A presentation to the Alliance for Permanent Access to the Records of Science on the ongoing work of the Blue Ribbon Task Force on Sustainable Digital Preservation and Access
Describes the access to knowledge policy developed by the Canadian Forest Service (2004): Background, policy statements, guidelines, implications, knowledge asset inventory; publication available
Describes Knowledge Markets as a circular value chain of knowledge services (2006): Background, knowledgemarkets, knowledge services system, application; publication available
Connecting knowledges: interventions aimed at “bridging” different worlds of knowledge
Presentation by Andrew McDevitt, IDS (UK)) at the Locating the Power of the In-Between conference July 08
Sarah Fahmy, of the Strategic Content Alliance, on the challenges faced by library, cultural heritage and other related sectors with the current financial situation.
Looks at the consequences for digital projects at this time, but also shows how these problems can be mitigated.
Tuesday 28 June, W3 - Sector self regulation and improvement - George Garlick lgconf11
This session will focus on the early lessons emerging from the implementation of the sector owned approach to self regulation and improvement – with a particular emphasis on the practicalities and benefits to be gained from sharing and comparing key performance data and the contribution peer challenge and support can make to improvement, in this case in regard to children’s services.
Speakers:
David Simmonds, London Borough of Hillingdon
George Garlick, Chief Executive, Durham County Council
Janette Karklins, Director of Children’s Services, Bracknell Forest Council
Chair: Cllr Jill Shortland, Vice Chair, Improvement Programme Board, LG Group
A presentation to the Alliance for Permanent Access to the Records of Science on the ongoing work of the Blue Ribbon Task Force on Sustainable Digital Preservation and Access
Describes the access to knowledge policy developed by the Canadian Forest Service (2004): Background, policy statements, guidelines, implications, knowledge asset inventory; publication available
Describes Knowledge Markets as a circular value chain of knowledge services (2006): Background, knowledgemarkets, knowledge services system, application; publication available
Connecting knowledges: interventions aimed at “bridging” different worlds of knowledge
Presentation by Andrew McDevitt, IDS (UK)) at the Locating the Power of the In-Between conference July 08
Sarah Fahmy, of the Strategic Content Alliance, on the challenges faced by library, cultural heritage and other related sectors with the current financial situation.
Looks at the consequences for digital projects at this time, but also shows how these problems can be mitigated.
Tuesday 28 June, W3 - Sector self regulation and improvement - George Garlick lgconf11
This session will focus on the early lessons emerging from the implementation of the sector owned approach to self regulation and improvement – with a particular emphasis on the practicalities and benefits to be gained from sharing and comparing key performance data and the contribution peer challenge and support can make to improvement, in this case in regard to children’s services.
Speakers:
David Simmonds, London Borough of Hillingdon
George Garlick, Chief Executive, Durham County Council
Janette Karklins, Director of Children’s Services, Bracknell Forest Council
Chair: Cllr Jill Shortland, Vice Chair, Improvement Programme Board, LG Group
Slides from our UK Kuali Day talk on Building a Community in June 2014. Simon Whittemore and I outline Jisc's new strategic focus, the "co-design" pipeline of new products and services that we are lining up, including our student lifecycle challenge: From Prospect to Alumnus. We also present feedback from event delegates on their interests and priorities, and potential next steps in building and sustaining the nascent UK Kuali community.
According to statistical data from the National Science Foundation, federally and non-federally funded research and development to higher education has been on the decline since 2011. In 2014 all R&D expenditures in higher education topped out at just over $67B. FY2014 contract dollars were $445B, with 64% of that distributed by the Department of Defense. Universities house enormous capabilities and those who have understood the contracting business have done very well. In this presentation we will discuss the opportunities that come from seeking contracts from the federal government. We will explore the establishment of the Alabama A&M Research, Innovation, Science, and Engineering (AAMU-RISE) Foundation and the steps taken to build this R&D contracting operation with a university setting from the ground up. We will discuss the establishment of the Knowledge Sharing Center, created to help other universities learn the steps involved in government contracting. Finally we will discuss the how the fifteen HBCUs that have ABET accredited Engineering programs can work together to benefit from the funding available through contract based R&D.
Measuring the costs and benefits of RDM to supporta a business caseJisc RDM
Graham Hay of Cambridge Econometrics on measuring the costs and benefits of RDM to support a business case for the Research Data Network event in May 2016, Cardiff University.
