The document provides details about a PRMIA meeting held in Washington DC on June 1st at IBM facilities. David Rowe spoke at the event. No other information is included in the document.
This document discusses the differences between user interface (UI), user experience (UX), and usability. UI refers to how users interact with a system through inputs and outputs, while UX considers all aspects of a user's interaction with a product. Usability focuses on making websites easy to use without specialized training. The document provides questions to consider regarding audience, goals, intuitiveness, loading speed, navigation, readability, and responsiveness. Common UX mistakes like inconsistent design and poor color contrast are also outlined. The author advocates listening to feedback and beta testing to improve UX.
Over the last 20 years, the banking industry has seen major consolidation, increased use of complex financial products, and a lack of high-quality data at financial institutions. During the 2008 crisis, key decision makers lacked adequate data on the interconnectedness of firms. Lessons learned are that enterprise stress testing should be routine and large firms need to improve data management. Regulators are now focusing on increasing transparency, liquidity risk management, and capital standards to address these issues.
This document is a report from the Senior Supervisors Group assessing risk management practices at major global financial institutions during recent market turmoil. It finds that firms with concentrated exposure to subprime mortgage securitizations suffered major losses, while those with comprehensive firm-wide risk identification and independent valuation practices fared better. It also notes challenges in managing liquidity needs and leveraged loan commitments. The report recommends supervisors strengthen regulatory frameworks and firms improve risk management, including senior oversight, stress testing, and liquidity planning.
The document is a report from the Counterparty Risk Management Policy Group III (CRMPG III) outlining recommendations to contain systemic risk in the financial system following the 2007-2008 credit crisis. The report covers four main areas: 1) reconsidering accounting standards for off-balance sheet entities, 2) managing complex financial instruments, 3) enhancing risk monitoring and management practices, and 4) improving credit market resiliency, particularly in over-the-counter derivatives markets like credit default swaps. The report urges swift industry action to create a clearinghouse for credit default swap transactions starting in late 2008.
The document lists the desktop backgrounds of four individuals: Obama, Timmy G, Ben Bernanke, and Lloyd Blankfein. Bernanke's background is labeled "it's only paper" and Blankfein's is labeled "Doing God's Work".
Banks and insurers are resisting new U.S. rules requiring large financial firms to submit "living wills" detailing how they could be dismantled during a crisis. Industry groups argue that breaking up companies would hurt them by imposing inefficient management structures. Regulators counter that they need an orderly mechanism to avoid panic, and that developing living wills would help firms and authorities be better prepared for resolving future failures. Discussions are ongoing between regulators and financial firms over how stringent the new rules should be.
Presentation on Corporate Governance and the changing financial landscape. Includes up to date discussion (as of April 2011) of Dodd-Frank Act elements as well as current topics and research. Links to papers via box.net.
This document discusses the differences between user interface (UI), user experience (UX), and usability. UI refers to how users interact with a system through inputs and outputs, while UX considers all aspects of a user's interaction with a product. Usability focuses on making websites easy to use without specialized training. The document provides questions to consider regarding audience, goals, intuitiveness, loading speed, navigation, readability, and responsiveness. Common UX mistakes like inconsistent design and poor color contrast are also outlined. The author advocates listening to feedback and beta testing to improve UX.
Over the last 20 years, the banking industry has seen major consolidation, increased use of complex financial products, and a lack of high-quality data at financial institutions. During the 2008 crisis, key decision makers lacked adequate data on the interconnectedness of firms. Lessons learned are that enterprise stress testing should be routine and large firms need to improve data management. Regulators are now focusing on increasing transparency, liquidity risk management, and capital standards to address these issues.
This document is a report from the Senior Supervisors Group assessing risk management practices at major global financial institutions during recent market turmoil. It finds that firms with concentrated exposure to subprime mortgage securitizations suffered major losses, while those with comprehensive firm-wide risk identification and independent valuation practices fared better. It also notes challenges in managing liquidity needs and leveraged loan commitments. The report recommends supervisors strengthen regulatory frameworks and firms improve risk management, including senior oversight, stress testing, and liquidity planning.
The document is a report from the Counterparty Risk Management Policy Group III (CRMPG III) outlining recommendations to contain systemic risk in the financial system following the 2007-2008 credit crisis. The report covers four main areas: 1) reconsidering accounting standards for off-balance sheet entities, 2) managing complex financial instruments, 3) enhancing risk monitoring and management practices, and 4) improving credit market resiliency, particularly in over-the-counter derivatives markets like credit default swaps. The report urges swift industry action to create a clearinghouse for credit default swap transactions starting in late 2008.
