
This year’s contest involves five separate challenges or sub-competitions as we refer to them, each with an historical epoch in mind. Contest categories include Current Generation, Modern, Legacy, Vintage and Dogpile. Let’s look at the stages in more detail regarding specific hardware limitations and benchmarks.
This report summarizes GPUPI benchmarking statistics and hardware usage trends among overclockers from November 2014 to August 2016. It finds that the Core i7 4790K and GeForce GTX 980 Ti are the most commonly used CPU and GPU. The report also analyzes benchmark submissions, user leagues, web traffic, benchmark versions, cooling methods, frequencies, motherboard brands and models. The data comes from the thousands of submissions made to the HWBOT GPUPI benchmarks over this time period.
In this presentation, Pieter from HWBOT takes the audience down the rabbit hole of extreme overclocking. The aim of the presentation is to explain why Overclocking is more than a rich man's game. Overclocking requires skill, insight in technologies and science, and a solid problem-solving strategy.
"Overclocking is not something you can just pick up and do, you need to put a lot of love into it" - Joseph "Steponz" Stepongzi
This document provides an overview of overclocking innovations for 2016, including:
- A live demonstration of overclocking Intel's first 10-core desktop processor using the Intel X99 chipset.
- A discussion of new overclocking capabilities for Intel Core processors like per-core overclocking and AVX ratio offset.
- Details on motherboard technologies from ASUS that enhance overclocking, like the ROG OC Panel and microcontrollers.
- An explanation of overclocking options for Intel 6th generation Core processors using the Intel Z170 chipset, including unlocked ratios and memory overclocking.
The document discusses tools and technologies for overclocking, like the Intel
The document summarizes HWBOT's World Tour 2016 overclocking competition events. It discusses HWBOT's mission to promote overclocking. The World Tour 2016 included 7 events around the world with approximately 450 participants total after the first 3 events, growing significantly from 30 participants in 2014. The document also provides background on overclocking, noting that it allows getting more performance from hardware by pushing it beyond factory specifications. It describes overclocking workshops held as part of the events to teach participants.
This session provides an architectural introduction of Intel’s enthusiast system solutions, with an emphasis on performance tuning for gaming and content creation. The discussion will include key overclocking ecosystem ingredients such as Intel® Extreme Memory Profile (Intel® XMP) technology. Live demos will accompany our discussion. Attendees will leave with a good understanding of the overclocking capabilities of Intel’s latest processors.
http://myeventagenda.com/sessions/0B9F4191-1C29-408A-8B61-65D7520025A8/7/5
Report of the HWBOT Novice Nimble #1 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 21 teams during a six week period in April and May.
http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/novice_nimble_2
This document summarizes the results of the Rookie Rumble #18 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and analyses of the 373 participants and over 1,000 submissions. The top performers achieved frequencies up to 5.3GHz and hardware records in categories like the Xeon E5 2698 V3. Outreach efforts included pop-up invites, newsletters, social media posts, and articles to promote the event.
This document provides information about the ROG OC Showdown event taking place June 6-8, 2015 in Taipei, Taiwan. The event will include a HWBOT World Series overclocking competition with cash and hardware prizes. Thirty seats are available for the 3-day overclocking competition, which participants must bring their own hardware and equipment for. The document provides contact information and notes participants are responsible for their own accommodation.
This document summarizes the results of Rookie Rumble #16, an overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and analyses of the 407 participants' submissions across various hardware categories and stages of the competition. The top submissions set several hardware category records, with the highest CPU frequency reaching 5411 MHz. Exposure statistics show over 15,000 people viewed the competition page and over 1000 submissions were made.
Report of the HWBOT Novice Nimble #1 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 21 teams during a six week period in January, February, and March.
http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/novice_nimble_1
This document provides an overview and safety information for liquid nitrogen certification Level 1. It discusses HWBOT's mission to evangelize and professionalize overclocking. It outlines risks of working with liquid nitrogen like cold burns and frostbite. Safety requirements are explained such as training, personal protective equipment. Procedures for various incidents are described, including calling for help, evaluating risk, and seeking medical assistance. The document aims to educate on safe liquid nitrogen practices.