Phillip Payne summarizes the key points of the CITIH 2011 Conference
Bridging Health IT & Innovation: Next steps in advancing healthcare through shared strengths and strategies.
Denodo DataFest 2017: Succeeding in Self-Service BIDenodo
Watch the live presentation on-demand here: https://goo.gl/VVshFK
Businesses are demanding more autonomy from IT to enable the creation the necessary reports and to perform analysis.
Watch this Denodo DataFest 2017 session to discover:
• How to create an environment that enables self-service
• How to architect an universal semantic model - a common business definition layer that simplifies integration
• Liberating the business users to use any reporting tool
Building Collaborative Health Networks: Pat Terrell”Healthwork
PPT on Building Collaborative Partnerships for the the Regional Health Care Safety Net in Northeastern Illinois. Presented at the Safety Net Summit, June 23, 2009, hosted by Health & Medicine Policy Research Group (HMPRG) and the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)
A recent IIED study on climate finance shows a big gap between total climate funds available and the proportion of that being implemented at local scale. In addition, global spending on conventional agriculture and forestry is manifold the spending on responsible land use practices. The CGIAR program on Forest Trees and Agroforestry studies success factors for inclusive and responsible businesses, which are at the core of both climate finance and responsible investments. It also looks at financial mechanisms that can adequately address the needs of such businesses.
"Clean Air and Urban Landscapes Hub (CAUL)"
Cathy Oke, Knowledge Broker, Clean Air and Urban Landscapes Hub presented an overview of her group as part of the SMART Seminar Series on 24 August 2016.
For more information, visit the event page at: http://smart.uow.edu.au/events/UOW219527.html
Five minute guide to choosing and implementing research management technologyUNIT4 UK
In a recent letter to the Telegraph, signatories from leading global research institutions claim major 20th century scientific breakthroughs would have been crushed under the weight of excessive modern administrative demands.
At UNIT4 we have witnessed the increase in the demands placed on universities in the last few years and this is not limited to the peer preview process refered to in the letter. Complicated funding requirements, the inflexibility of existing systems, the trend towards bigger, more collaborative projects and greater competition for grants have combined to place huge pressure on institutions and the researchers themselves.
There has to be a balance between enforcing quality measures and allowing innovation, finding the right mix will be difficult. Until that time however technology can help make this complex process simpler.
Our five-minute guide to choosing and implementing research management technology has been designed to give you an overview of the challenges and opportunities presented by the new funding landscape.
PPT on Building Collaborative Partnerships for the the Regional Health Care Safety Net in Northeastern Illinois. Presented at the Safety Net Summit, June 23, 2009, hosted by Health & Medicine Policy Research Group (HMPRG) and the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)
"UrbanGrowth NSW Collaborative Learning – Working with Schools, TAFE and Universities"
Nicole Campbell, Manager, Collaborative Learning, UrbanGrowth NSW presented a summary of her research as part of the SMART Seminar Series on 19 August 2016.
For more information, visit the event page at: http://smart.uow.edu.au/events/UOW219790.html.
Peter Hay: Making links with GPs: influencing commissioningThe King's Fund
Peter Hay, President, Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS), looks at the role of integrated commissioning in the new health economy.
This presentation outlines some steps for those new to digital curation (i.e., preserving and providing access to digital collections). This presentation was for the Digital Conversion Interest Group, sponsored by ALCTS-PARS, and was given at the American Library Association Conference in Anaheim, California on June 23, 2012. All content in this presentation is Creative Commons licensed (CC-BY-SA).
Curation and Crisis: Curated Crisis ContentSophia B Liu
In a networked world, we are increasingly inundated with information from online data streams especially from the social web. Curation has increasingly become the buzzword for managing this problem of information overload in the digital age. However, the applications and interpretations of curation by social web users are varied and often stray away from traditional curator roles. I present seven types of curatorial activities (i.e. collecting, organizing, preserving, filtering, crafting a story, displaying, and facilitating discussions) based on the analysis of 100 web artifacts. I introduce the concept, socially-distributed curation, to emphasize the distributed nature of this curatorial process emerging from the social web. Lastly, I present seven case studies to illustrate preliminary examples of curated crisis content for four crises. These findings are to inform future designs and developments of crisis management tools that could benefit from curated crisis content.