The document lists the desktop backgrounds of four individuals: Obama, Timmy G, Ben Bernanke, and Lloyd Blankfein. Bernanke's background is labeled "it's only paper" and Blankfein's is labeled "Doing God's Work".
Banks and insurers are resisting new U.S. rules requiring large financial firms to submit "living wills" detailing how they could be dismantled during a crisis. Industry groups argue that breaking up companies would hurt them by imposing inefficient management structures. Regulators counter that they need an orderly mechanism to avoid panic, and that developing living wills would help firms and authorities be better prepared for resolving future failures. Discussions are ongoing between regulators and financial firms over how stringent the new rules should be.
Presentation on Corporate Governance and the changing financial landscape. Includes up to date discussion (as of April 2011) of Dodd-Frank Act elements as well as current topics and research. Links to papers via box.net.
The document discusses the challenges that banks face in meeting new regulatory requirements for stress testing and capital planning. It notes that existing risk and finance systems are not well-suited to the more rigorous analysis now required, and that banks must improve data management, analytical models, and reporting in order to "break the black box" and increase transparency. The document outlines the complex data, modeling, and reporting needs to conduct comprehensive, forward-looking stress tests that meet regulatory expectations and can be useful for bank management.
This presentation discusses the changing financial landscape after the 2008 crisis and lessons learned. It covers four main topics: 1) how the financial crisis occurred and the role of poor policy and incentives, 2) changes in regulation and the financial system, 3) key lessons on risk management and governance, and 4) focus areas including liquidity, capital, and compensation. The presentation emphasizes that while regulation is important, the underlying issues were related more to incentives and risk culture within firms.
This document provides an agenda and overview for a presentation on interest rate risk modeling and management. It discusses supervisory expectations, capabilities of the ALM5 tool, how the tool can be used for risk management versus compliance, key issues in interest rate risk architecture, and concludes with a summary review. The presentation aims to help financial institutions better understand balance sheet management and interest rate risk modeling.
The document discusses a presentation about the financial crisis, its impacts on risk management, and key lessons learned. It begins with standard disclaimers and an agenda. The presentation argues that the crisis was due to systemic failures from national policies promoting homeownership, monetary policy, poor risk controls at firms, and corporate governance issues, rather than a lack of regulation. It also provides context on the Dodd-Frank Act and regulatory reform timeline.
This technical report presents Version 1.1 of the Capability Maturity Model (CMM) for software. The CMM is a framework for evaluating and improving the maturity of software processes in an organization. It describes five levels of process maturity ranging from ad hoc to optimizing. Key practices are identified for key process areas at each maturity level that must be satisfied to achieve that level of process capability. The report provides an overview of the CMM framework and its use for software process assessments and improvements. Future directions are also discussed, including potential new areas for the CMM.
This document provides a theoretical analysis of factors that can trigger a financial crisis based on the works of John Maynard Keynes and Hyman Minsky. It discusses two key changes in deregulated financial markets: 1) growing uncertainty in liberalized markets, and 2) financial innovations that generate liquidity beyond bank credit. These changes, along with debt financing and securitization, can lead markets from a state of hedging to speculation and eventually "Ponzi finance" where borrowing is needed to pay off existing liabilities. The global financial crisis of 2008 is analyzed as a potential example of a Minsky moment where extended speculation triggered a collapse in confidence and asset values.
The document is a vision statement by Thomas Eugene Day nominating himself to the Board of the Professional Risk Managers' International Association (PRMIA). It discusses the changes needed in risk management practices in light of the 2007-2009 financial crisis. It outlines PRMIA's role in contributing to the evolving risk management field through its designation program, building affinity relationships, growing revenue, and securing sponsorships while maintaining independence.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
The document discusses the 38-year experiment with fiat currency since the US abandoned the gold standard in 1971. It notes that fiat currency has no intrinsic value and is only worth what goods and services it can purchase. However, there is now more claims on assets than real assets due to credit expansion. This could lead to currency debasement through inflation as more money is created. The document warns that printing money to get out of the current crisis will only make the problem worse by further eroding confidence in fiat currencies. It argues we may be reaching an important crossroads where people begin questioning the value of paper money.
