History and Future of the European Network on Archival Cooperation and its role as a participant in the sustainable interlinking between European archives.
The document outlines a proposed project called ENArC that aims to expand the existing archival network in Europe and increase access to archival materials through digitization. The project would be led by a consortium of 14 partners from 10 countries over 4.5 years with a total budget of 4.5 million Euros, half of which would be requested from the EU. Key activities of the project include networking to expand the partner group, national workshops, an expert exchange program, training programs, digitization of archival collections, IT development, scientific sub-projects, and public lectures on archives and technology.
nestor is a German cooperative project funded by the German Ministry of Education and Research to establish expertise and support long-term preservation of digital resources. It aims to raise awareness, trigger synergies between ongoing activities in Germany, and establish standards and best practices. nestor has partner institutions from libraries, archives, and museums, and has working groups focused on topics like trusted repositories, media formats, and standardization. It provides training, publications, and collaborates with other international projects.
The DETECt project investigates how crime narratives from various European countries have contributed to the emergence of a plural, transcultural European identity from 1989 to the present. The project is coordinated by the University of Bologna and involves nine academic partners and six stakeholders. It examines the transnational circulation of European crime narratives through their production, representation, and reception. Key research areas include the history and theory of the crime genre, representing European history, and the strategies of producing and distributing European crime narratives. The project aims to advance knowledge of cultural Europeanization and provide educational resources through workshops, publications, and an online portal.
Presentation of the Municipal and state archives of Vienna by Brigitte Rigele at the workshop "Österreichische Archive in Europa", 17th & 18th of October 2012 in the Austrian State Archives in Vienna
The document discusses the Digital Curator Vocational Education Europe (DigCurV) project. It aims to support and extend vocational training for digital curators in libraries, archives, and museums across Europe. The project will identify existing training opportunities and needs, develop an initial curriculum framework, and disseminate results to promote its use within and between countries. It will also help develop an international community of practice for digital curation training.
Review of the Working Internationally for Libraries Programme in a presentation to the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Libraries, Information and Knowledge on 30 November 2021
The document summarizes the tasks and targets of the Bundesministerium für Unterricht, Kunst und Kultur (BM:UKK) Department for IT Systems for Educational Purposes in Austria. The department plans IT infrastructure for schools, supports educational technology initiatives, and coordinates projects like the Virtual School Austria platform. The Virtual School Austria provides online educational resources and aims to increase quality e-content for teachers through collaborations with other organizations.
The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated or made more visible many known inequalities across borders and societies. This includes access to archaeological resources, both physical and digital. As both the creators and users of archaeological data adapted to working from their homes, cut off from artefact collections and research data siloed within organisations and institutions, the importance of making data freely and openly
available internationally became even more pronounced. The ARIADNE infrastructure (ariadne-infrastructure.eu) for archaeological data, and the SEADDA COST Action
(seadda.eu) are working to secure the sustainable future of archaeological data across Europe and beyond, in ways that are Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Re-usable (FAIR). Experience within the ARIADNE partnership during the pandemic was largely positive, with many partners able to carry on as usual with accessing their digital resources, emphasising what is possible, while also emphasising what is not achievable
across archaeology, due to lack of capacity. ARIADNE and SEADDA invite papers discussing the challenges, opportunities and lessons learned across all aspects of archaeological data management during the pandemic, and how it may change and
inform our best practice going forward. We particularly invite papers from outside of Western Europe on how the COVID-19 pandemic created barriers or opportunities for accessing archaeological resources, so that we may better understand capacity building during a post-COVID era.
The document outlines a proposed project called ENArC that aims to expand the existing archival network in Europe and increase access to archival materials through digitization. The project would be led by a consortium of 14 partners from 10 countries over 4.5 years with a total budget of 4.5 million Euros, half of which would be requested from the EU. Key activities of the project include networking to expand the partner group, national workshops, an expert exchange program, training programs, digitization of archival collections, IT development, scientific sub-projects, and public lectures on archives and technology.
nestor is a German cooperative project funded by the German Ministry of Education and Research to establish expertise and support long-term preservation of digital resources. It aims to raise awareness, trigger synergies between ongoing activities in Germany, and establish standards and best practices. nestor has partner institutions from libraries, archives, and museums, and has working groups focused on topics like trusted repositories, media formats, and standardization. It provides training, publications, and collaborates with other international projects.