Report of the HWBOT Rookie Rumble #15 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 357 overclockers during a three week period in February and March.
Report of the HWBOT Rookie Rumble #14 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 303 overclockers during a three week period in January and February.
This document summarizes the Rookie Rumble #14 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and results for the 303 participants and 771 submissions across multiple stages and categories. The top submissions achieved world record frequencies up to 5.3GHz. Analysis of the hardware used found most common were Core i7 4790K CPUs, ASUS motherboards, and Corsair memory. Exposure for the competition included nearly 10,500 impressions on the HWBOT website.
Overclockers from 143 countries submitted results to HWBOT in 2014, representing 73% of the world's countries. There were over 242,000 score submissions in total, a significant increase from 2011. The benchmark most used was XTU, accounting for over 93,000 submissions over 32 days of running time. 59 teams competed in the team cup, with Overclock.net having the most submissions at over 7,600. The most viewed individual result was an overclocker's 3DMark Fire Strike score that received 11,000 views.
HWBOT World Tour 2015 - North America Lan ETS GuideHWBOT
In this guide you can find all information for the upcoming HWBOT World Tour 2015 - North America Lan ETS event in Montreal, Canada on March 6 - 8.
See you all there!
This document summarizes the results of the Rookie Rumble #13 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings for the overall competition as well as each stage. It also analyzes the hardware and participants, with the highest overclocked frequency being 5507 MHz. Charts and graphs show results for CPU models, cooling solutions, memory, and other components. The competition engaged 364 participants who submitted 864 results, generating over 10,000 impressions on the competition page.
This document summarizes the results of the Rookie Rumble #12 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and statistics on the 269 participants and their 490 submissions. The highest CPU overclock was 5.15GHz. Most common hardware used included Intel Core i7-4790K and Core i5-4690K CPUs as well as MSI and ASUS motherboards. The competition generated over 7,000 page views on the HWBOT website.
"What does it really mean for your system to be available, or how to define w...Fwdays
We will talk about system monitoring from a few different angles. We will start by covering the basics, then discuss SLOs, how to define them, and why understanding the business well is crucial for success in this exercise.
In this presentation, Pieter from HWBOT takes the audience down the rabbit hole of extreme overclocking. The aim of the presentation is to explain why Overclocking is more than a rich man's game. Overclocking requires skill, insight in technologies and science, and a solid problem-solving strategy.
"Overclocking is not something you can just pick up and do, you need to put a lot of love into it" - Joseph "Steponz" Stepongzi
This document provides an overview of overclocking innovations for 2016, including:
- A live demonstration of overclocking Intel's first 10-core desktop processor using the Intel X99 chipset.
- A discussion of new overclocking capabilities for Intel Core processors like per-core overclocking and AVX ratio offset.
- Details on motherboard technologies from ASUS that enhance overclocking, like the ROG OC Panel and microcontrollers.
- An explanation of overclocking options for Intel 6th generation Core processors using the Intel Z170 chipset, including unlocked ratios and memory overclocking.
The document discusses tools and technologies for overclocking, like the Intel
The document summarizes HWBOT's World Tour 2016 overclocking competition events. It discusses HWBOT's mission to promote overclocking. The World Tour 2016 included 7 events around the world with approximately 450 participants total after the first 3 events, growing significantly from 30 participants in 2014. The document also provides background on overclocking, noting that it allows getting more performance from hardware by pushing it beyond factory specifications. It describes overclocking workshops held as part of the events to teach participants.