This document proposes adjustments to fair value accounting to reduce procyclicality. It suggests using a historical moving average over four quarters to calculate asset values for capital requirements, rather than quarterly mark-to-market valuations. This would dampen the impact of short-term market volatility on capital while still providing transparency through footnote disclosures. It aims to balance microprudential and macroprudential objectives by giving regulators flexibility to adjust requirements in times of stress without changing the accounting methodology. Feedback is requested on using a moving average to decrease fair value's potential to exacerbate downturns.
The Reform Package made several changes to banking regulations. It created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to oversee consumer financial products and established new restrictions on risky trading by big banks to reduce risk. The package also increased capital requirements for banks to reduce taxpayer bailouts in case of future crises.
This document discusses approaches to monitoring systemic risk in the financial system. It begins with an overview of systemic risk and what drives it, such as the size, interconnectedness, liquidity, concentration, and leverage of financial institutions. It then reviews potential roles of a systemic risk regulator and various initiatives by banking, securities, and insurance regulators to monitor systemic risk. The document evaluates different approaches to collecting systemic risk information and identifies gaps. It considers tools like stress tests, risk reporting templates, trade repositories, and data warehouses. Finally, it discusses key concepts around improving data infrastructure while protecting confidentiality and balancing macroprudential and microprudential oversight.
This is the G-30 club that Volker used to chair. This is a publically available document, so hopefully SlideShare can figure that out and not remove it.
The document provides a summary of the implementation of compensation principles and standards by national authorities. Key points include:
1) Most jurisdictions have adopted a mix of regulation and supervisory oversight to implement the principles and standards.
2) Significant progress has been made but effective implementation is still a work in progress across jurisdictions.
3) Key recommendations are to finalize implementation efforts, strengthen supervisory cooperation across borders, ensure standards apply to all significant financial institutions, and conduct a follow up review in 2011.
This document summarizes a study of 347 cases of alleged fraudulent financial reporting by U.S. public companies between 1998 and 2007. Some key findings include:
- The dollar magnitude of fraud significantly increased compared to a previous 1987-1997 study, with a total of $120 billion in misstatements across 300 cases.
- Companies committing fraud tended to be larger than in the previous study, with median assets and revenues just under $100 million.
- The CEO and/or CFO were named as involved in 89% of fraud cases.
- Improper revenue recognition was the most common fraud technique in over 60% of cases.
- Few differences were found between fraud and no-fraud companies in terms of
This document summarizes the key findings and recommendations from The Turner Review, which analyzes the causes of the global banking crisis that began in 2008 and proposes reforms to create a more stable banking system. The review finds that macroeconomic trends, financial innovation, excessive leverage, procyclicality, and misplaced reliance on mathematical models all contributed to the crisis. It recommends fundamental changes like increasing and improving bank capital requirements, implementing countercyclical policies, expanding regulatory coverage, and enhancing supervision, regulation and risk management. The review argues these reforms are necessary to reduce the probability and severity of future financial crises.
This document from the U.S. Department of the Treasury presents recommendations to improve the U.S. financial regulatory structure. It identifies short-term recommendations to improve regulatory coordination in response to events in credit and mortgage markets. Intermediate recommendations aim to modernize regulation of banking, insurance, securities and futures to eliminate duplication. Longer term, the document proposes an "objectives-based" model with three distinct regulators focused on market stability, safety and soundness for institutions with government guarantees, and business conduct regulation. This conceptual model is intended to begin discussion on rethinking the current structure to better promote innovation while enhancing regulation.
This document provides a summary of a Congressional Oversight Panel report on regulatory reform. It discusses lessons from past financial crises, shortcomings of the current regulatory system, and recommendations for improvement. The current crisis should not be a surprise as the regulatory system failed to effectively manage risk, require transparency, or ensure fair dealings. The report recommends identifying and regulating systemic risks, limiting leverage, modernizing shadow market oversight, reforming mortgages and consumer credit, executive pay, credit ratings, establishing global standards, and planning for future crises.
The document discusses concerns about increases in the monetary base and how that money could be removed from the system without harm. It raises the question of how increased monetary base from central bank actions is taken out of the system without negatively impacting the economy. In a few short sentences, it introduces the topic of monetary policy and managing the money supply.
The Basel Committee proposes strengthening global capital and liquidity regulations to promote a more resilient banking sector and reduce risks of spillover from the financial sector to the real economy. Key proposals include raising capital requirements, enhancing risk coverage, introducing a leverage ratio, and addressing procyclicality and systemic risk. The proposals aim to improve the banking sector's ability to absorb shocks from financial stress by increasing quality and consistency of capital, supplementing risk-based requirements with a leverage ratio, and implementing countercyclical buffers and capital conservation measures.