Slides from our UK Kuali Day talk on Building a Community in June 2014. Simon Whittemore and I outline Jisc's new strategic focus, the "co-design" pipeline of new products and services that we are lining up, including our student lifecycle challenge: From Prospect to Alumnus. We also present feedback from event delegates on their interests and priorities, and potential next steps in building and sustaining the nascent UK Kuali community.
According to statistical data from the National Science Foundation, federally and non-federally funded research and development to higher education has been on the decline since 2011. In 2014 all R&D expenditures in higher education topped out at just over $67B. FY2014 contract dollars were $445B, with 64% of that distributed by the Department of Defense. Universities house enormous capabilities and those who have understood the contracting business have done very well. In this presentation we will discuss the opportunities that come from seeking contracts from the federal government. We will explore the establishment of the Alabama A&M Research, Innovation, Science, and Engineering (AAMU-RISE) Foundation and the steps taken to build this R&D contracting operation with a university setting from the ground up. We will discuss the establishment of the Knowledge Sharing Center, created to help other universities learn the steps involved in government contracting. Finally we will discuss the how the fifteen HBCUs that have ABET accredited Engineering programs can work together to benefit from the funding available through contract based R&D.
Measuring the costs and benefits of RDM to supporta a business caseJisc RDM
Graham Hay of Cambridge Econometrics on measuring the costs and benefits of RDM to support a business case for the Research Data Network event in May 2016, Cardiff University.
Phillip Payne summarizes the key points of the CITIH 2011 Conference
Bridging Health IT & Innovation: Next steps in advancing healthcare through shared strengths and strategies.
Denodo DataFest 2017: Succeeding in Self-Service BIDenodo
Watch the live presentation on-demand here: https://goo.gl/VVshFK
Businesses are demanding more autonomy from IT to enable the creation the necessary reports and to perform analysis.
Watch this Denodo DataFest 2017 session to discover:
• How to create an environment that enables self-service
• How to architect an universal semantic model - a common business definition layer that simplifies integration
• Liberating the business users to use any reporting tool
Building Collaborative Health Networks: Pat Terrell”Healthwork
PPT on Building Collaborative Partnerships for the the Regional Health Care Safety Net in Northeastern Illinois. Presented at the Safety Net Summit, June 23, 2009, hosted by Health & Medicine Policy Research Group (HMPRG) and the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)
A recent IIED study on climate finance shows a big gap between total climate funds available and the proportion of that being implemented at local scale. In addition, global spending on conventional agriculture and forestry is manifold the spending on responsible land use practices. The CGIAR program on Forest Trees and Agroforestry studies success factors for inclusive and responsible businesses, which are at the core of both climate finance and responsible investments. It also looks at financial mechanisms that can adequately address the needs of such businesses.
"Clean Air and Urban Landscapes Hub (CAUL)"
Cathy Oke, Knowledge Broker, Clean Air and Urban Landscapes Hub presented an overview of her group as part of the SMART Seminar Series on 24 August 2016.
For more information, visit the event page at: http://smart.uow.edu.au/events/UOW219527.html
Five minute guide to choosing and implementing research management technologyUNIT4 UK
In a recent letter to the Telegraph, signatories from leading global research institutions claim major 20th century scientific breakthroughs would have been crushed under the weight of excessive modern administrative demands.
At UNIT4 we have witnessed the increase in the demands placed on universities in the last few years and this is not limited to the peer preview process refered to in the letter. Complicated funding requirements, the inflexibility of existing systems, the trend towards bigger, more collaborative projects and greater competition for grants have combined to place huge pressure on institutions and the researchers themselves.
There has to be a balance between enforcing quality measures and allowing innovation, finding the right mix will be difficult. Until that time however technology can help make this complex process simpler.
Our five-minute guide to choosing and implementing research management technology has been designed to give you an overview of the challenges and opportunities presented by the new funding landscape.
PPT on Building Collaborative Partnerships for the the Regional Health Care Safety Net in Northeastern Illinois. Presented at the Safety Net Summit, June 23, 2009, hosted by Health & Medicine Policy Research Group (HMPRG) and the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)
"UrbanGrowth NSW Collaborative Learning – Working with Schools, TAFE and Universities"
Nicole Campbell, Manager, Collaborative Learning, UrbanGrowth NSW presented a summary of her research as part of the SMART Seminar Series on 19 August 2016.
For more information, visit the event page at: http://smart.uow.edu.au/events/UOW219790.html.