This session provides an architectural introduction of Intel’s enthusiast system solutions, with an emphasis on performance tuning for gaming and content creation. The discussion will include key overclocking ecosystem ingredients such as Intel® Extreme Memory Profile (Intel® XMP) technology. Live demos will accompany our discussion. Attendees will leave with a good understanding of the overclocking capabilities of Intel’s latest processors.
http://myeventagenda.com/sessions/0B9F4191-1C29-408A-8B61-65D7520025A8/7/5
Report of the HWBOT Novice Nimble #1 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 21 teams during a six week period in April and May.
http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/novice_nimble_2
This document summarizes the results of the Rookie Rumble #18 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and analyses of the 373 participants and over 1,000 submissions. The top performers achieved frequencies up to 5.3GHz and hardware records in categories like the Xeon E5 2698 V3. Outreach efforts included pop-up invites, newsletters, social media posts, and articles to promote the event.
This document provides information about the ROG OC Showdown event taking place June 6-8, 2015 in Taipei, Taiwan. The event will include a HWBOT World Series overclocking competition with cash and hardware prizes. Thirty seats are available for the 3-day overclocking competition, which participants must bring their own hardware and equipment for. The document provides contact information and notes participants are responsible for their own accommodation.
This document summarizes the results of Rookie Rumble #16, an overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and analyses of the 407 participants' submissions across various hardware categories and stages of the competition. The top submissions set several hardware category records, with the highest CPU frequency reaching 5411 MHz. Exposure statistics show over 15,000 people viewed the competition page and over 1000 submissions were made.
Report of the HWBOT Novice Nimble #1 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 21 teams during a six week period in January, February, and March.
http://oc-esports.io/#!/round/novice_nimble_1
This document provides an overview and safety information for liquid nitrogen certification Level 1. It discusses HWBOT's mission to evangelize and professionalize overclocking. It outlines risks of working with liquid nitrogen like cold burns and frostbite. Safety requirements are explained such as training, personal protective equipment. Procedures for various incidents are described, including calling for help, evaluating risk, and seeking medical assistance. The document aims to educate on safe liquid nitrogen practices.
Report of the HWBOT Rookie Rumble #15 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 357 overclockers during a three week period in February and March.
Report of the HWBOT Rookie Rumble #14 overclocking competition. The competition engaged 303 overclockers during a three week period in January and February.
This document summarizes the Rookie Rumble #14 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and results for the 303 participants and 771 submissions across multiple stages and categories. The top submissions achieved world record frequencies up to 5.3GHz. Analysis of the hardware used found most common were Core i7 4790K CPUs, ASUS motherboards, and Corsair memory. Exposure for the competition included nearly 10,500 impressions on the HWBOT website.
Overclockers from 143 countries submitted results to HWBOT in 2014, representing 73% of the world's countries. There were over 242,000 score submissions in total, a significant increase from 2011. The benchmark most used was XTU, accounting for over 93,000 submissions over 32 days of running time. 59 teams competed in the team cup, with Overclock.net having the most submissions at over 7,600. The most viewed individual result was an overclocker's 3DMark Fire Strike score that received 11,000 views.
HWBOT World Tour 2015 - North America Lan ETS GuideHWBOT
In this guide you can find all information for the upcoming HWBOT World Tour 2015 - North America Lan ETS event in Montreal, Canada on March 6 - 8.
See you all there!
This document summarizes the results of the Rookie Rumble #13 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings for the overall competition as well as each stage. It also analyzes the hardware and participants, with the highest overclocked frequency being 5507 MHz. Charts and graphs show results for CPU models, cooling solutions, memory, and other components. The competition engaged 364 participants who submitted 864 results, generating over 10,000 impressions on the competition page.
This document summarizes the results of the Rookie Rumble #12 overclocking competition hosted by HWBOT. It provides rankings and statistics on the 269 participants and their 490 submissions. The highest CPU overclock was 5.15GHz. Most common hardware used included Intel Core i7-4790K and Core i5-4690K CPUs as well as MSI and ASUS motherboards. The competition generated over 7,000 page views on the HWBOT website.