Generating privacy-protected synthetic data using Secludy and MilvusZilliz
During this demo, the founders of Secludy will demonstrate how their system utilizes Milvus to store and manipulate embeddings for generating privacy-protected synthetic data. Their approach not only maintains the confidentiality of the original data but also enhances the utility and scalability of LLMs under privacy constraints. Attendees, including machine learning engineers, data scientists, and data managers, will witness first-hand how Secludy's integration with Milvus empowers organizations to harness the power of LLMs securely and efficiently.
Best 20 SEO Techniques To Improve Website Visibility In SERPPixlogix Infotech
Boost your website's visibility with proven SEO techniques! Our latest blog dives into essential strategies to enhance your online presence, increase traffic, and rank higher on search engines. From keyword optimization to quality content creation, learn how to make your site stand out in the crowded digital landscape. Discover actionable tips and expert insights to elevate your SEO game.
The document discusses the challenges that banks face in meeting new regulatory requirements for stress testing and capital planning. It notes that existing risk and finance systems are not well-suited to the more rigorous analysis now required, and that banks must improve data management, analytical models, and reporting in order to "break the black box" and increase transparency. The document outlines the complex data, modeling, and reporting needs to conduct comprehensive, forward-looking stress tests that meet regulatory expectations and can be useful for bank management.
This presentation discusses the changing financial landscape after the 2008 crisis and lessons learned. It covers four main topics: 1) how the financial crisis occurred and the role of poor policy and incentives, 2) changes in regulation and the financial system, 3) key lessons on risk management and governance, and 4) focus areas including liquidity, capital, and compensation. The presentation emphasizes that while regulation is important, the underlying issues were related more to incentives and risk culture within firms.
This document provides an agenda and overview for a presentation on interest rate risk modeling and management. It discusses supervisory expectations, capabilities of the ALM5 tool, how the tool can be used for risk management versus compliance, key issues in interest rate risk architecture, and concludes with a summary review. The presentation aims to help financial institutions better understand balance sheet management and interest rate risk modeling.
The document discusses a presentation about the financial crisis, its impacts on risk management, and key lessons learned. It begins with standard disclaimers and an agenda. The presentation argues that the crisis was due to systemic failures from national policies promoting homeownership, monetary policy, poor risk controls at firms, and corporate governance issues, rather than a lack of regulation. It also provides context on the Dodd-Frank Act and regulatory reform timeline.
This technical report presents Version 1.1 of the Capability Maturity Model (CMM) for software. The CMM is a framework for evaluating and improving the maturity of software processes in an organization. It describes five levels of process maturity ranging from ad hoc to optimizing. Key practices are identified for key process areas at each maturity level that must be satisfied to achieve that level of process capability. The report provides an overview of the CMM framework and its use for software process assessments and improvements. Future directions are also discussed, including potential new areas for the CMM.
This document provides a theoretical analysis of factors that can trigger a financial crisis based on the works of John Maynard Keynes and Hyman Minsky. It discusses two key changes in deregulated financial markets: 1) growing uncertainty in liberalized markets, and 2) financial innovations that generate liquidity beyond bank credit. These changes, along with debt financing and securitization, can lead markets from a state of hedging to speculation and eventually "Ponzi finance" where borrowing is needed to pay off existing liabilities. The global financial crisis of 2008 is analyzed as a potential example of a Minsky moment where extended speculation triggered a collapse in confidence and asset values.
The document is a vision statement by Thomas Eugene Day nominating himself to the Board of the Professional Risk Managers' International Association (PRMIA). It discusses the changes needed in risk management practices in light of the 2007-2009 financial crisis. It outlines PRMIA's role in contributing to the evolving risk management field through its designation program, building affinity relationships, growing revenue, and securing sponsorships while maintaining independence.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
The document discusses the 38-year experiment with fiat currency since the US abandoned the gold standard in 1971. It notes that fiat currency has no intrinsic value and is only worth what goods and services it can purchase. However, there is now more claims on assets than real assets due to credit expansion. This could lead to currency debasement through inflation as more money is created. The document warns that printing money to get out of the current crisis will only make the problem worse by further eroding confidence in fiat currencies. It argues we may be reaching an important crossroads where people begin questioning the value of paper money.