The DETECt project investigates how crime narratives from various European countries have contributed to the emergence of a plural, transcultural European identity from 1989 to the present. The project is coordinated by the University of Bologna and involves nine academic partners and six stakeholders. It examines the transnational circulation of European crime narratives through their production, representation, and reception. Key research areas include the history and theory of the crime genre, representing European history, and the strategies of producing and distributing European crime narratives. The project aims to advance knowledge of cultural Europeanization and provide educational resources through workshops, publications, and an online portal.
Presentation of the Municipal and state archives of Vienna by Brigitte Rigele at the workshop "Österreichische Archive in Europa", 17th & 18th of October 2012 in the Austrian State Archives in Vienna
The document discusses the Digital Curator Vocational Education Europe (DigCurV) project. It aims to support and extend vocational training for digital curators in libraries, archives, and museums across Europe. The project will identify existing training opportunities and needs, develop an initial curriculum framework, and disseminate results to promote its use within and between countries. It will also help develop an international community of practice for digital curation training.
Review of the Working Internationally for Libraries Programme in a presentation to the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Libraries, Information and Knowledge on 30 November 2021
The document summarizes the tasks and targets of the Bundesministerium für Unterricht, Kunst und Kultur (BM:UKK) Department for IT Systems for Educational Purposes in Austria. The department plans IT infrastructure for schools, supports educational technology initiatives, and coordinates projects like the Virtual School Austria platform. The Virtual School Austria provides online educational resources and aims to increase quality e-content for teachers through collaborations with other organizations.
The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated or made more visible many known inequalities across borders and societies. This includes access to archaeological resources, both physical and digital. As both the creators and users of archaeological data adapted to working from their homes, cut off from artefact collections and research data siloed within organisations and institutions, the importance of making data freely and openly
available internationally became even more pronounced. The ARIADNE infrastructure (ariadne-infrastructure.eu) for archaeological data, and the SEADDA COST Action
(seadda.eu) are working to secure the sustainable future of archaeological data across Europe and beyond, in ways that are Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Re-usable (FAIR). Experience within the ARIADNE partnership during the pandemic was largely positive, with many partners able to carry on as usual with accessing their digital resources, emphasising what is possible, while also emphasising what is not achievable
across archaeology, due to lack of capacity. ARIADNE and SEADDA invite papers discussing the challenges, opportunities and lessons learned across all aspects of archaeological data management during the pandemic, and how it may change and
inform our best practice going forward. We particularly invite papers from outside of Western Europe on how the COVID-19 pandemic created barriers or opportunities for accessing archaeological resources, so that we may better understand capacity building during a post-COVID era.
Slides 2 - 6: Introduction to the programme by Georgia Angelaki
Slides 7 - 9: Keynote Michael Edson
Slides 10 - 40: Europeana Aggregators Forum by Marco Rendina
Slides 42 - 75: Promoting Cultural Heritage with digital invasion by Altheo Valentini-Egina and Marianna Marcucci
Slides 77 - 97: Opportunities for digital cultural heritage and the public domain, under the EU Copyright Rules by Paul Keller, Steven Stegers, Jurga Gradauskaite, Antje Schmidt, Sebastiaan ter Burg and Harry Verwayen
Slides 98 - 101: Climate Call for Action: Outcomes by Barbara Fischer
Slides 102 - 114: Wrap up and closure by Marco de Niet
A presentation of the knowledge base we've been working on in the ELMCIP project, and of future plans, to be used visiting universities and research groups in Chicago and California in April 2012.
The document discusses the Local Content in the Europeana Cloud (LoCloud) project. The key points are:
1) LoCloud is an EU-funded project that aims to add over 4 million digital resources from small cultural institutions to Europeana.
2) The project provides support and technical solutions to make it easier for small/medium institutions to contribute quality content to Europeana and increase local heritage available.
3) LoCloud develops cloud-based services for metadata enrichment and hosting digital collections. It works with partners across Europe to aggregate and provide local institutional content to Europeana.
LoCloud EVA / Minerva Workshop 2015
Workshop organised by LoCloud as part of XIIth Annual International Conference for Professionals in Cultural Heritage,
Presentation by Holly Wright, Archaeology Data Service, United Kingdom
Jerusalem, Israel
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The document discusses the Local Content in the Europeana Cloud (LoCloud) project. The key points are:
1) LoCloud is an EU-funded project that aims to add over 4 million digital resources from small cultural institutions to Europeana.
2) The project provides support and technical solutions to make it easier for small/medium institutions to contribute quality content to Europeana and increase local heritage available.
