OSGi -Simplifying the IoT Gateway - Walt Bowersmfrancis
OSGi Community Event 2015
Why do IoT gateways have to be so difficult? Currently the fragmentation, complexity, and potential lock-in of the gateway make picking an IoT gateway solution appear difficult. Add to that developer integration challenges and the gateway picture seems overly complex. Enter OSGi to simplify the development and deployment of the IoT Gateway.</p>
Built on OSGi, Eclipse Kura provides an open platform for developing and deploying IoT gateways. Combining live demonstrations on the Raspberry Pi and Eurotech Reliagate with real world Eurotech use cases, this talk will provide an overview of Kura demonstrating how it leverages OSGi to simplify IoT gateway solutions.
The Right Tools for IoT Developers – Dan Gross @ Eclipse IoT Day ThingMonk 2016Benjamin Cabé
Video available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P8Hk5Ir8fXo
Samsung has introduced the Samsung ARTIK IDE for IoT Developers. This new set of tools is based on Eclipse Che and is designed to make it easy to build, deploy and manage IoT applications. This presentation will demonstrate why creating the right tools for IoT developers make it quicker and easier for IoT application development.
Business and IoT Economic Alchemy or Another Anticlimax - March 2016 - OSGi A...mfrancis
OSGi Alliance presentation at CeBIT IoT Summit from March 2016.
Presented by Dr Richard Nicholson.
From the Environment to Manufacturing, from the Consumer to Education, from Finance to Government, IoT has the potential to transform markets and businesses and almost everything we know today. However, to achieve this change, one must first be cognizant of, and then address, the business and engineering challenges posed by IoT. Business as usual in IT will not deliver the promises of IoT!
This talk will review the fundamental characteristics required for any pervasive IoT solution to achieve this transformation and discuss the central importance of an industry standard for software modularity. These will be compared and contrasted against some of the hot IT trends of the last decade. The presentation will conclude with an overview of the OSGi Alliance and its activities within the IoT, along with industry examples and some opportunities for you to take advantage or and get involved with OSGi.
http://www.cebit.de/event/business-iot-economic-alchemy-or-another-anti-climax/KEY/70812
OSGi Community Event 2014
Abstract:
At the OSGi Community Event 2014 the OSGi Alliance invited you to visit our OSGi IoT stand in the Eclipse IoT playground where we showed a demo of a wind farm using Raspberry Pi’s and an OSGi Cloud plus OSGi based SaaS. People who brought along their Raspberry Pi (B or B+) to the stand had the opportunity to join the demo and turn their Raspberry Pi's into a ‘virtual’ windmill.
We hosted a OSGi Extended Session to explore this demo and launch a hackathon competition. Attendees participated in the OSGi IoT demo, using a Raspberry Pi. Each of them received a microSD card and adapter, kindly contributed by the SD Association (along with SanDisk and Cardwave).
The microSD card included the bootstrap software for each attendee to participate in the demo. After becoming an OSGi-enabled device the Raspberry Pi discovered the OSGi based cloud platform, Paremus Service Fabric, where ProSyst mPRM and a MQTT server were running. A Bitreactive wind farm application was dynamically installed on the OSGi enabled Raspberry Pi from the mPRM in the Cloud. Once installed the Raspberry Pi automatically joined our ‘virtual’ wind farm demo using MQTT.
Having seen the wind farm demo the attendees were given the opportunity to take part in a hackathon to develop new applications to be submitted by close of play the next day. There was a great competition between attendees to develop the best application and win a brand new devolo Home Control starter kit. The winner of the hackathon was Tobiasz Dworak, System and Software Architect at the Research & Engineering Center Sp.z o.o.
The OSGi IoT demo will be reused and extended for future events to include other products and additional applications. Please send us an email if you would like to get involved.
OSGi -Simplifying the IoT Gateway - Walt Bowersmfrancis
OSGi Community Event 2015
Why do IoT gateways have to be so difficult? Currently the fragmentation, complexity, and potential lock-in of the gateway make picking an IoT gateway solution appear difficult. Add to that developer integration challenges and the gateway picture seems overly complex. Enter OSGi to simplify the development and deployment of the IoT Gateway.</p>
Built on OSGi, Eclipse Kura provides an open platform for developing and deploying IoT gateways. Combining live demonstrations on the Raspberry Pi and Eurotech Reliagate with real world Eurotech use cases, this talk will provide an overview of Kura demonstrating how it leverages OSGi to simplify IoT gateway solutions.