This document proposes adjustments to fair value accounting to reduce procyclicality. It suggests using a historical moving average over four quarters to calculate asset values for capital requirements, rather than quarterly mark-to-market valuations. This would dampen the impact of short-term market volatility on capital while still providing transparency through footnote disclosures. It aims to balance microprudential and macroprudential objectives by giving regulators flexibility to adjust requirements in times of stress without changing the accounting methodology. Feedback is requested on using a moving average to decrease fair value's potential to exacerbate downturns.
The Reform Package made several changes to banking regulations. It created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to oversee consumer financial products and established new restrictions on risky trading by big banks to reduce risk. The package also increased capital requirements for banks to reduce taxpayer bailouts in case of future crises.
This document discusses approaches to monitoring systemic risk in the financial system. It begins with an overview of systemic risk and what drives it, such as the size, interconnectedness, liquidity, concentration, and leverage of financial institutions. It then reviews potential roles of a systemic risk regulator and various initiatives by banking, securities, and insurance regulators to monitor systemic risk. The document evaluates different approaches to collecting systemic risk information and identifies gaps. It considers tools like stress tests, risk reporting templates, trade repositories, and data warehouses. Finally, it discusses key concepts around improving data infrastructure while protecting confidentiality and balancing macroprudential and microprudential oversight.
This is the G-30 club that Volker used to chair. This is a publically available document, so hopefully SlideShare can figure that out and not remove it.
The document provides a summary of the implementation of compensation principles and standards by national authorities. Key points include:
1) Most jurisdictions have adopted a mix of regulation and supervisory oversight to implement the principles and standards.
2) Significant progress has been made but effective implementation is still a work in progress across jurisdictions.
3) Key recommendations are to finalize implementation efforts, strengthen supervisory cooperation across borders, ensure standards apply to all significant financial institutions, and conduct a follow up review in 2011.
This document summarizes a study of 347 cases of alleged fraudulent financial reporting by U.S. public companies between 1998 and 2007. Some key findings include:
- The dollar magnitude of fraud significantly increased compared to a previous 1987-1997 study, with a total of $120 billion in misstatements across 300 cases.
- Companies committing fraud tended to be larger than in the previous study, with median assets and revenues just under $100 million.
- The CEO and/or CFO were named as involved in 89% of fraud cases.
- Improper revenue recognition was the most common fraud technique in over 60% of cases.
- Few differences were found between fraud and no-fraud companies in terms of
This document summarizes the key findings and recommendations from The Turner Review, which analyzes the causes of the global banking crisis that began in 2008 and proposes reforms to create a more stable banking system. The review finds that macroeconomic trends, financial innovation, excessive leverage, procyclicality, and misplaced reliance on mathematical models all contributed to the crisis. It recommends fundamental changes like increasing and improving bank capital requirements, implementing countercyclical policies, expanding regulatory coverage, and enhancing supervision, regulation and risk management. The review argues these reforms are necessary to reduce the probability and severity of future financial crises.
This document from the U.S. Department of the Treasury presents recommendations to improve the U.S. financial regulatory structure. It identifies short-term recommendations to improve regulatory coordination in response to events in credit and mortgage markets. Intermediate recommendations aim to modernize regulation of banking, insurance, securities and futures to eliminate duplication. Longer term, the document proposes an "objectives-based" model with three distinct regulators focused on market stability, safety and soundness for institutions with government guarantees, and business conduct regulation. This conceptual model is intended to begin discussion on rethinking the current structure to better promote innovation while enhancing regulation.
This document provides a summary of a Congressional Oversight Panel report on regulatory reform. It discusses lessons from past financial crises, shortcomings of the current regulatory system, and recommendations for improvement. The current crisis should not be a surprise as the regulatory system failed to effectively manage risk, require transparency, or ensure fair dealings. The report recommends identifying and regulating systemic risks, limiting leverage, modernizing shadow market oversight, reforming mortgages and consumer credit, executive pay, credit ratings, establishing global standards, and planning for future crises.
The document discusses concerns about increases in the monetary base and how that money could be removed from the system without harm. It raises the question of how increased monetary base from central bank actions is taken out of the system without negatively impacting the economy. In a few short sentences, it introduces the topic of monetary policy and managing the money supply.
The Basel Committee proposes strengthening global capital and liquidity regulations to promote a more resilient banking sector and reduce risks of spillover from the financial sector to the real economy. Key proposals include raising capital requirements, enhancing risk coverage, introducing a leverage ratio, and addressing procyclicality and systemic risk. The proposals aim to improve the banking sector's ability to absorb shocks from financial stress by increasing quality and consistency of capital, supplementing risk-based requirements with a leverage ratio, and implementing countercyclical buffers and capital conservation measures.
