The document is a SWOT analysis infographic template that analyzes the planets in our solar system. It includes strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats sections related to various planets. The strengths include Mercury being the closest planet to the sun and Mars being cold despite its red color. The weaknesses include Jupiter being the largest gas giant and Neptune being the farthest planet from the sun. The opportunities include Saturn having rings composed of hydrogen and helium and Venus having a beautiful name. The threats include Mars actually being cold and full of iron oxide dust despite its red appearance. The template then provides examples of how to populate the SWOT analysis with different planets.
Your score increases as you pick a category, fill ouYour score increases as you pick a category, fill out a long description and add more tags.t a long description and add more tags.Your score iYour score increases as you pick a category, fill out a long description and add more tags.ncreases as you pick a category, fill out a long description and add more tags.
1. Introduction
Gender equality is crucial for economic development, yet women still contribute only 37% of the global GDP, a persistent issue requiring ongoing efforts.
Africa's female entrepreneurs face a $42 billion financing gap, hindering their economic contribution due to limited resources, legal frameworks, and socio-cultural environments.
The Commercial Bank of Ethiopia is introducing a customer-centric business model, proposing a collateral-free loan product for women-owned small businesses, to address the financing gap and promote financial inclusion in Ethiopia's 49.8% female population.
2. Objectives of the proposal
2.1. General Objectives
The general objective of this proposal is to ensure sustainably growing profit and equitable resource allocation by offering collateral-free loans to support selected growth-oriented women-owned enterprises.
2.2. Specific Objectives
• To play a proactive role in supporting and promoting women-owned enterprises by availing of useful and affordable loan products;
• To pilot collateral-free financing and improve the credit risk appetite of the bank;
• To realize enhanced customer experience through adapting and scaling up the collateral-free financing scheme;
• To realize the bank’s digital financing initiatives;
• To mobilize resources through aligning with different development partners who are working on promoting women's economic empowerment and access to finance;
• To diversify the product portfolio of the bank;
• To implement the provisions regarding micro- and small-enterprises lending aspects of the credit policy and procedures of the bank;
• To support the realization of the financial inclusion strategy of the country;
• To optimize the profitability of the bank by entering untapped and new market niches;
• To optimize the competition capability of the bank;
• To ensure customer satisfaction and retention by availing of tailor-made products with simple and accessible outreach options.
3. Target groups
4. Work flow
For this pilot, women entrepreneurs owning and operating an active business will be selected through a coalition with government organs and/or other parties that work with the entrepreneurs, train them, and involve them in skill development. When a selected applicant submits the loan request along with all the required documents to the bank, the credit department of the district (for this program, the central region district) will appraise and review the credit request either manually for conventional borrowers or using a credit scoring solution for digital borrowers. Based on the credit appraisal result and credit scoring solution determination, the applicant can get the approved amount of an unsecured micro loan. Indeed, the work flow can be described as follows:
• The selected women-owned microbusinesses lodged their requests at a branch or using their phones digitally.
• Legal documents like a TIN, trade registration and license, financial statements, sales contract
Global Situational Awareness of A.I. and where its headedvikram sood
You can see the future first in San Francisco.
Over the past year, the talk of the town has shifted from $10 billion compute clusters to $100 billion clusters to trillion-dollar clusters. Every six months another zero is added to the boardroom plans. Behind the scenes, there’s a fierce scramble to secure every power contract still available for the rest of the decade, every voltage transformer that can possibly be procured. American big business is gearing up to pour trillions of dollars into a long-unseen mobilization of American industrial might. By the end of the decade, American electricity production will have grown tens of percent; from the shale fields of Pennsylvania to the solar farms of Nevada, hundreds of millions of GPUs will hum.
The AGI race has begun. We are building machines that can think and reason. By 2025/26, these machines will outpace college graduates. By the end of the decade, they will be smarter than you or I; we will have superintelligence, in the true sense of the word. Along the way, national security forces not seen in half a century will be un-leashed, and before long, The Project will be on. If we’re lucky, we’ll be in an all-out race with the CCP; if we’re unlucky, an all-out war.
Everyone is now talking about AI, but few have the faintest glimmer of what is about to hit them. Nvidia analysts still think 2024 might be close to the peak. Mainstream pundits are stuck on the wilful blindness of “it’s just predicting the next word”. They see only hype and business-as-usual; at most they entertain another internet-scale technological change.