3) LoCloud develops cloud-based services for metadata enrichment and hosting digital collections. It works with partners across Europe to aggregate their content and make it available through Europeana.
The document discusses the ICARUS network which promotes cooperation between archives. It has over 120 member archives from 26 countries. The network holds biannual meetings and common projects like Monasterium, an online portal providing access to medieval documents. The ENArC project aims to enlarge the existing network to 10
Presentation about Net7's Digital Humanities projects, gave by Francesca Di Donato in Trento on Dec 10th 2013, at the Digital Humanities Group of Fondazione Bruno Kessler
The Digital Research & Curator Team at the British Library was formed in 2010 to support digital scholarship practices through several initiatives:
They offer training programs on digital tools and skills to library staff, develop models for utilizing digital content and technologies, and engage with user communities. Some of their activities include curating digital research data, managing projects, and sharing content with other institutions.
The team works to widen access to the library's collections by supporting digitization efforts, born-digital materials, and crowdsourcing projects. They aim to enhance research and learning through new tools and strong collaboration between different groups.
BL Labs Roadshow 2016 - Digital Research Teamlabsbl
The Digital Research & Curator Team at the British Library was formed in 2010 to support digital scholarship practices through several initiatives:
They offer training programs in digital tools and skills to library staff, develop models for utilizing digital content and technologies, and engage with user communities. Some of their activities include curating digital research data, managing projects, and creating online content shared with other institutions.
The team works to widen access to the library's collections by supporting digitization efforts, born-digital materials, and crowdsourcing projects that extract content from personal devices and engage the public. They also aim to enhance research and learning through partnerships that provide tools to analyze and manipulate digital materials.
EUscreen is a project funded by the European Union to provide access to a collection of over 35,000 digitized television items from 27 partner organizations across Europe. The project aims to develop technical solutions to make the audiovisual collections interoperable and accessible on Europeana. It will launch an integrated portal in month 14 including the first batch of content and test user scenarios. The full collection and results of testing will be delivered by the end of the 36 month project.
CALL FOR COMMUNICATIONS AND ADVOCACY TRAINERS FOR CULTURE MANAGERSYulia Proskurina
The topics include Communication and Advocacy.
The training will begin in April 2016 and will run till summer 2017.
Each expert will work in three countries up to 18 working days in total.
The deadline of applications is 25 March 2016.
The Digital Research and Curator Team at the British Library supports the library's mission of making its collections accessible by developing strategies for digital scholarship. The team provides training to library staff, curates digital research data, and manages projects that engage users and promote the library's digital services and collections. This includes crowdsourcing initiatives, exhibitions exploring digital tools and data, and games that reuse the library's digital holdings. The goal is to widen access to collections and enhance research through collaboration between librarians, researchers, and technology experts.
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ECLAP White paper, social network for Cultural Heritage on Peforming artsPaolo Nesi
the experience of a new generation digital content service is presented, namely ECLAP (European Collected Library of Artistic Performance, http://www.eclap.eu). ECLAP is a live lab in which several new technologies and solutions in the area of semantic computing and social media have been developed and put under trial of the final users and institutions. On this regard, ECLAP is open for both content and results experimentations, and presently comprises more than 35 prestigious international institutions; ECLAP provides services and tools for automated content ingestion, adaptation, metadata ingestion and editing, semantic information extraction, indexing and distribution by exploiting the most innovative and consolidated technologies. ECLAP supports the institutions in all their activities: metadata selection and mapping, content ingestion, to the definition and management of permissions and licenses on contents, and finally managing their users on ECLAP services. According to ECLAP workflow, the obtained metadata are sent to Europeana only after that the metadata have been enriched and linked to a reachable digital resource and when the IPR details have been finalized, with needed quality level. An ECLAP IPR Model can be associated with each single content or collection. ECLAP also provides infrastructural connection for direct promotion of content towards a large number of social networks, including: Facebook, LinkedIn, Diggs, Twitter, etc. On ECLAP, each content provider may have its own distribution channel/group (including a forum and a blog in addition to the space for their content collections, and the groups can be open, moderated or private) with the possibility of customizing the group user interface according to their logo and colours. This multitenant modality permits at the institutions to see ECLAP as a non-intrusive service, to reinforce their brand and at the same time to exploit and experiment a number of innovative ECLAP tools, to accelerate the promotion exploiting ECLAP social media, LOD and Europeana channels, and ready to access new users for their content. ECLAP provides the unique videos, images and texts related to more than 50 years of activity of the Dario Fo and Franca Rame theatre company, featuring videos, photos, texts, drawings, paintings, sketches, posters, copies of contracts and of invoices, notes, books, articles. Other unique, irreplaceable material includes video, audio recordings and photos of performances, workshops, seminars, rehearsals of Jerzy Grotowski, Peter Brook, Gennadi Bogdanov, Anatolij Vasil’ev, Alberto Sordi, Carmelo Bene, Giorgio Strehler, Mimmo Cuticchio, Gian Maria Volonté, Judith Malina.