More from ACTUS Foundation for Financial Research (20)
Generating privacy-protected synthetic data using Secludy and MilvusZilliz
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Best 20 SEO Techniques To Improve Website Visibility In SERPPixlogix Infotech
Boost your website's visibility with proven SEO techniques! Our latest blog dives into essential strategies to enhance your online presence, increase traffic, and rank higher on search engines. From keyword optimization to quality content creation, learn how to make your site stand out in the crowded digital landscape. Discover actionable tips and expert insights to elevate your SEO game.
Letter and Document Automation for Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Sol...Jeffrey Haguewood
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This video focuses on automated letter generation for Bonterra Impact Management using Google Workspace or Microsoft 365.
Interested in deploying letter generation automations for Bonterra Impact Management? Contact us at sales@sidekicksolutionsllc.com to discuss next steps.
Introduction of Cybersecurity with OSS at Code Europe 2024Hiroshi SHIBATA
I develop the Ruby programming language, RubyGems, and Bundler, which are package managers for Ruby. Today, I will introduce how to enhance the security of your application using open-source software (OSS) examples from Ruby and RubyGems.
The first topic is CVE (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures). I have published CVEs many times. But what exactly is a CVE? I'll provide a basic understanding of CVEs and explain how to detect and handle vulnerabilities in OSS.
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5th Power Grid Model Meet-up
It is with great pleasure that we extend to you an invitation to the 5th Power Grid Model Meet-up, scheduled for 6th June 2024. This event will adopt a hybrid format, allowing participants to join us either through an online Mircosoft Teams session or in person at TU/e located at Den Dolech 2, Eindhoven, Netherlands. The meet-up will be hosted by Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e), a research university specializing in engineering science & technology.
Power Grid Model
The global energy transition is placing new and unprecedented demands on Distribution System Operators (DSOs). Alongside upgrades to grid capacity, processes such as digitization, capacity optimization, and congestion management are becoming vital for delivering reliable services.
Power Grid Model is an open source project from Linux Foundation Energy and provides a calculation engine that is increasingly essential for DSOs. It offers a standards-based foundation enabling real-time power systems analysis, simulations of electrical power grids, and sophisticated what-if analysis. In addition, it enables in-depth studies and analysis of the electrical power grid’s behavior and performance. This comprehensive model incorporates essential factors such as power generation capacity, electrical losses, voltage levels, power flows, and system stability.
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What to expect
For the upcoming meetup we are organizing, we have an exciting lineup of activities planned:
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-An update on the latest advancements in Power Grid -Model technology during the first and second quarters of 2024.
-An interactive brainstorming session to discuss and propose new feature requests.
-An opportunity to connect with fellow Power Grid Model enthusiasts and users.
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A Comprehensive Guide to DeFi Development Services in 2024Intelisync
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In 2024, we are witnessing an explosion of new DeFi projects and protocols, each pushing the boundaries of what’s possible in finance.
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Ready to take your DeFi project to the next level? Partner with Intelisync for expert DeFi development services today!
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Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift
Overview
Dive into the world of anomaly detection on edge devices with our comprehensive hands-on tutorial. This SlideShare presentation will guide you through the entire process, from data collection and model training to edge deployment and real-time monitoring. Perfect for those looking to implement robust anomaly detection systems on resource-constrained IoT/edge devices.
Key Topics Covered
1. Introduction to Anomaly Detection
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2. Understanding Edge (IoT)
- Learn about edge computing and IoT, and how they enable real-time data processing and decision-making at the source.
3. What is ArgoCD?
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4. Deployment Using ArgoCD for Edge Devices
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5. Introduction to Apache Kafka and S3
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6. Viewing Kafka Messages in the Data Lake
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7. What is Prometheus?
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8. Monitoring Application Metrics with Prometheus
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9. What is Camel K?
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10. Configuring Camel K Integrations for Data Pipelines
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11. What is a Jupyter Notebook?
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12. Jupyter Notebooks with Code Examples
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Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift.pdf
David rowe copyright lessons from the great recession
1. Washington DC, June 1st PRMIA Meeting, Speaker David Rowe,
Location: IBM Facilities (a special thanks to Dr. Rowe and IBM).
Saturday, June 05, 2010
12:25 PM
Unfiled Notes Page 1