The Right Tools for IoT Developers – Dan Gross @ Eclipse IoT Day ThingMonk 2016Benjamin Cabé
Video available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P8Hk5Ir8fXo
Samsung has introduced the Samsung ARTIK IDE for IoT Developers. This new set of tools is based on Eclipse Che and is designed to make it easy to build, deploy and manage IoT applications. This presentation will demonstrate why creating the right tools for IoT developers make it quicker and easier for IoT application development.
Business and IoT Economic Alchemy or Another Anticlimax - March 2016 - OSGi A...mfrancis
OSGi Alliance presentation at CeBIT IoT Summit from March 2016.
Presented by Dr Richard Nicholson.
From the Environment to Manufacturing, from the Consumer to Education, from Finance to Government, IoT has the potential to transform markets and businesses and almost everything we know today. However, to achieve this change, one must first be cognizant of, and then address, the business and engineering challenges posed by IoT. Business as usual in IT will not deliver the promises of IoT!
This talk will review the fundamental characteristics required for any pervasive IoT solution to achieve this transformation and discuss the central importance of an industry standard for software modularity. These will be compared and contrasted against some of the hot IT trends of the last decade. The presentation will conclude with an overview of the OSGi Alliance and its activities within the IoT, along with industry examples and some opportunities for you to take advantage or and get involved with OSGi.
http://www.cebit.de/event/business-iot-economic-alchemy-or-another-anti-climax/KEY/70812
OSGi Community Event 2014
Abstract:
At the OSGi Community Event 2014 the OSGi Alliance invited you to visit our OSGi IoT stand in the Eclipse IoT playground where we showed a demo of a wind farm using Raspberry Pi’s and an OSGi Cloud plus OSGi based SaaS. People who brought along their Raspberry Pi (B or B+) to the stand had the opportunity to join the demo and turn their Raspberry Pi's into a ‘virtual’ windmill.
We hosted a OSGi Extended Session to explore this demo and launch a hackathon competition. Attendees participated in the OSGi IoT demo, using a Raspberry Pi. Each of them received a microSD card and adapter, kindly contributed by the SD Association (along with SanDisk and Cardwave).
The microSD card included the bootstrap software for each attendee to participate in the demo. After becoming an OSGi-enabled device the Raspberry Pi discovered the OSGi based cloud platform, Paremus Service Fabric, where ProSyst mPRM and a MQTT server were running. A Bitreactive wind farm application was dynamically installed on the OSGi enabled Raspberry Pi from the mPRM in the Cloud. Once installed the Raspberry Pi automatically joined our ‘virtual’ wind farm demo using MQTT.
Having seen the wind farm demo the attendees were given the opportunity to take part in a hackathon to develop new applications to be submitted by close of play the next day. There was a great competition between attendees to develop the best application and win a brand new devolo Home Control starter kit. The winner of the hackathon was Tobiasz Dworak, System and Software Architect at the Research & Engineering Center Sp.z o.o.
The OSGi IoT demo will be reused and extended for future events to include other products and additional applications. Please send us an email if you would like to get involved.
When Experimental and Computational Research Meet: The Participatory Extensio...Richard Oliver Legendi
Abstract: Experimental and computational research is gaining more and more interest in the last decades in the field of social science and economics. Conducting laboratory experiments and incorporating heterogeneity within agent-based models help us get a better understanding of the analyzed phenomena and the micro-macro rules driving them by taking the human factor into account -- either directly or through stylized personal preferences.
Our contribution is a new tool called the Participatory Extension Module v2.0 which is intended to help scientists conducting mixed-method research (i.e., perform experimental research using existing agent-based models). It is an improved version of the original PET [1], a robust and generic web framework that allows modellers to extend their models to participatory simulations. It is a set of web applications that incorporates agent-based simulations into a web interface compatible with any of the major web browsers, enabling users to administrate, run and participate in simulations in a way that they are familiar with, applying the mechanisms and practices they use every day while browsing web-pages and using other web-based applications.
Applications of PET v2.0 may include online case studies for demonstrative and teaching purposes, or the conduct of lab experiments for behavioural studies of a model. The presentation includes a hands-on live demo of the features of the framework using a widely known model.