Before long, the world will wake up. But right now, there are perhaps a few hundred people, most of them in San Francisco and the AI labs, that have situational awareness. Through whatever peculiar forces of fate, I have found myself amongst them. A few years ago, these people were derided as crazy—but they trusted the trendlines, which allowed them to correctly predict the AI advances of the past few years. Whether these people are also right about the next few years remains to be seen. But these are very smart people—the smartest people I have ever met—and they are the ones building this technology. Perhaps they will be an odd footnote in history, or perhaps they will go down in history like Szilard and Oppenheimer and Teller. If they are seeing the future even close to correctly, we are in for a wild ride.
Let me tell you what we see.
Your score increases as you pick a category, fill ouYour score increases as you pick a category, fill out a long description and add more tags.t a long description and add more tags.Your score iYour score increases as you pick a category, fill out a long description and add more tags.ncreases as you pick a category, fill out a long description and add more tags.
1. Introduction
Gender equality is crucial for economic development, yet women still contribute only 37% of the global GDP, a persistent issue requiring ongoing efforts.
Africa's female entrepreneurs face a $42 billion financing gap, hindering their economic contribution due to limited resources, legal frameworks, and socio-cultural environments.
The Commercial Bank of Ethiopia is introducing a customer-centric business model, proposing a collateral-free loan product for women-owned small businesses, to address the financing gap and promote financial inclusion in Ethiopia's 49.8% female population.
2. Objectives of the proposal
2.1. General Objectives
The general objective of this proposal is to ensure sustainably growing profit and equitable resource allocation by offering collateral-free loans to support selected growth-oriented women-owned enterprises.
2.2. Specific Objectives
• To play a proactive role in supporting and promoting women-owned enterprises by availing of useful and affordable loan products;
• To pilot collateral-free financing and improve the credit risk appetite of the bank;
• To realize enhanced customer experience through adapting and scaling up the collateral-free financing scheme;
• To realize the bank’s digital financing initiatives;
• To mobilize resources through aligning with different development partners who are working on promoting women's economic empowerment and access to finance;
• To diversify the product portfolio of the bank;
• To implement the provisions regarding micro- and small-enterprises lending aspects of the credit policy and procedures of the bank;
• To support the realization of the financial inclusion strategy of the country;
• To optimize the profitability of the bank by entering untapped and new market niches;
• To optimize the competition capability of the bank;
• To ensure customer satisfaction and retention by availing of tailor-made products with simple and accessible outreach options.
3. Target groups
4. Work flow
For this pilot, women entrepreneurs owning and operating an active business will be selected through a coalition with government organs and/or other parties that work with the entrepreneurs, train them, and involve them in skill development. When a selected applicant submits the loan request along with all the required documents to the bank, the credit department of the district (for this program, the central region district) will appraise and review the credit request either manually for conventional borrowers or using a credit scoring solution for digital borrowers. Based on the credit appraisal result and credit scoring solution determination, the applicant can get the approved amount of an unsecured micro loan. Indeed, the work flow can be described as follows:
• The selected women-owned microbusinesses lodged their requests at a branch or using their phones digitally.
• Legal documents like a TIN, trade registration and license, financial statements, sales contract
Global Situational Awareness of A.I. and where its headedvikram sood
You can see the future first in San Francisco.
Over the past year, the talk of the town has shifted from $10 billion compute clusters to $100 billion clusters to trillion-dollar clusters. Every six months another zero is added to the boardroom plans. Behind the scenes, there’s a fierce scramble to secure every power contract still available for the rest of the decade, every voltage transformer that can possibly be procured. American big business is gearing up to pour trillions of dollars into a long-unseen mobilization of American industrial might. By the end of the decade, American electricity production will have grown tens of percent; from the shale fields of Pennsylvania to the solar farms of Nevada, hundreds of millions of GPUs will hum.
The AGI race has begun. We are building machines that can think and reason. By 2025/26, these machines will outpace college graduates. By the end of the decade, they will be smarter than you or I; we will have superintelligence, in the true sense of the word. Along the way, national security forces not seen in half a century will be un-leashed, and before long, The Project will be on. If we’re lucky, we’ll be in an all-out race with the CCP; if we’re unlucky, an all-out war.
Everyone is now talking about AI, but few have the faintest glimmer of what is about to hit them. Nvidia analysts still think 2024 might be close to the peak. Mainstream pundits are stuck on the wilful blindness of “it’s just predicting the next word”. They see only hype and business-as-usual; at most they entertain another internet-scale technological change.
Before long, the world will wake up. But right now, there are perhaps a few hundred people, most of them in San Francisco and the AI labs, that have situational awareness. Through whatever peculiar forces of fate, I have found myself amongst them. A few years ago, these people were derided as crazy—but they trusted the trendlines, which allowed them to correctly predict the AI advances of the past few years. Whether these people are also right about the next few years remains to be seen. But these are very smart people—the smartest people I have ever met—and they are the ones building this technology. Perhaps they will be an odd footnote in history, or perhaps they will go down in history like Szilard and Oppenheimer and Teller. If they are seeing the future even close to correctly, we are in for a wild ride.