"What does it really mean for your system to be available, or how to define w...Fwdays
We will talk about system monitoring from a few different angles. We will start by covering the basics, then discuss SLOs, how to define them, and why understanding the business well is crucial for success in this exercise.
inQuba Webinar Mastering Customer Journey Management with Dr Graham HillLizaNolte
HERE IS YOUR WEBINAR CONTENT! 'Mastering Customer Journey Management with Dr. Graham Hill'. We hope you find the webinar recording both insightful and enjoyable.
In this webinar, we explored essential aspects of Customer Journey Management and personalization. Here’s a summary of the key insights and topics discussed:
Key Takeaways:
Understanding the Customer Journey: Dr. Hill emphasized the importance of mapping and understanding the complete customer journey to identify touchpoints and opportunities for improvement.
Personalization Strategies: We discussed how to leverage data and insights to create personalized experiences that resonate with customers.
Technology Integration: Insights were shared on how inQuba’s advanced technology can streamline customer interactions and drive operational efficiency.
[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.
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.
QR Secure: A Hybrid Approach Using Machine Learning and Security Validation F...AlexanderRichford
QR Secure: A Hybrid Approach Using Machine Learning and Security Validation Functions to Prevent Interaction with Malicious QR Codes.
Aim of the Study: The goal of this research was to develop a robust hybrid approach for identifying malicious and insecure URLs derived from QR codes, ensuring safe interactions.
This is achieved through:
Machine Learning Model: Predicts the likelihood of a URL being malicious.
Security Validation Functions: Ensures the derived URL has a valid certificate and proper URL format.
This innovative blend of technology aims to enhance cybersecurity measures and protect users from potential threats hidden within QR codes 🖥 🔒
This study was my first introduction to using ML which has shown me the immense potential of ML in creating more secure digital environments!
Dandelion Hashtable: beyond billion requests per second on a commodity serverAntonios Katsarakis
This slide deck presents DLHT, a concurrent in-memory hashtable. Despite efforts to optimize hashtables, that go as far as sacrificing core functionality, state-of-the-art designs still incur multiple memory accesses per request and block request processing in three cases. First, most hashtables block while waiting for data to be retrieved from memory. Second, open-addressing designs, which represent the current state-of-the-art, either cannot free index slots on deletes or must block all requests to do so. Third, index resizes block every request until all objects are copied to the new index. Defying folklore wisdom, DLHT forgoes open-addressing and adopts a fully-featured and memory-aware closed-addressing design based on bounded cache-line-chaining. This design offers lock-free index operations and deletes that free slots instantly, (2) completes most requests with a single memory access, (3) utilizes software prefetching to hide memory latencies, and (4) employs a novel non-blocking and parallel resizing. In a commodity server and a memory-resident workload, DLHT surpasses 1.6B requests per second and provides 3.5x (12x) the throughput of the state-of-the-art closed-addressing (open-addressing) resizable hashtable on Gets (Deletes).
Session 1 - Intro to Robotic Process Automation.pdfUiPathCommunity
👉 Check out our full 'Africa Series - Automation Student Developers (EN)' page to register for the full program:
https://bit.ly/Automation_Student_Kickstart
In this session, we shall introduce you to the world of automation, the UiPath Platform, and guide you on how to install and setup UiPath Studio on your Windows PC.
📕 Detailed agenda:
What is RPA? Benefits of RPA?
RPA Applications
The UiPath End-to-End Automation Platform
UiPath Studio CE Installation and Setup
💻 Extra training through UiPath Academy:
Introduction to Automation
UiPath Business Automation Platform
Explore automation development with UiPath Studio
👉 Register here for our upcoming Session 2 on June 20: Introduction to UiPath Studio Fundamentals: https://community.uipath.com/events/details/uipath-lagos-presents-session-2-introduction-to-uipath-studio-fundamentals/
Lee Barnes - Path to Becoming an Effective Test Automation Engineer.pdfleebarnesutopia
So… you want to become a Test Automation Engineer (or hire and develop one)? While there’s quite a bit of information available about important technical and tool skills to master, there’s not enough discussion around the path to becoming an effective Test Automation Engineer that knows how to add VALUE. In my experience this had led to a proliferation of engineers who are proficient with tools and building frameworks but have skill and knowledge gaps, especially in software testing, that reduce the value they deliver with test automation.