[1] Ivanyi, Marton, Rajmund Bocsi, Laszlo Gulyas, Vilmos Kozma and Richard
Legendi. "The multi-agent simulation suite." In Emergent Agents and
Socialities: Social and Organizational Aspects of Intelligence. Papers from
the 2007 AAAI Fall Symposium, pp. 57-64. 2007.
Leveraging the Crowd: Supporting Newcomers to Build an OSS CommunityMarco Aurelio Gerosa
Keynote delivered at the Paris Workshop at the International Conference on Global Software Engineering
Abstract:
Open Source Software is an important economic driving force. Companies are aware of the benefits and are adopting OSS as a strategy, opening their source code. However, fostering an OSS developer community is challenging. Newcomers to OSS projects face many technical and social barriers and commonly drop out before making their first contribution. In this keynote, I will talk about how companies are opening their code, the barriers newcomers face to join OSS projects, and FLOSSCoach, a tool we developed to support newcomers first steps.
Bio:
Marco Aurélio Gerosa is an Associate Professor in the Computer Science Department at the University of São Paulo, Brazil. His research lies in the intersection between Software Engineering and Social Computing, focusing on the fields of empirical software engineering, mining software repositories, software evolution, and social dimensions of software development. He has published more than 150 peer-reviewed papers. He served as Program Chair at ICGSE 2016 and PC member in several conferences, such as ACM CSCW, SANER, MSR, etc. In addition to his research, he also coordinates award-winning open source projects. For more information, visit http://www.ime.usp.br/~gerosa.
Europeana Cloud Work Package 1: Assessing Researchers' Needs in the CloudTU Delft, Netherlands
A presentation given about Work Package 1 of the Europeana Cloud project http://pro.europeana.eu/web/europeana-cloud
By Agiatis Bernadou and Alastair Dunning
Given at http://dighumlab.dk/news/single-news/artikel/cfp-cultural-heritage-creative-tools-and-archives-workshop/, June 2013
GIS Day 2015: Geoinformatics, Open Source and Videos - a library perspectivePeter Löwe
Digital audiovisual content has become an important communication channel in Science. The TIB|AV-Portal for audiovisual scientific-technical information meets the requirements to preserve such content and to provide innovative services for search and retrieval. Quality checked audiovisual content from Open Source Geoinformatics communities is constantly being acquired for the portal as a part of TIB's mission to preserve relevant content in applied computer sciences for science, industry, and the general public.
Science Demonstrator Session: Social and Earth SciencesEOSCpilot .eu
The main focus of Science Demonstrator sessions is to provide feedback to the EOSC community on the first experience of science demonstrators in the practical use of the emerging EOSC ecosystem.
Each panel will consist of a representative of a Science Demonstrator that will provide an overview of their experiences in the use of emerging EOSC services.
These sessions will help members of the scientific communities understanding the current state of maturity of the EOSC ecosystem and what is obtainable in a field of scientific research. It is also valuable to prospective Service Providers who wish to discover what are the challenges and opportunities that user communities might have to deal with, as a result of the adoption of their services.
This session will focus on Social and Earth Sciences.
The IoT Methodology aims to provide a loosely structured ecosystem of mutual value for all who participate, driven by sharing, collaboration, community and learning. An ecosystem made up of tools, design patterns, architecture references and guidelines to build IoT solutions.
In the spirit of the World Wide Web and Open Source communities across the globe, a new collaborative effort must be taken to make the Internet of Things a reality.
It’s alive, it grows, it expands, it has no end date or budget restriction.
UK e-Infrastructure: Widening Access, Increasing ParticipationNeil Chue Hong
A talk given at the ICHEC Annual Seminar by Neil Chue Hong, reflecting on the rise of Grid and Web 2.0, and how this might enable increased participation and use of computing infrastructure for e-Science and research.