The Digital Research & Curator Team at the British Library was formed in 2010 to support digital scholarship. Their mission is to develop innovative models for digital scholarship using digital content and technologies. Some of their main activities include staff training, promoting digital scholarship at the library, curating digital research data, and engaging with users. They offer various training courses, organize discussions on digital topics, and support digital collections and services at the library.
Welcome and introduction to the 2nd innovation camp in Network of Nordic Public Libraries, 19 September 2011 in Stockholm. 55 participants from the libraries in Oslo, Helsinki, Stockholm, Reykjavik, Akureyri and Aarhus co-create ideas and concept for the future of public libraries in the Nordic Societies
B1 maria teresanatale_storytelling_movioevaminerva
2014 EVA/Minerva Jerusalem International Conference on Digitisation of Cultural Heritage
http://2014.minervaisrael.org.il
http://www.digital-heritage.org.il
This document summarizes a presentation on improving access to cultural heritage through digitization projects. It discusses two specific projects: Europeana Regia, which created a digital library of 1,298 royal manuscripts from Medieval and Renaissance Europe; and Europeana Newspapers, which has digitized over 18 million newspaper pages. Both projects worked to aggregate content and metadata from various institutions to make the collections accessible through Europeana and other portals. The document outlines the digitization, aggregation, and user needs considerations of the projects. It also discusses sustainability through best practices, networking among institutions, and reusing digitized content. The overall goal is to integrate digitization into cultural heritage institutions and use authority data to create "islands of meaning" accessible
Esteban R. Frías
Social Innovation Labs at Universities: The Case of Medialab UGR – a Research Laboratory for Digital Culture and Society
ICARUS-Meeting #20 | The Age of Digital Technology: Documents, Archives and Society
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Slides 2 - 6: Introduction to the programme by Georgia Angelaki
Slides 7 - 9: Keynote Michael Edson
Slides 10 - 40: Europeana Aggregators Forum by Marco Rendina
Slides 42 - 75: Promoting Cultural Heritage with digital invasion by Altheo Valentini-Egina and Marianna Marcucci
Slides 77 - 97: Opportunities for digital cultural heritage and the public domain, under the EU Copyright Rules by Paul Keller, Steven Stegers, Jurga Gradauskaite, Antje Schmidt, Sebastiaan ter Burg and Harry Verwayen
Slides 98 - 101: Climate Call for Action: Outcomes by Barbara Fischer
Slides 102 - 114: Wrap up and closure by Marco de Niet
A presentation of the knowledge base we've been working on in the ELMCIP project, and of future plans, to be used visiting universities and research groups in Chicago and California in April 2012.
The document discusses the Local Content in the Europeana Cloud (LoCloud) project. The key points are:
1) LoCloud is an EU-funded project that aims to add over 4 million digital resources from small cultural institutions to Europeana.
2) The project provides support and technical solutions to make it easier for small/medium institutions to contribute quality content to Europeana and increase local heritage available.
3) LoCloud develops cloud-based services for metadata enrichment and hosting digital collections. It works with partners across Europe to aggregate and provide local institutional content to Europeana.
LoCloud EVA / Minerva Workshop 2015
Workshop organised by LoCloud as part of XIIth Annual International Conference for Professionals in Cultural Heritage,
Presentation by Holly Wright, Archaeology Data Service, United Kingdom
Jerusalem, Israel
8 November 2015
The document discusses the Local Content in the Europeana Cloud (LoCloud) project. The key points are:
1) LoCloud is an EU-funded project that aims to add over 4 million digital resources from small cultural institutions to Europeana.
2) The project provides support and technical solutions to make it easier for small/medium institutions to contribute quality content to Europeana and increase local heritage available.
3) LoCloud develops cloud-based services for metadata enrichment and hosting digital collections. It works with partners across Europe to aggregate their content and make it available through Europeana.