Peter Hay: Making links with GPs: influencing commissioningThe King's Fund
Peter Hay, President, Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS), looks at the role of integrated commissioning in the new health economy.
This presentation outlines some steps for those new to digital curation (i.e., preserving and providing access to digital collections). This presentation was for the Digital Conversion Interest Group, sponsored by ALCTS-PARS, and was given at the American Library Association Conference in Anaheim, California on June 23, 2012. All content in this presentation is Creative Commons licensed (CC-BY-SA).
Curation and Crisis: Curated Crisis ContentSophia B Liu
In a networked world, we are increasingly inundated with information from online data streams especially from the social web. Curation has increasingly become the buzzword for managing this problem of information overload in the digital age. However, the applications and interpretations of curation by social web users are varied and often stray away from traditional curator roles. I present seven types of curatorial activities (i.e. collecting, organizing, preserving, filtering, crafting a story, displaying, and facilitating discussions) based on the analysis of 100 web artifacts. I introduce the concept, socially-distributed curation, to emphasize the distributed nature of this curatorial process emerging from the social web. Lastly, I present seven case studies to illustrate preliminary examples of curated crisis content for four crises. These findings are to inform future designs and developments of crisis management tools that could benefit from curated crisis content.
Presentation at the 2015 CAUL Research Repositories Community Event
In this presentation I outlined the Digital Asset Management System (DAMS) policy framework and the strategy for developing staff capacity around the curation of digital objects. Usually Institutional Repository (IR) requirements are focused on access rather than curating the files. This is why University of Otago Library is developing a DAMS to curate digital objects, using Fedora Commons / Islandora rather than DSpace (currently used for our IR). The biggest challenge with establishing this type of repository is not technical, but about making sure staff become skilled in areas such as the Open Archival Information System (OAIS) reference model. The pilot (Marsden Online Archive https://marsdenarchive.otago.ac.nz/ repository) made accessible the Church Missionary Society letters and journals of the Reverend Samuel Marsden and other nineteenth century missionaries to support the Digital Humanities. The next stage will extend Fedora Commons / Islandora to curate further unique Library collections.
RDAP 15: Data Curation Issues for Electronic Theses and Dissertations at Corn...ASIS&T
Research Data Access and Preservation Summit, 2015
Minneapolis, MN
April 22-23, 2015
Part of "Current Issues and Approaches to Curating Student Research Data"
Dianne Dietrich, Physics and Astronomy Librarian, Cornell University
Wendy Kozlowski, Scientific Data Curation Specialist, Cornell University
The Role of Libraries in Data Management and CurationNicole Vasilevsky
The Role of Libraries in Data Management and Curation, presented at the American Library Association conference in Las Vegas, NV, 07/29/14.
Abstract:
As increasing amounts of data are being generated, applying best practices in handling data is important, and librarians are well poised to assist users. During this session, we will discuss the role of libraries in assisting with data management, application of metadata, ontologies, data standards, and the publication of data in repositories and on the Semantic Web. This talk will describe best data practices and engage the attendees in interactive activities to demonstrate these principles.
Creating Culturally Relevant Discourse Through Digital Curationsuesharma
Engage students in the examination of voice and perspective, through the intentional integration of culturally relevant materials. The digital curation framework provides a guide for teachers as they create, store, share and repurpose instructional materials to support culturally relevant literacy instruction in P-20 classrooms. In this session, discover how digital curation can be utilized to increase positive reader and writer identities while enhancing dialogic discourse. Learn how to transcend classroom silos and create preservation possibilities for your learning community.
A deepening of training needs in digital curationDigCurV
Presentation by Claudia Engelhardt, Goettingen State and University Library at the DigCurV International Conference; Framing the digital curation curriculum
6-7 May, 2013
Florence, Rome
Slide deck from presentation on Oct 8, 2015 at Johns Hopkins University. Topic is Digital Curation in Art Museums: Technology, People, Process. #jhudigcur
LIBER Webinar: 23 Things About Research Data ManagementLIBER Europe
These are the slides for the LIBER Webinar "23 Things About Research Data Management", held on 23 February 2017. A recording of the webinar is available here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HGH6fVHrnKQ
In a recent survey of 1,550 US professionals on the impact of content curation for their business goals, 65% said content curation helped with regards to SEO. Not only that but data from 65M+ pieces of content curated on the Scoop.it platform show that an average of 40% of traffic comes from Google Search.