Cloud Computing Needs for Earth Observation Data Analysis: EGI and EOSC-hubBjörn Backeberg
This presentation was given during the Japan Geosciences Union 2019. Session details can be found at http://www.jpgu.org/meeting_e2019/SessionList_en/detail/M-GI31.htm
ICT research in the context of European Union
CASE SUMMER SCHOOL ON APPLIED SOFTWARE ENGINEERING
APPLIED SOFTWARE PROCESS MANAGEMENT AND TESTING
JULY 6-10, 2009, BOZEN/BOLZANO, ITALY
Data Science: History repeated? – The heritage of the Free and Open Source GI...Peter Löwe
Data Science is described as the process of knowledge extraction from large data sets by means of scientific
methods. The discipline draws heavily from techniques and theories from many fields, which are jointly used to
furthermore develop information retrieval on structured or unstructured very large datasets. While the term Data
Science was already coined in 1960, the current perception of this field places is still in the first section of the hype cycle according to Gartner, being well en route from the technology trigger stage to the peak of inflated
expectations.
In our view the future development of Data Science could benefit from the analysis of experiences from
related evolutionary processes. One predecessor is the area of Geographic Information Systems (GIS). The
intrinsic scope of GIS is the integration and storage of spatial information from often heterogeneous sources, data
analysis, sharing of reconstructed or aggregated results in visual form or via data transfer. GIS is successfully
applied to process and analyse spatially referenced content in a wide and still expanding range of science
areas, spanning from human and social sciences like archeology, politics and architecture to environmental and
geoscientific applications, even including planetology.
This paper presents proven patterns for innovation and organisation derived from the evolution of GIS,
which can be ported to Data Science. Within the GIS landscape, three strategic interacting tiers can be denoted: i) Standardisation, ii) applications based on closed-source software, without the option of access to and analysis of the implemented algorithms, and iii) Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) based on freely accessible program code enabling analysis, education and ,improvement by everyone. This paper focuses on patterns gained from the synthesis of three decades of FOSS development. We identified best-practices which evolved from long term FOSS projects, describe the role of community-driven global umbrella organisations such as OSGeo, as well as the standardization of innovative services. The main driver is the acknowledgement of a meritocratic attitude.
These patterns follow evolutionary processes of establishing and maintaining a web-based democratic culture
spawning new kinds of communication and projects. This culture transcends the established compartmentation and
stratification of science by creating mutual benefits for the participants, irrespective of their respective research
interest and standing. Adopting these best practices will enable
Presentation to the Eclipse community of Berlin of an artistic exhibition event happening in July 2017 in Berlin. The different artistic projects should be based on the IoT technologies involved in the AGILE-IoT project.
Designing for Privacy in Amazon Web ServicesKrzysztofKkol1
Data privacy is one of the most critical issues that businesses face. This presentation shares insights on the principles and best practices for ensuring the resilience and security of your workload.
Drawing on a real-life project from the HR industry, the various challenges will be demonstrated: data protection, self-healing, business continuity, security, and transparency of data processing. This systematized approach allowed to create a secure AWS cloud infrastructure that not only met strict compliance rules but also exceeded the client's expectations.
Why React Native as a Strategic Advantage for Startup Innovation.pdfayushiqss
Do you know that React Native is being increasingly adopted by startups as well as big companies in the mobile app development industry? Big names like Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest have already integrated this robust open-source framework.
In fact, according to a report by Statista, the number of React Native developers has been steadily increasing over the years, reaching an estimated 1.9 million by the end of 2024. This means that the demand for this framework in the job market has been growing making it a valuable skill.
But what makes React Native so popular for mobile application development? It offers excellent cross-platform capabilities among other benefits. This way, with React Native, developers can write code once and run it on both iOS and Android devices thus saving time and resources leading to shorter development cycles hence faster time-to-market for your app.
Let’s take the example of a startup, which wanted to release their app on both iOS and Android at once. Through the use of React Native they managed to create an app and bring it into the market within a very short period. This helped them gain an advantage over their competitors because they had access to a large user base who were able to generate revenue quickly for them.
Exploring Innovations in Data Repository Solutions - Insights from the U.S. G...Globus
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has made substantial investments in meeting evolving scientific, technical, and policy driven demands on storing, managing, and delivering data. As these demands continue to grow in complexity and scale, the USGS must continue to explore innovative solutions to improve its management, curation, sharing, delivering, and preservation approaches for large-scale research data. Supporting these needs, the USGS has partnered with the University of Chicago-Globus to research and develop advanced repository components and workflows leveraging its current investment in Globus. The primary outcome of this partnership includes the development of a prototype enterprise repository, driven by USGS Data Release requirements, through exploration and implementation of the entire suite of the Globus platform offerings, including Globus Flow, Globus Auth, Globus Transfer, and Globus Search. This presentation will provide insights into this research partnership, introduce the unique requirements and challenges being addressed and provide relevant project progress.