Let me tell you what we see.
The Building Blocks of QuestDB, a Time Series Databasejavier ramirez
Talk Delivered at Valencia Codes Meetup 2024-06.
Traditionally, databases have treated timestamps just as another data type. However, when performing real-time analytics, timestamps should be first class citizens and we need rich time semantics to get the most out of our data. We also need to deal with ever growing datasets while keeping performant, which is as fun as it sounds.
It is no wonder time-series databases are now more popular than ever before. Join me in this session to learn about the internal architecture and building blocks of QuestDB, an open source time-series database designed for speed. We will also review a history of some of the changes we have gone over the past two years to deal with late and unordered data, non-blocking writes, read-replicas, or faster batch ingestion.
Adjusting OpenMP PageRank : SHORT REPORT / NOTESSubhajit Sahu
For massive graphs that fit in RAM, but not in GPU memory, it is possible to take
advantage of a shared memory system with multiple CPUs, each with multiple cores, to
accelerate pagerank computation. If the NUMA architecture of the system is properly taken
into account with good vertex partitioning, the speedup can be significant. To take steps in
this direction, experiments are conducted to implement pagerank in OpenMP using two
different approaches, uniform and hybrid. The uniform approach runs all primitives required
for pagerank in OpenMP mode (with multiple threads). On the other hand, the hybrid
approach runs certain primitives in sequential mode (i.e., sumAt, multiply).
Techniques to optimize the pagerank algorithm usually fall in two categories. One is to try reducing the work per iteration, and the other is to try reducing the number of iterations. These goals are often at odds with one another. Skipping computation on vertices which have already converged has the potential to save iteration time. Skipping in-identical vertices, with the same in-links, helps reduce duplicate computations and thus could help reduce iteration time. Road networks often have chains which can be short-circuited before pagerank computation to improve performance. Final ranks of chain nodes can be easily calculated. This could reduce both the iteration time, and the number of iterations. If a graph has no dangling nodes, pagerank of each strongly connected component can be computed in topological order. This could help reduce the iteration time, no. of iterations, and also enable multi-iteration concurrency in pagerank computation. The combination of all of the above methods is the STICD algorithm. [sticd] For dynamic graphs, unchanged components whose ranks are unaffected can be skipped altogether.
Unleashing the Power of Data_ Choosing a Trusted Analytics Platform.pdfEnterprise Wired
In this guide, we'll explore the key considerations and features to look for when choosing a Trusted analytics platform that meets your organization's needs and delivers actionable intelligence you can trust.
Learn SQL from basic queries to Advance queriesmanishkhaire30
Dive into the world of data analysis with our comprehensive guide on mastering SQL! This presentation offers a practical approach to learning SQL, focusing on real-world applications and hands-on practice. Whether you're a beginner or looking to sharpen your skills, this guide provides the tools you need to extract, analyze, and interpret data effectively.
Key Highlights:
Foundations of SQL: Understand the basics of SQL, including data retrieval, filtering, and aggregation.
Advanced Queries: Learn to craft complex queries to uncover deep insights from your data.
Data Trends and Patterns: Discover how to identify and interpret trends and patterns in your datasets.
Practical Examples: Follow step-by-step examples to apply SQL techniques in real-world scenarios.
Actionable Insights: Gain the skills to derive actionable insights that drive informed decision-making.
Join us on this journey to enhance your data analysis capabilities and unlock the full potential of SQL. Perfect for data enthusiasts, analysts, and anyone eager to harness the power of data!
#DataAnalysis #SQL #LearningSQL #DataInsights #DataScience #Analytics
STATATHON: Unleashing the Power of Statistics in a 48-Hour Knowledge Extravag...sameer shah
"Join us for STATATHON, a dynamic 2-day event dedicated to exploring statistical knowledge and its real-world applications. From theory to practice, participants engage in intensive learning sessions, workshops, and challenges, fostering a deeper understanding of statistical methodologies and their significance in various fields."