The document discusses the ICARUS network which promotes cooperation between archives. It has over 120 member archives from 26 countries. The network holds biannual meetings and common projects like Monasterium, an online portal providing access to medieval documents. The ENArC project aims to enlarge the existing network to 10
Presentation about Net7's Digital Humanities projects, gave by Francesca Di Donato in Trento on Dec 10th 2013, at the Digital Humanities Group of Fondazione Bruno Kessler
The Digital Research & Curator Team at the British Library was formed in 2010 to support digital scholarship practices through several initiatives:
They offer training programs on digital tools and skills to library staff, develop models for utilizing digital content and technologies, and engage with user communities. Some of their activities include curating digital research data, managing projects, and sharing content with other institutions.
The team works to widen access to the library's collections by supporting digitization efforts, born-digital materials, and crowdsourcing projects. They aim to enhance research and learning through new tools and strong collaboration between different groups.
BL Labs Roadshow 2016 - Digital Research Teamlabsbl
The Digital Research & Curator Team at the British Library was formed in 2010 to support digital scholarship practices through several initiatives:
They offer training programs in digital tools and skills to library staff, develop models for utilizing digital content and technologies, and engage with user communities. Some of their activities include curating digital research data, managing projects, and creating online content shared with other institutions.
The team works to widen access to the library's collections by supporting digitization efforts, born-digital materials, and crowdsourcing projects that extract content from personal devices and engage the public. They also aim to enhance research and learning through partnerships that provide tools to analyze and manipulate digital materials.
EUscreen is a project funded by the European Union to provide access to a collection of over 35,000 digitized television items from 27 partner organizations across Europe. The project aims to develop technical solutions to make the audiovisual collections interoperable and accessible on Europeana. It will launch an integrated portal in month 14 including the first batch of content and test user scenarios. The full collection and results of testing will be delivered by the end of the 36 month project.
CALL FOR COMMUNICATIONS AND ADVOCACY TRAINERS FOR CULTURE MANAGERSYulia Proskurina
The topics include Communication and Advocacy.
The training will begin in April 2016 and will run till summer 2017.
Each expert will work in three countries up to 18 working days in total.
The deadline of applications is 25 March 2016.
The Digital Research and Curator Team at the British Library supports the library's mission of making its collections accessible by developing strategies for digital scholarship. The team provides training to library staff, curates digital research data, and manages projects that engage users and promote the library's digital services and collections. This includes crowdsourcing initiatives, exhibitions exploring digital tools and data, and games that reuse the library's digital holdings. The goal is to widen access to collections and enhance research through collaboration between librarians, researchers, and technology experts.
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Presentation by Maurizio Vivarelli, Maria Cassella and Federico Valacchi, University of Turin at the DigCurV International Conference; Framing the digital curation curriculum
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the experience of a new generation digital content service is presented, namely ECLAP (European Collected Library of Artistic Performance, http://www.eclap.eu). ECLAP is a live lab in which several new technologies and solutions in the area of semantic computing and social media have been developed and put under trial of the final users and institutions. On this regard, ECLAP is open for both content and results experimentations, and presently comprises more than 35 prestigious international institutions; ECLAP provides services and tools for automated content ingestion, adaptation, metadata ingestion and editing, semantic information extraction, indexing and distribution by exploiting the most innovative and consolidated technologies. ECLAP supports the institutions in all their activities: metadata selection and mapping, content ingestion, to the definition and management of permissions and licenses on contents, and finally managing their users on ECLAP services. According to ECLAP workflow, the obtained metadata are sent to Europeana only after that the metadata have been enriched and linked to a reachable digital resource and when the IPR details have been finalized, with needed quality level. An ECLAP IPR Model can be associated with each single content or collection. ECLAP also provides infrastructural connection for direct promotion of content towards a large number of social networks, including: Facebook, LinkedIn, Diggs, Twitter, etc. On ECLAP, each content provider may have its own distribution channel/group (including a forum and a blog in addition to the space for their content collections, and the groups can be open, moderated or private) with the possibility of customizing the group user interface according to their logo and colours. This multitenant modality permits at the institutions to see ECLAP as a non-intrusive service, to reinforce their brand and at the same time to exploit and experiment a number of innovative ECLAP tools, to accelerate the promotion exploiting ECLAP social media, LOD and Europeana channels, and ready to access new users for their content. ECLAP provides the unique videos, images and texts related to more than 50 years of activity of the Dario Fo and Franca Rame theatre company, featuring videos, photos, texts, drawings, paintings, sketches, posters, copies of contracts and of invoices, notes, books, articles. Other unique, irreplaceable material includes video, audio recordings and photos of performances, workshops, seminars, rehearsals of Jerzy Grotowski, Peter Brook, Gennadi Bogdanov, Anatolij Vasil’ev, Alberto Sordi, Carmelo Bene, Giorgio Strehler, Mimmo Cuticchio, Gian Maria Volonté, Judith Malina.