In this talk, Lee will share his lessons learned from over 30 years of working with, and mentoring, hundreds of Test Automation Engineers. Whether you’re looking to get started in test automation or just want to improve your trade, this talk will give you a solid foundation and roadmap for ensuring your test automation efforts continuously add value. This talk is equally valuable for both aspiring Test Automation Engineers and those managing them! All attendees will take away a set of key foundational knowledge and a high-level learning path for leveling up test automation skills and ensuring they add value to their organizations.
Getting the Most Out of ScyllaDB Monitoring: ShareChat's TipsScyllaDB
ScyllaDB monitoring provides a lot of useful information. But sometimes it’s not easy to find the root of the problem if something is wrong or even estimate the remaining capacity by the load on the cluster. This talk shares our team's practical tips on: 1) How to find the root of the problem by metrics if ScyllaDB is slow 2) How to interpret the load and plan capacity for the future 3) Compaction strategies and how to choose the right one 4) Important metrics which aren’t available in the default monitoring setup.
How information systems are built or acquired puts information, which is what they should be about, in a secondary place. Our language adapted accordingly, and we no longer talk about information systems but applications. Applications evolved in a way to break data into diverse fragments, tightly coupled with applications and expensive to integrate. The result is technical debt, which is re-paid by taking even bigger "loans", resulting in an ever-increasing technical debt. Software engineering and procurement practices work in sync with market forces to maintain this trend. This talk demonstrates how natural this situation is. The question is: can something be done to reverse the trend?
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.
Keywords: AI, Containeres, Kubernetes, Cloud Native
Event Link: https://meine.doag.org/events/cloudland/2024/agenda/#agendaId.4211
GlobalLogic Java Community Webinar #18 “How to Improve Web Application Perfor...GlobalLogic Ukraine
Під час доповіді відповімо на питання, навіщо потрібно підвищувати продуктивність аплікації і які є найефективніші способи для цього. А також поговоримо про те, що таке кеш, які його види бувають та, основне — як знайти performance bottleneck?
Відео та деталі заходу: https://bit.ly/45tILxj
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.
"$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.
2. Overclockers gather in Taipei
50+
Representing 24 nations worldwide
Speaking 20 languages, from all regions
For 8 days of overclocking frenzy
Computex Overclocking
3. Major overclocking competitions
3
HyperX OC Takeover
USD $47,500 total prize purse $$$
Largest OC cash prize ever!
G.Skill OC World Cup
Intel OC Challenge
Computex Overclocking
4. Computex Overclocking
Score submissions to HWBOT
10 Overclocking world records
GIGABYTE broke the memory frequency
record twice, live!
Competitions generate 28K pageviews
150+
5. Liters of Liquid Nitrogen consumed
8.5
thousand
HyperX OC Takedown – 12%
G.Skill OC World Cup & Record stage – 21%
Intel OC Challenge – 5%
HWBOT OC Gathering – 21%
Vendor Booths – 41%
Computex Overclocking
6. Computex 2014 Overclocking
Hours video consumed on Twitch
17+
thousand
Or 711 consecutive days, or 1.9 Years...
Unique streaming session 155
Thousand
Over 8 days of overclocking livestream
7. Computex 2014 Overclocking
2450+ peak concurrent viewers
Record of enthusiasts watching live OC
Chat messages discussing live OC 10+
Thousand
That’s one message, every minute, for 8 days
8. HWBOT OC Gathering
Overclockers attending
35+
18 of which overclocking at Pro OC level
Gathering 80% of the overclockers present at Computex
Celebrating HWBOT 10th Anniversary
1M benchmark submissions
9. HWBOT OC Gathering
Major industry partners
5
Thanks to:
Gigabyte, G.Skill, Enermax, Cooler Master & Gelid Solutions
Four days of Extreme Overclocking 48H
One weekend of 48h non-stop benching