2. T
Threats
Despite being red, Mars
is actually a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
W
Weaknesses
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
O
Opportunities
Venus has a beautiful
name and is the second
planet from the Sun
S
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and the
smallest one
Strengths
SWOT Analysis Infographics
3. SWOT Analysis Infographics
SWOT
Weaknesses
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
Opportunities
Venus has a beautiful
name and is the second
planet from the Sun
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and the
smallest one
Strengths
Threats
Despite being red, Mars
is actually a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
4. 01
02
04
03
SWOT Analysis Infographics
SWOT
Weaknesses
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
Threats
Venus has a beautiful
name and is the second
planet from the Sun
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and the
smallest one
Strengths
Opportunities
Despite being red, Mars
is actually a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
5. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Mercury is
the smallest
planet
S
Mercury
Mercury is the
smallest one
Mars is a
very cold
place
W
Mars
Mars is full of iron
oxide dust
Neptune is
the farthest
planet
O
Neptune
Neptune is the
fourth-largest
Venus has a
beautiful
name
T
Venus
It has a poisonous
atmosphere
6. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Weaknesses
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
W
Threats
Despite being red, Mars
is actually a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
T
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and the
smallest one
Strengths
S
Opportunities
Venus has a beautiful
name and is the second
planet from the Sun
O
SWOT
7. Strengths
Mercury is the
closest planet to
the Sun
Despite being
red, Mars is a
cold place
Threats
Jupiter is a gas
giant and the
biggest one
Weaknesses
Venus is the
second planet
from the Sun
Opportunities
SWOT Analysis Infographics
8. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Moon
Weaknesses
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
Mars
Opportunities
Venus has a beautiful
name and is the second
planet from the Sun
Mercury
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and the
smallest one
Strengths
Jupiter
Threats
Despite being red, Mars
is actually a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
9. Weaknesses
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
Opportunities
Venus has a beautiful
name and is the second
planet from the Sun
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and the
smallest one
Strengths
Threats
Despite being red, Mars
is actually a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
SWOT Analysis Infographics
10. Despite being red,
Mars is actually a
cold place
Threats
Venus is the
second planet from
the Sun
Opportunities
Jupiter is the
biggest planet of
them all
Weaknesses
SWOT Analysis Infographics
Mercury is the
closest planet to
the Sun
Strengths
11. Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and
the smallest one
Jupiter is a gas giant
and the biggest planet
in the Solar System
Despite being red,
Mars is a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
Venus has a beautiful
name, but also a
poisonous atmosphere
SWOT Analysis Infographics
12. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Mercury is the smallest
planet in the Solar System S
Mercury
Jupiter is a gas giant and the
biggest planet of them all W
Jupiter
Saturn is composed of
hydrogen and helium O
Saturn
Despite being red, Mars is
actually a cold place T
Mars
13. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Saturn is a gas
giant and has
several rings
O
Jupiter is a gas
giant and the
biggest planet
W
Mercury is the
closest planet to
the Sun
S
Neptune is the
farthest planet
from the Sun
T
14. SWOT Analysis Infographics
S
Mars
Despite being red, Mars
is a cold place full of iron
oxide dust
Saturn
Saturn is composed
mostly of hydrogen and
helium
O
Jupiter
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
W
Neptune
Neptune is the farthest
planet from the Sun and
the fourth-largest
T
15. SWOT Analysis Infographics
STRENGTHS
Mars
Despite being red, Mars is a cold place
Jupiter
Jupiter is a gas giant and the biggest planet
WEAKNESSES
Neptune
Neptune is the farthest planet from the Sun
OPPORTUNITIES
Saturn
Saturn is composed of hydrogen and helium
THREATS
16. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Jupiter is a gas
giant and the
biggest planet
Jupiter
S
Saturn is a gas
giant and has
several rings
Saturn
W Neptune is the
farthest planet
from the Sun
Neptune
O
Despite being
red, Mars is a
cold place
Mars
T
17. SWOT Analysis Infographics
WEAKNESSES
Jupiter is a gas giant and the biggest planet W
THREATS
Saturn is composed of hydrogen and helium T
OPPORTUNITIES
Neptune is the farthest planet from the Sun O
STRENGTHS
Despite being red, Mars is a cold place S
18. SWOT Analysis Infographics
THREATS
Jupiter is a gas giant
and the biggest planet
in the Solar System
WEAKNESSES
Venus has a beautiful
name, but also very
high temperatures
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and
the smallest one
STRENGTHS OPPORTUNITIES
Despite being red,
Mars is a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
19. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and also
the smallest one
THREATS
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
STRENGTHS
Saturn, the ringed planet, is
composed mostly of
hydrogen and helium
OPPORTUNITIES
Neptune is the farthest