The Digital Research & Curator Team at the British Library was formed in 2010 to support digital scholarship. Their mission is to develop innovative models for digital scholarship using digital content and technologies. Some of their main activities include staff training, promoting digital scholarship at the library, curating digital research data, and engaging with users. They offer various training courses, organize discussions on digital topics, and support digital collections and services at the library.
Welcome and introduction to the 2nd innovation camp in Network of Nordic Public Libraries, 19 September 2011 in Stockholm. 55 participants from the libraries in Oslo, Helsinki, Stockholm, Reykjavik, Akureyri and Aarhus co-create ideas and concept for the future of public libraries in the Nordic Societies
B1 maria teresanatale_storytelling_movioevaminerva
2014 EVA/Minerva Jerusalem International Conference on Digitisation of Cultural Heritage
http://2014.minervaisrael.org.il
http://www.digital-heritage.org.il
This document summarizes a presentation on improving access to cultural heritage through digitization projects. It discusses two specific projects: Europeana Regia, which created a digital library of 1,298 royal manuscripts from Medieval and Renaissance Europe; and Europeana Newspapers, which has digitized over 18 million newspaper pages. Both projects worked to aggregate content and metadata from various institutions to make the collections accessible through Europeana and other portals. The document outlines the digitization, aggregation, and user needs considerations of the projects. It also discusses sustainability through best practices, networking among institutions, and reusing digitized content. The overall goal is to integrate digitization into cultural heritage institutions and use authority data to create "islands of meaning" accessible
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ICARUS-Meeting #17 | Transparency - Accessibility – Dialogue. How a creative archival landscape can effect society
23–25 May 2016, Krukmakarens hus (The Potter´s house), Mellangatan 21, 621 56 Visby / The Regional State Archives in Visby, Broväg 27, 621 41 Visby, Sweden
Michael Scholz
Tourismusgeschichte und Destinationsentwicklung am Beispiel Gotlands
ICARUS-Meeting #17 | Transparency - Accessibility – Dialogue. How a creative archival landscape can effect society
23–25 May 2016, Krukmakarens hus (The Potter´s house), Mellangatan 21, 621 56 Visby / The Regional State Archives in Visby, Broväg 27, 621 41 Visby, Sweden
More from ICARUS - International Centre for Archival Research (20)
How information systems are built or acquired puts information, which is what they should be about, in a secondary place. Our language adapted accordingly, and we no longer talk about information systems but applications. Applications evolved in a way to break data into diverse fragments, tightly coupled with applications and expensive to integrate. The result is technical debt, which is re-paid by taking even bigger "loans", resulting in an ever-increasing technical debt. Software engineering and procurement practices work in sync with market forces to maintain this trend. This talk demonstrates how natural this situation is. The question is: can something be done to reverse the trend?
"Frontline Battles with DDoS: Best practices and Lessons Learned", Igor IvaniukFwdays
At this talk we will discuss DDoS protection tools and best practices, discuss network architectures and what AWS has to offer. Also, we will look into one of the largest DDoS attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure that happened in February 2022. We'll see, what techniques helped to keep the web resources available for Ukrainians and how AWS improved DDoS protection for all customers based on Ukraine experience
Skybuffer SAM4U tool for SAP license adoptionTatiana Kojar
Manage and optimize your license adoption and consumption with SAM4U, an SAP free customer software asset management tool.
SAM4U, an SAP complimentary software asset management tool for customers, delivers a detailed and well-structured overview of license inventory and usage with a user-friendly interface. We offer a hosted, cost-effective, and performance-optimized SAM4U setup in the Skybuffer Cloud environment. You retain ownership of the system and data, while we manage the ABAP 7.58 infrastructure, ensuring fixed Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and exceptional services through the SAP Fiori interface.
5th LF Energy Power Grid Model Meet-up SlidesDanBrown980551
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.
Power Grid Model is currently being applied in a wide variety of use cases, including grid planning, expansion, reliability, and congestion studies. It can also help in analyzing the impact of renewable energy integration, assessing the effects of disturbances or faults, and developing strategies for grid control and optimization.