We describe the deployment and use of Globus Compute for remote computation. This content is aimed at researchers who wish to compute on remote resources using a unified programming interface, as well as system administrators who will deploy and operate Globus Compute services on their research computing infrastructure.
Check out the webinar slides to learn more about how XfilesPro transforms Salesforce document management by leveraging its world-class applications. For more details, please connect with sales@xfilespro.com
If you want to watch the on-demand webinar, please click here: https://www.xfilespro.com/webinars/salesforce-document-management-2-0-smarter-faster-better/
How Recreation Management Software Can Streamline Your Operations.pptxwottaspaceseo
Recreation management software streamlines operations by automating key tasks such as scheduling, registration, and payment processing, reducing manual workload and errors. It provides centralized management of facilities, classes, and events, ensuring efficient resource allocation and facility usage. The software offers user-friendly online portals for easy access to bookings and program information, enhancing customer experience. Real-time reporting and data analytics deliver insights into attendance and preferences, aiding in strategic decision-making. Additionally, effective communication tools keep participants and staff informed with timely updates. Overall, recreation management software enhances efficiency, improves service delivery, and boosts customer satisfaction.
Innovating Inference - Remote Triggering of Large Language Models on HPC Clus...Globus
Large Language Models (LLMs) are currently the center of attention in the tech world, particularly for their potential to advance research. In this presentation, we'll explore a straightforward and effective method for quickly initiating inference runs on supercomputers using the vLLM tool with Globus Compute, specifically on the Polaris system at ALCF. We'll begin by briefly discussing the popularity and applications of LLMs in various fields. Following this, we will introduce the vLLM tool, and explain how it integrates with Globus Compute to efficiently manage LLM operations on Polaris. Attendees will learn the practical aspects of setting up and remotely triggering LLMs from local machines, focusing on ease of use and efficiency. This talk is ideal for researchers and practitioners looking to leverage the power of LLMs in their work, offering a clear guide to harnessing supercomputing resources for quick and effective LLM inference.
Advanced Flow Concepts Every Developer Should KnowPeter Caitens
Tim Combridge from Sensible Giraffe and Salesforce Ben presents some important tips that all developers should know when dealing with Flows in Salesforce.
Into the Box Keynote Day 2: Unveiling amazing updates and announcements for modern CFML developers! Get ready for exciting releases and updates on Ortus tools and products. Stay tuned for cutting-edge innovations designed to boost your productivity.
Accelerate Enterprise Software Engineering with PlatformlessWSO2
Key takeaways:
Challenges of building platforms and the benefits of platformless.
Key principles of platformless, including API-first, cloud-native middleware, platform engineering, and developer experience.
How Choreo enables the platformless experience.
How key concepts like application architecture, domain-driven design, zero trust, and cell-based architecture are inherently a part of Choreo.
Demo of an end-to-end app built and deployed on Choreo.
top nidhi software solution freedownloadvrstrong314
This presentation emphasizes the importance of data security and legal compliance for Nidhi companies in India. It highlights how online Nidhi software solutions, like Vector Nidhi Software, offer advanced features tailored to these needs. Key aspects include encryption, access controls, and audit trails to ensure data security. The software complies with regulatory guidelines from the MCA and RBI and adheres to Nidhi Rules, 2014. With customizable, user-friendly interfaces and real-time features, these Nidhi software solutions enhance efficiency, support growth, and provide exceptional member services. The presentation concludes with contact information for further inquiries.
Globus Compute wth IRI Workflows - GlobusWorld 2024Globus
As part of the DOE Integrated Research Infrastructure (IRI) program, NERSC at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab and ALCF at Argonne National Lab are working closely with General Atomics on accelerating the computing requirements of the DIII-D experiment. As part of the work the team is investigating ways to speedup the time to solution for many different parts of the DIII-D workflow including how they run jobs on HPC systems. One of these routes is looking at Globus Compute as a way to replace the current method for managing tasks and we describe a brief proof of concept showing how Globus Compute could help to schedule jobs and be a tool to connect compute at different facilities.