planet from the Sun and the
fourth-largest
WEAKNESSES
20. SWOT Analysis Infographics
S
Mercury is the
closest planet to the
Sun and the smallest
in the Solar System
Mercury
W
Neptune
Neptune is the
farthest planet from
the Sun and the
fourth-largest
O
Mars
Despite being red,
Mars is actually a
cold place full of iron
oxide dust
T
Jupiter
Jupiter is a gas giant
and also the biggest
planet in the Solar
System
21. SWOT Analysis Infographics
S
Mercury is the
closest planet to
the Sun
Strengths
Jupiter is a gas
giant and the
biggest planet
Weaknesses
W
Venus is the
second planet from
the Sun
Opportunities
O
Despite being red,
Mars is actually a
cold place
Threats
T
22. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Weaknesses
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and the
smallest one
Strengths
Jupiter is a gas giant and
also the biggest planet in
the Solar System
Opportunities
Venus has a beautiful name
and is the second planet
from the Sun
Threats
Despite being red, Mars is
actually a cold place full of
iron oxide dust
23. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Threats
Despite being red, Mars
is actually a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
Weaknesses
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and the
smallest one
Strengths
Opportunities
Venus has a beautiful
name and is the second
planet from the Sun
24. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Mercury
Mercury is the
closest planet to
the Sun
S
Jupiter
Jupiter is a gas
giant and the
biggest one
W
Venus
Venus is the
second planet
from the Sun
O
Neptune
Neptune is the
farthest planet
from the Sun
T
25. SWOT Analysis Infographics
T
Threats
Despite being red, Mars
is actually a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
S
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and the
smallest one
Strengths
O
Opportunities
Venus has a beautiful
name and is the second
planet from the Sun
W Weaknesses
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
26. S
Strengths
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
SWOT Analysis Infographics
W
Weaknesses
Despite being red, Mars
is actually a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
O
Opportunities
Venus has a beautiful
name and is the second
planet from the Sun
T
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and the
smallest one
Threats
27. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Jupiter
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
Saturn
Saturn is composed
mostly of hydrogen and
also helium
Venus
Venus has a beautiful
name and is the second
planet from the Sun
Mars
Despite being red, Mars
is a cold place full of iron
oxide dust
28. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Threats
Despite being red, Mars
is actually a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
Weaknesses
Jupiter is a gas giant and
the biggest planet in the
Solar System
Mercury is the closest
planet to the Sun and the
smallest one
Strengths
Opportunities
Venus has a beautiful
name and is the second
planet from the Sun
29. SWOT Analysis Infographics
S
Mars
Despite being red, Mars is a cold place
O
Jupiter
Jupiter is a gas giant and the biggest planet
W
Neptune
Neptune is the farthest planet from the Sun
T
Saturn
Saturn is composed of hydrogen and helium
30. SWOT Analysis Infographics
Mercury is the
closest planet to
the Sun
Strengths
Jupiter is a gas
giant and the
biggest planet
Weaknesses
Venus is the
second planet from
the Sun
Opportunities
Despite being red,
Mars is actually a
cold place
Threats
31. SWOT Analysis Infographics
OPPORTUNITIES
Jupiter
Jupiter is a gas giant
and the biggest
planet of them all
THREATS
Saturn
Saturn is composed
mostly of hydrogen
and helium
STRENGTHS
Venus
Venus has a beautiful
name, but also very
high temperatures
WEAKNESSES
Mars
Despite being red,
Mars is a cold place
full of iron oxide dust
32. Instructions for use
In order to use this template, you must credit Slidesgo and Freepik in your final presentation and include links to
both websites.
You are allowed to:
- Modify this template.
- Use it for both personal and commercial projects.
You are not allowed to:
- Sublicense, sell or rent any of Slidesgo Content (or a modified version of Slidesgo Content).
- Distribute Slidesgo Content unless it has been expressly authorized by Slidesgo.
- Include Slidesgo Content in an online or offline database or file.
- Offer Slidesgo templates (or modified versions of Slidesgo templates) for download.
- Acquire the copyright of Slidesgo Content.
For more information about editing slides, please read our FAQs or visit Slidesgo School:
https://slidesgo.com/faqs and https://slidesgo.com/slidesgo-school
33. Infographics
You can add and edit some infographics to your presentation to show your data in a visual way.
● Choose your favourite infographic and insert it in your presentation using Ctrl C
+ Ctrl V or Cmd C + Cmd V in Mac.
● Select one of the parts and ungroup it by right-clicking and choosing
“Ungroup”.
● Change the color by clicking on the paint bucket.
● Then resize the element by clicking and dragging one of the square-shaped
points of its bounding box (the cursor should look like a double-headed arrow).
Remember to hold Shift while dragging to keep the proportions.
● Group the elements again by selecting them, right-clicking and choosing
“Group”.
● Repeat the steps above with the other parts and when you’re done editing, copy
the end result and paste it into your presentation.
● Remember to choose the “Keep source formatting” option so that it keeps the
design. For more info, please visit Slidesgo School.