What to expect
For the upcoming meetup we are organizing, we have an exciting lineup of activities planned:
-Insightful presentations covering two practical applications of the Power Grid Model.
-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.
Dandelion Hashtable: beyond billion requests per second on a commodity serverAntonios Katsarakis
This slide deck presents DLHT, a concurrent in-memory hashtable. Despite efforts to optimize hashtables, that go as far as sacrificing core functionality, state-of-the-art designs still incur multiple memory accesses per request and block request processing in three cases. First, most hashtables block while waiting for data to be retrieved from memory. Second, open-addressing designs, which represent the current state-of-the-art, either cannot free index slots on deletes or must block all requests to do so. Third, index resizes block every request until all objects are copied to the new index. Defying folklore wisdom, DLHT forgoes open-addressing and adopts a fully-featured and memory-aware closed-addressing design based on bounded cache-line-chaining. This design offers lock-free index operations and deletes that free slots instantly, (2) completes most requests with a single memory access, (3) utilizes software prefetching to hide memory latencies, and (4) employs a novel non-blocking and parallel resizing. In a commodity server and a memory-resident workload, DLHT surpasses 1.6B requests per second and provides 3.5x (12x) the throughput of the state-of-the-art closed-addressing (open-addressing) resizable hashtable on Gets (Deletes).
Ivanti’s Patch Tuesday breakdown goes beyond patching your applications and brings you the intelligence and guidance needed to prioritize where to focus your attention first. Catch early analysis on our Ivanti blog, then join industry expert Chris Goettl for the Patch Tuesday Webinar Event. There we’ll do a deep dive into each of the bulletins and give guidance on the risks associated with the newly-identified vulnerabilities.
Your One-Stop Shop for Python Success: Top 10 US Python Development Providersakankshawande
Simplify your search for a reliable Python development partner! This list presents the top 10 trusted US providers offering comprehensive Python development services, ensuring your project's success from conception to completion.
What is an RPA CoE? Session 1 – CoE VisionDianaGray10
In the first session, we will review the organization's vision and how this has an impact on the COE Structure.
Topics covered:
• The role of a steering committee
• How do the organization’s priorities determine CoE Structure?
Speaker:
Chris Bolin, Senior Intelligent Automation Architect Anika Systems
The Microsoft 365 Migration Tutorial For Beginner.pptxoperationspcvita
This presentation will help you understand the power of Microsoft 365. However, we have mentioned every productivity app included in Office 365. Additionally, we have suggested the migration situation related to Office 365 and how we can help you.
You can also read: https://www.systoolsgroup.com/updates/office-365-tenant-to-tenant-migration-step-by-step-complete-guide/
Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing.pdfssuserfac0301
Read Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing to gain insights on AI adoption in the manufacturing industry, such as:
1. How quickly AI is being implemented in manufacturing.
2. Which barriers stand in the way of AI adoption.
3. How data quality and governance form the backbone of AI.
4. Organizational processes and structures that may inhibit effective AI adoption.
6. Ideas and approaches to help build your organization's AI strategy.
Northern Engraving | Nameplate Manufacturing Process - 2024Northern Engraving
Manufacturing custom quality metal nameplates and badges involves several standard operations. Processes include sheet prep, lithography, screening, coating, punch press and inspection. All decoration is completed in the flat sheet with adhesive and tooling operations following. The possibilities for creating unique durable nameplates are endless. How will you create your brand identity? We can help!
HCL Notes and Domino License Cost Reduction in the World of DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-and-domino-license-cost-reduction-in-the-world-of-dlau/
The introduction of DLAU and the CCB & CCX licensing model caused quite a stir in the HCL community. As a Notes and Domino customer, you may have faced challenges with unexpected user counts and license costs. You probably have questions on how this new licensing approach works and how to benefit from it. Most importantly, you likely have budget constraints and want to save money where possible. Don’t worry, we can help with all of this!
We’ll show you how to fix common misconfigurations that cause higher-than-expected user counts, and how to identify accounts which you can deactivate to save money. There are also frequent patterns that can cause unnecessary cost, like using a person document instead of a mail-in for shared mailboxes. We’ll provide examples and solutions for those as well. And naturally we’ll explain the new licensing model.
Join HCL Ambassador Marc Thomas in this webinar with a special guest appearance from Franz Walder. It will give you the tools and know-how to stay on top of what is going on with Domino licensing. You will be able lower your cost through an optimized configuration and keep it low going forward.