In software engineering, the right architecture is essential for robust, scalable platforms. Wix has undergone a pivotal shift from event sourcing to a CRUD-based model for its microservices. This talk will chart the course of this pivotal journey.
Event sourcing, which records state changes as immutable events, provided robust auditing and "time travel" debugging for Wix Stores' microservices. Despite its benefits, the complexity it introduced in state management slowed development. Wix responded by adopting a simpler, unified CRUD model. This talk will explore the challenges of event sourcing and the advantages of Wix's new "CRUD on steroids" approach, which streamlines API integration and domain event management while preserving data integrity and system resilience.
Participants will gain valuable insights into Wix's strategies for ensuring atomicity in database updates and event production, as well as caching, materialization, and performance optimization techniques within a distributed system.
Join us to discover how Wix has mastered the art of balancing simplicity and extensibility, and learn how the re-adoption of the modest CRUD has turbocharged their development velocity, resilience, and scalability in a high-growth environment.
How to Position Your Globus Data Portal for Success Ten Good PracticesGlobus
Science gateways allow science and engineering communities to access shared data, software, computing services, and instruments. Science gateways have gained a lot of traction in the last twenty years, as evidenced by projects such as the Science Gateways Community Institute (SGCI) and the Center of Excellence on Science Gateways (SGX3) in the US, The Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) and its platforms in Australia, and the projects around Virtual Research Environments in Europe. A few mature frameworks have evolved with their different strengths and foci and have been taken up by a larger community such as the Globus Data Portal, Hubzero, Tapis, and Galaxy. However, even when gateways are built on successful frameworks, they continue to face the challenges of ongoing maintenance costs and how to meet the ever-expanding needs of the community they serve with enhanced features. It is not uncommon that gateways with compelling use cases are nonetheless unable to get past the prototype phase and become a full production service, or if they do, they don't survive more than a couple of years. While there is no guaranteed pathway to success, it seems likely that for any gateway there is a need for a strong community and/or solid funding streams to create and sustain its success. With over twenty years of examples to draw from, this presentation goes into detail for ten factors common to successful and enduring gateways that effectively serve as best practices for any new or developing gateway.
Large Language Models and the End of ProgrammingMatt Welsh
Talk by Matt Welsh at Craft Conference 2024 on the impact that Large Language Models will have on the future of software development. In this talk, I discuss the ways in which LLMs will impact the software industry, from replacing human software developers with AI, to replacing conventional software with models that perform reasoning, computation, and problem-solving.
Code reviews are vital for ensuring good code quality. They serve as one of our last lines of defense against bugs and subpar code reaching production.
Yet, they often turn into annoying tasks riddled with frustration, hostility, unclear feedback and lack of standards. How can we improve this crucial process?
In this session we will cover:
- The Art of Effective Code Reviews
- Streamlining the Review Process
- Elevating Reviews with Automated Tools
By the end of this presentation, you'll have the knowledge on how to organize and improve your code review proces
Multiple Your Crypto Portfolio with the Innovative Features of Advanced Crypt...Hivelance Technology
Cryptocurrency trading bots are computer programs designed to automate buying, selling, and managing cryptocurrency transactions. These bots utilize advanced algorithms and machine learning techniques to analyze market data, identify trading opportunities, and execute trades on behalf of their users. By automating the decision-making process, crypto trading bots can react to market changes faster than human traders
Hivelance, a leading provider of cryptocurrency trading bot development services, stands out as the premier choice for crypto traders and developers. Hivelance boasts a team of seasoned cryptocurrency experts and software engineers who deeply understand the crypto market and the latest trends in automated trading, Hivelance leverages the latest technologies and tools in the industry, including advanced AI and machine learning algorithms, to create highly efficient and adaptable crypto trading bots
In 2015, I used to write extensions for Joomla, WordPress, phpBB3, etc and I ...Juraj Vysvader
In 2015, I used to write extensions for Joomla, WordPress, phpBB3, etc and I didn't get rich from it but it did have 63K downloads (powered possible tens of thousands of websites).