This presentation explains why and outlines content curation best practices for SEO.
Financing Digital Preservation: Making digital preservation affordable - Valu...Simon Tanner
Simon Tanner will discuss the strategic perspectives towards being able to effectively finance digital preservation. The audience and other stakeholders define the economic factors by which digital information is valued, used and ultimately retained. In looking to finance digital preservation there are a number of different issues to consider including business planning, risk management, possible revenue streams and a clear cost benefit relationship. Simon will explore all these issues and offer a means of developing a cost and benefit justification for digital preservation to help secure the financial underpinning needed to make institutional digital preservation a realistic proposition.
Dr. Katherine Skinner is the Executive Director of the Educopia Institute, a not-for-profit educational organization that builds networks and collaborative communities to help cultural, scientific, and scholarly institutions achieve greater impact. Dr. Skinner, who has a doctorate from Emory University, has co-edited three books and co-authored the landmark “Guidelines for Digital Newspaper Preservation Readiness” with Matt Schultz.
This presentation has a focus on taking a broad perspective on current challenges in digital preservation and on collaborative efforts to address them.
Katherine Skinner - Economics of Digital Preservationdianezorich
Katherine Skinner's presentation on the economics of digital preservation given at MCN 2009 session on "Economics 911: The Economics of Digitizing Cultural Collections"
Slides for talk on Addressing The Limitations Of Open Standards given at Museums & the Web 2007 conference.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/conferences/mw-2007/talk-standards/
Implementing Sustainable Digital Preservationneilgrindley
There has been a lot of investment and activity in digital preservation over the last decade and a lot of it has been supported by grant funded activity and research projects. The ‘learn by doing’ approach and the prodigious number of beta systems and project reports have all played their part in helping to mature the digital preservation field - and judging by the changing tone of conferences over the years, the community has come a long way. So far - in fact - that a lot of organisations are now at the stage when theory is less important than action. They need to work out the best implementation paths and make procurement choices.
So the economic landscape for digital preservation has shifted and the onus is now on many organisations to look closely at their needs and their objectives and to make investment choices that are sustainable as part of the business needs of their organisation rather than as an adjunct activity that is supported by ‘soft’ research money. Work being taken forward by the 4C Project is looking at providing resources to support organisations to make sustainable digital preservation investment choices and this webinar will describe some of that work.
But budgets are hard to secure and digital preservation remains a difficult case to argue so collaboration with like-minded organisations and the establishment of shared services should support the arguments and drive down the cost. This is one of the core messages that underpins the Aligning National Approaches to Digital Preservation (ANADP) initiative and this will also be described and explained during the webinar.
This talk was given as part of the 'Uptake of e-Infrastructure services in the arts and humanities' workshop at KCL on July 6, 2010. The talk described four of the Digital Curation Centre's resources and explored what lessons had been learned through their uptake.
http://www.arts-humanities.net/event/workshop_uptake_e_infrastructure_services_arts_humanities
LIFE3: Predicting Long Term Preservation Costs, by Brian HoleJISC KeepIt project
This presentation describes LIFE, a tool for evaluating and predicting the costs of managing a digital object over its full lifecycle. It was given as part of module 2 of a 5-module course on digital preservation tools for repository managers, presented by the JISC KeepIt project. For more on this and other presentations in this course look for the tag 'KeepIt course' in the project blog http://blogs.ecs.soton.ac.uk/keepit/
LIFE3: Predicting Long Term Preservation Costs, Brian Holeguest128c9a
This presentation describes LIFE, a tool for evaluating and predicting the costs of managing a digital object over its full lifecycle. It was given as part of module 2 of a 5-module course on digital preservation tools for repository managers, presented by the JISC KeepIt project. For more on this and other presentations in this course look for the tag 'KeepIt course' in the project blog http://blogs.ecs.soton.ac.uk/keepit/
UNESCO IFLA ICA Digital Preservation Roadmapneilgrindley
This is the presentation I gave as part of the joint UNESCO, IFLA and ICA initiative to discuss and launch a Roadmap for Digital Preservation. The meeting took place in The Hague 5-6 December 2013 and features some of the work carried out by the EC-funded 4C Project.
Data ecosystems: turning data into public valueSlim Turki, Dr.
Africa Information Highway Live Exchange #Session 7
8 October 2021
The AIH Live Exchange between the Africa Information Highway Team, partners and countries is a free monthly webinar hosted by the African Development Bank to discuss topics related to government data and statistics. This webinar series is the main platform for countries to share their experiences and best practices around open data including using their Open Data Platform of the AIH.