These topics will be covered
- Reducing license cost by finding and fixing misconfigurations and superfluous accounts
- How do CCB and CCX licenses really work?
- Understanding the DLAU tool and how to best utilize it
- Tips for common problem areas, like team mailboxes, functional/test users, etc
- Practical examples and best practices to implement right away
Freshworks Rethinks NoSQL for Rapid Scaling & Cost-EfficiencyScyllaDB
Freshworks creates AI-boosted business software that helps employees work more efficiently and effectively. Managing data across multiple RDBMS and NoSQL databases was already a challenge at their current scale. To prepare for 10X growth, they knew it was time to rethink their database strategy. Learn how they architected a solution that would simplify scaling while keeping costs under control.
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift.pdfTosin Akinosho
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
- Understand the fundamentals of anomaly detection and its importance in identifying unusual behavior or failures in systems.
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?
- Discover ArgoCD, a declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes, and its role in deploying applications on edge devices.
4. Deployment Using ArgoCD for Edge Devices
- Step-by-step guide on deploying anomaly detection models on edge devices using ArgoCD.
5. Introduction to Apache Kafka and S3
- Explore Apache Kafka for real-time data streaming and Amazon S3 for scalable storage solutions.
6. Viewing Kafka Messages in the Data Lake
- Learn how to view and analyze Kafka messages stored in a data lake for better insights.
7. What is Prometheus?
- Get to know Prometheus, an open-source monitoring and alerting toolkit, and its application in monitoring edge devices.
8. Monitoring Application Metrics with Prometheus
- Detailed instructions on setting up Prometheus to monitor the performance and health of your anomaly detection system.
9. What is Camel K?
- Introduction to Camel K, a lightweight integration framework built on Apache Camel, designed for Kubernetes.
10. Configuring Camel K Integrations for Data Pipelines
- Learn how to configure Camel K for seamless data pipeline integrations in your anomaly detection workflow.
11. What is a Jupyter Notebook?
- Overview of Jupyter Notebooks, an open-source web application for creating and sharing documents with live code, equations, visualizations, and narrative text.
12. Jupyter Notebooks with Code Examples
- Hands-on examples and code snippets in Jupyter Notebooks to help you implement and test anomaly detection models.
Main news related to the CCS TSI 2023 (2023/1695)Jakub Marek
An English 🇬🇧 translation of a presentation to the speech I gave about the main changes brought by CCS TSI 2023 at the biggest Czech conference on Communications and signalling systems on Railways, which was held in Clarion Hotel Olomouc from 7th to 9th November 2023 (konferenceszt.cz). Attended by around 500 participants and 200 on-line followers.
The original Czech 🇨🇿 version of the presentation can be found here: https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/hlavni-novinky-souvisejici-s-ccs-tsi-2023-2023-1695/269688092 .
The videorecording (in Czech) from the presentation is available here: https://youtu.be/WzjJWm4IyPk?si=SImb06tuXGb30BEH .
Fueling AI with Great Data with Airbyte WebinarZilliz
This talk will focus on how to collect data from a variety of sources, leveraging this data for RAG and other GenAI use cases, and finally charting your course to productionalization.
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.
2. Central point Contact place for preparation and implementation of various projects Internationality Partners from 16 European countries Enrichment ICARUS Sustainability Accessibility Research Platform for all topics regarding virtual preparation of historical sources and their content Archive Activities in the archival field New possibilities
12. ENArC - partners Generaldirektion der Staatlichen Archive Bayerns (DE) Diözesanarchiv St. Pölten (AT) - Coordiantor ICARUS –International Centre for Archival Research (AT) HKI, Universität zu Köln (DE) Arhiv Republike Slovenije (SI) Hrvatski Državni Archiv (HR) Slovenský Národný Archiv (SK) Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa (IT) Budapest Főváros Levéltára (HU) Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II (IT) Magyar Országos Levéltár (HU) Národní Archiv (CZ) Ministerio de Cultura, Subdirección General de los Archivos Estatales (ES) Balkanoloski Institut SANU (RS)
24. National Workshops In order to announce the project results among experts within the individualcountries and attract new partners for the network, one partner of each country will host anational workshop. The workshop should last one day andconsist of two blocks: 1. Appraisal of national activities in the area of digital processing of archival records 2. A discussion in context of the project and international developments. 10workshops in countries of participating partners 4 workshops will take placein neighbouring countries.