Gamify Your Mind; The Secret Sauce to Delivering Success, Continuously Improv...Shahin Sheidaei
Games are powerful teaching tools, fostering hands-on engagement and fun. But they require careful consideration to succeed. Join me to explore factors in running and selecting games, ensuring they serve as effective teaching tools. Learn to maintain focus on learning objectives while playing, and how to measure the ROI of gaming in education. Discover strategies for pitching gaming to leadership. This session offers insights, tips, and examples for coaches, team leads, and enterprise leaders seeking to teach from simple to complex concepts.
Gamify Your Mind; The Secret Sauce to Delivering Success, Continuously Improv...
Dissemination and Community Building
1. AGILE M18 Review, 20 October 2017, Brussels (Belgium)
WP7 - Dissemination
& Community Building
DR. PHILIPPE KRIEF/ ECLIPSE FOUNDATION EUROPE
1
2. Outline
Dissemination Activity status (vs. previous review)
• Scientific Papers Published
• Social Media Activity
Community Building
• Partnerships
• Eclipse Project Status
• Open Call #1 Dissemination
Adaptation: When Art meets IoT (Berlin, July 2017)
4. Scientific Papers
October 2016: 3 Scientific papers published
October 2017: +9 new Scientific papers published
Human Computation for Constraint-based Recommenders (JIIS)
Human Interaction with Artificial Advice Givers (ACM)
Recommender Systems for Health Informatics: State-of-the-Art and Future
Perspectives (LNCS)
Analysis of Product Modelling Techniques for Product Configuration Systems in
Industrial Companies (IEEE)
Cluster-Specific Heuristics for Constraint Solving (IEA-AIE)
A Versatile Architecture for Building IoT Quantified-Self Applications (CBMS)
Recommendation Technologies for IoT Edge Devices (IoTNAT)
Cluster-Based Constraint Ordering for Direct Diagnosis (19th Configuration Workshop)
ASP-based Knowledge Representations for IoT Configuration Scenarios (19th
Configuration Workshop)
5. Social Media activity
SlideShare
+2 presentations (39 in Oct. 2016)
+ 6.775 views (7.471 views in Oct. 2016)
+316 download (229 downloads in Oct. 2016)
29 followers (N/A last year)
Twitter
+341 followers (416 in Oct. 2016)
+203 tweets (290 in Oct. 2016)
MailChimp
+196 subscribers (74 in Oct. 2016)
+5 newsletters (1 in Oct. 2016)
5
6. Other Dissemination Assets
Blog Posts
+28 articles (25 in Oct. 2016)
Wiki Page
+17 pages (0 in Oct. 2016)
Including First Getting Started
YouTube
+4 videos (2 in Oct. 2016)
6
9. Partnership with:
IPDB Foundation
The IPDB foundation that is behind the
BigChainDB decentralized database.
Use the BigChainDB to allow AGILE users to
store their personal IoT data in a
decentralized way.
They have agreed to give AGILE users early
beta access to the network and also help us
implement the connectors (APIs, etc) to the
database.
The relationship is maintained
a Public Database for the Planet
10. Partnership with:
Red Hat
• Initial contact initiated
• RedHat is an Eclipse Foundation strategic member
• The R&D department is looking for research projects to join
• They are interested in IoT projects
• They are interested in the AGILE project agnostic approach
10
13. Eclipse Open Source project status
Provide an Open Source platform hosted by the Eclipse Foundation, inside
the Eclipse IoT Working Group. This task will coordinate and contribute to
the creation and development of the open source community.
First year is dedicated:
To the formalization of the perimeter of the open source platform including
connections with other existing open source projects,
To create the AGILE open source project to publish the initial contribution.
Trademark Transfer or new Name creation: Eclipse AGAIL
Initial contribution
Intellectual Property review
The remaining time of the project will be dedicated:
• to publish new component,
• to improve the existing components and
• to grow the community through the project.
13
Pre-
Proposal
Proposal
Incubation
Mature
Archived
Declaration
Creation
Review
Graduation
Review
Termination
Review
Release
Review
Release
Review
We are
here !
All the necessary actions to prepare for long term sustainability of the AGILE project
(including best practices for build and test, …) will be also be addressed and coordinated.
18. Adaptation competition
Adaptation was a competition and an event aimed at envisioning the
interstices of art and technology, utilizing the Internet of Things.
The event was scheduled to take place in Berlin, Germany during the
summer of 2017.