This session is co-organized with the Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology (LIST) which is a mission-driven Research and Technology Organization (RTO) that develops advanced technologies and delivers innovative products and services to industry and society. These innovations can also be used to solve several societal challenges, particularly in the areas of the environment, security, education and culture, sustainable development, as well as the efficient use of resources.
Official statistical data are recognized as high-value datasets for the society and economy, to enrich research, inform decision making or develop new products and services. The use of these authoritative data sources contributes to building a society with more empowered people, better policies, more effective and accountable decision-making, greater participation and stronger democratic mechanisms.
Official statistics are produced to be used and re-used to make an impact on society through a higher degree of openness and transparency while ensuring confidentiality and, at the same time, providing equal access to information to citizens.
The value of data lies in its use and re-use. In this interactive webinar, you will learn new techniques to improve the use and re-use of your statistical data, going beyond the provision logic and adopting the ecosystem mindset. You will:
● Sharpen your capacity at identifying and engaging users and re-users and stakeholders (data ecosystem mapping)?
● Effectively tackle technical and organizational barriers to stimulate data use and re-use?
● Smartly orchestrate a self-sustainable data ecosystem to increase the impact of statistical data.
This session is an opportunity for Regional members countries to '' Sharpen their skills in making data used and re-used by developing an ecosystem mindset to effectively build sustainable community of users around their Open Data Platform thus promoting transparency and better decision-making”
Ipres 2011 The Costs and Economics of Preservationneilgrindley
To introduce and describe some of the work that has been done to help institutions and research groups understand both the costs and the economics of preservation
To describe ongoing phases of JISC-funded work that are attempting to further advance understanding and implement approaches in this area
To give some indication of where collective international effort may be of universal benefit.
The Future for Educational Resource Repositories in a Web 2.0 Worldlisbk
Slides for a talk on "The Future for Educational Resource Repositories in a Web 2.0 World" given by Brian Kelly, UKOLN at an Edspaces workshop held at the University of Southampton on 4 November 2009.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/edspace-2009/
Costs, Policy, and Benefits in Long-term Digital Preservation, by Neil BeagrieJISC KeepIt project
This presentation describes Keeping Research Data Safe (KRDS) a model, method and survey for assessing the institutional costs for managing and looking after research data. It was given as part of module 2 of a 5-module course on digital preservation tools for repository managers, presented by the JISC KeepIt project. For more on this and other presentations in this course look for the tag 'KeepIt course' in the project blog http://blogs.ecs.soton.ac.uk/keepit/
Presentation on the theme 'democratisation of knowledge' to RLUK in December 2010. Open Science, Open Access, Open Data, Research Libraries and research data...
Presentation to the ARROW repositories day, Brisbane, 2008, on suggestions for improving the rate of capture of documents in institutional repositories
Kubernetes & AI - Beauty and the Beast !?! @KCD Istanbul 2024Tobias Schneck
As AI technology is pushing into IT I was wondering myself, as an “infrastructure container kubernetes guy”, how get this fancy AI technology get managed from an infrastructure operational view? Is it possible to apply our lovely cloud native principals as well? What benefit’s both technologies could bring to each other?
Let me take this questions and provide you a short journey through existing deployment models and use cases for AI software. On practical examples, we discuss what cloud/on-premise strategy we may need for applying it to our own infrastructure to get it to work from an enterprise perspective. I want to give an overview about infrastructure requirements and technologies, what could be beneficial or limiting your AI use cases in an enterprise environment. An interactive Demo will give you some insides, what approaches I got already working for real.
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
Generating a custom Ruby SDK for your web service or Rails API using Smithyg2nightmarescribd
Have you ever wanted a Ruby client API to communicate with your web service? Smithy is a protocol-agnostic language for defining services and SDKs. Smithy Ruby is an implementation of Smithy that generates a Ruby SDK using a Smithy model. In this talk, we will explore Smithy and Smithy Ruby to learn how to generate custom feature-rich SDKs that can communicate with any web service, such as a Rails JSON API.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 4DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 4. In this session, we will cover Test Manager overview along with SAP heatmap.
The UiPath Test Manager overview with SAP heatmap webinar offers a concise yet comprehensive exploration of the role of a Test Manager within SAP environments, coupled with the utilization of heatmaps for effective testing strategies.