Artists were invited to submit their proposal for one of the four
different categories of the competition:
Quantified Self supported by BioAssist
Interactive Spaces supported by Atos – Worldline
Environment & Data supported by FBK – Create-Net
Smart Cities supported by Libelium
19. Adaptation Schedule
Jul. 2016
GET-D Project presentation,
Art + Data workshop.
Applications open.
Sep. 2016 Q&A Hangout
Nov. 2016 Q&A Hangout
Dec. 2016 Applications close
Jan. 2016
Winners announced.
Pairing up artists with partners support.
Jul. 2017 Exhibition – 300 attendees
Oct. 2017 EclipseCon Europe – 600 attendees
19
6 months Competition:
37 proposals:
Quantified Self: 8
Interactive Spaces: 21
Environment & Data: 3
Smart Cities: 5
4 artists selected
6 months Implementation
3 days Exhibition in Berlin
2 days EclipseCon Europe in Ludwigsburg
30. AGILE Community Website by Sessions
30
Open Call #1 Launched
Adaptation Videos
Published
IoT Survey – RFC 2017
Open Call #1
Announced
31. AGILE Community Website by Page
31
1. Who we are
2. The Open Call
3. Keywords like
• MicroServices,
• Adaptation event,
• Kura
People are interested by
34. AGENDA
34
9.00 Start
15min Brief intro (recap of previous episodes, main architecture / achievements in a nutshell) — Raffaele
9.15 (30min) IoT Hardware innovation: the Industrial and Maker's hardware gateway (roughly WP1) —
Paolo (Ramon?)
9.45 (45min) Enabling rapid prototyping: AGILE gateway, device, protocol mgmt, software release, packaged
components (roughly WP2+WP3) — Georgios + Csaba
10.30 (10min) Coffee Break
10.40 (20min) AGILE Development Environment, demo — Csaba (WP3)
11.00 (30min) AGILE Research, brief results overview: recommender and configuration + security —
Alexander/Seda + Juan David (recommender and WP5)
11.30 (60min) IoT and Cloud services interactions (including demo) — Roman (WP4)
12.30 lunch (1.5hr - can be shortened in case of time constraints)
14.00 restart
14.00 (90min) AGILE Pilots (focus on use of AGILE architecture in pilots and on what innovation potential
came out of those) — Andreas (+ Pilot leaders) (WP8)
15.30 (20min) innovations radar — Jonas
15.50 (10min) Coffee Break
16.00 (20min) impact, open calls and external collaboration — Johnny (WP6)
16.20 (20min) partnership and dissemination — Philippe (WP7)
16.40 (30min) Administrative / financial — Margherita (WP9)
17.10 (35min) reviewers / PO debriefing
17.45 (15min) PO to present main conclusions / first feedback
18.00 end (can be extended until 18.30 at the latest in case of overrunning the schedule)
Editor's Notes
41
“E-Camera” is communicating with biometric sensors that are attached to the photographer’s body. These sensors measure the photographer’s heart rate, body-temperature and galvanic value when taking a picture.
All of these data strongly reflect the photographer’s emotions.
The use of “E-Camera” enables the photographer to reflect on her emotions and to actively embody them into the creative process of photography.
Floral Automaton is a sculptural device that grows flowers digitally. Using various sensors taken from Smart Cities technologies, it reacts and adapts itself to its environment in real time. Sensors are instruments that translate chemical or mechanical stimuli such as light, temperature, gas concentration, speed and vibration across analog and digital sensors into electrical resistors and voltage signal.
Floral Automaton explores the implications when environments become programmable and are made to be operational through sensor technologies. The information collected by the device becomes a material to mimic biological processes and question the authenticity of our surroundings.
The Fountains installation draws on open data sets of water pollution selected from specific locations around the globe to create data visualizations that transform the 3D scanned, virtual skin surfaces of people’s bodies to reflect the quality of their local water sources.
The installation features audio recordings of interviews of people adversely affected by water pollution, as well as people living with fair water conditions.
“Still touchable?” explores our relationships to information. The physical relationships we had with the media, such as letters, postcards, newspapers, CD, which started to disappear as the touch, feel, memories and emotions we had with them are disappearing.
Encountering this paradox of existence, we invite people to reflect on our physical relationship to the information: Who replaced our bookstores, record shop and post offices? And how? Can we recuperate our physical relationships with the information nowadays? Can they still be tangible and interactable?