Participants will gain insights into the responsibilities, challenges, and best practices associated with test management in SAP projects. Additionally, the webinar delves into the significance of heatmaps as a visual aid for identifying testing priorities, areas of risk, and resource allocation within SAP landscapes. Through this session, attendees can expect to enhance their understanding of test management principles while learning practical approaches to optimize testing processes in SAP environments using heatmap visualization techniques
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into SAP testing best practices
2. Heatmap utilization for testing
3. Optimization of testing processes
4. Demo
Topics covered:
Execution from the test manager
Orchestrator execution result
Defect reporting
SAP heatmap example with demo
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey 2024 by 91mobiles.pdf91mobiles
91mobiles recently conducted a Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey in which we asked over 3,000 respondents about the TV they own, aspects they look at on a new TV, and their TV buying preferences.
JMeter webinar - integration with InfluxDB and GrafanaRTTS
Watch this recorded webinar about real-time monitoring of application performance. See how to integrate Apache JMeter, the open-source leader in performance testing, with InfluxDB, the open-source time-series database, and Grafana, the open-source analytics and visualization application.
In this webinar, we will review the benefits of leveraging InfluxDB and Grafana when executing load tests and demonstrate how these tools are used to visualize performance metrics.
Length: 30 minutes
Session Overview
-------------------------------------------
During this webinar, we will cover the following topics while demonstrating the integrations of JMeter, InfluxDB and Grafana:
- What out-of-the-box solutions are available for real-time monitoring JMeter tests?
- What are the benefits of integrating InfluxDB and Grafana into the load testing stack?
- Which features are provided by Grafana?
- Demonstration of InfluxDB and Grafana using a practice web application
To view the webinar recording, go to:
https://www.rttsweb.com/jmeter-integration-webinar
Dev Dives: Train smarter, not harder – active learning and UiPath LLMs for do...UiPathCommunity
💥 Speed, accuracy, and scaling – discover the superpowers of GenAI in action with UiPath Document Understanding and Communications Mining™:
See how to accelerate model training and optimize model performance with active learning
Learn about the latest enhancements to out-of-the-box document processing – with little to no training required
Get an exclusive demo of the new family of UiPath LLMs – GenAI models specialized for processing different types of documents and messages
This is a hands-on session specifically designed for automation developers and AI enthusiasts seeking to enhance their knowledge in leveraging the latest intelligent document processing capabilities offered by UiPath.
Speakers:
👨🏫 Andras Palfi, Senior Product Manager, UiPath
👩🏫 Lenka Dulovicova, Product Program Manager, UiPath
How world-class product teams are winning in the AI era by CEO and Founder, P...
Reference Model for Economically Sustainable Digital Curation
1. Reference Model for Economically Sustainable Digital Curation Brian Lavoie, OCLC Chris Rusbridge, Consultant IDCC11 Workshop Bristol, England 8 December 2011
3. Foundations for progress 15 years ago … Focus on digital preservation as a technical problem OAIS Reference Model Organized problem space and provided foundation for future progress Today … Focus on digital curation as economic/organizational problem Report: “Sustainable Economics for a Digital Planet: Ensuring Long-Term Access to Digital Information” Draft: “Reference Model for Economically Sustainable Digital Curation” Organize problem space, provide foundation for future progress
14. Creator Rights Holder Current Beneficiaries Future Beneficiaries Managing Agency Representatives of the Long-term Public Interest Supply-side Demand-side Lifecycle Management Digital Assets “ Investors” Ecosystem Layer 1: Roles
15. Creator Rights Holder Current Beneficiaries Future Beneficiaries Managing Agency Representatives of the Long-term Public Interest Supply-side Demand-side Lifecycle Management Digital Assets “ Investors” Ecosystem Layer 2: Relationships
16.
17.
18.
19.
20. Reference Model for Economically Sustainable Digital Curation: Tools & Evidence IDCC Workshop Bristol, UK December 8, 2011
21. Theory to practice … Tools to aid in applying reference model concepts & frameworks Development of evidence base of “ worked examples” Reference model: Concepts & frameworks Practical application: Real-world decision-making (sustainability strategy design)
22. Ex: KRDS Benefits Analysis Toolkit KRDS Benefits Framework Value Chain & Benefits Impact Tool Partner case studies User Guides http://beagrie.com/krds-i2s2.php