The document provides instructions for submitting papers to the ENTCS (Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science) macro package. It explains that the paper must be formatted using either the entcsmacro.sty or prentcsmacro.sty style files. It also provides information on formatting the frontmatter, using environments like theorems and lemmas, adding references, and producing a PDF file.
This document provides instructions for preparing a paper using the ENTCS macro style package. It explains that the prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty files should be used and can be found at the ENTCS Macro Home Page. It also provides information on the document structure, including the frontmatter environment for the title, author names, abstract, and keywords, and describes some of the sectioning and environments that can be used, such as theorems, lemmas, definitions and algorithms.
This document provides reference information about the Gecko DOM (Document Object Model) API. It includes sections that describe the DOM window, DOM document, DOM elements, DOM events, DOM styles, and DOM ranges. The document is intended for web developers and explains how to access and manipulate web page content and structure using the DOM.
This document provides an overview of the QuickTime file format, including its use of atoms to structure metadata and media data. Atoms include movie atoms, track atoms, media atoms, and sample atoms. Movie atoms contain overall information about a file, while track atoms contain metadata for individual video or audio tracks. Media atoms describe media formats and handlers, and sample atoms contain sample descriptions and reference compressed media data. The document also describes common media data formats like video, audio, text, and sprites that can be contained in QuickTime files.
The document describes the QuickTime File Format, including the structure and types of atoms used to store media data. Key points:
- QuickTime uses a hierarchical structure of atoms to store media data, with parent atoms able to contain child atoms.
- Common atom types include movie atoms, track atoms, media atoms and sample atoms. Movie atoms can contain track atoms, which can contain media and sample atoms.
- Atoms store metadata like movie headers, track headers and media information. They also store media data like video frames, audio samples and text content.
- Sample atoms associate samples of media data with metadata on timing and location within a track. This allows random access to the media.
This screenplay is a drama/romance titled "Blue Diamond". It follows a Los Angeles homicide detective named Alton Graham whose wife has passed away from cancer. After her death, Alton believes his wife's spirit appears to him and tells him to go to the small town of Blue Diamond, Texas. Desperate for answers, he leaves his job and travels there. Upon arriving, he finds the town filled with colorful characters and gets caught up in investigating the death of a four-year-old girl which the powerful grandfather believes was done by his negligent son-in-law. As Alton investigates, he starts to see himself in the young man and questions the true motives of the town's leaders.
After his wife passes away from cancer, a Los Angeles homicide detective believes he sees her spirit, which instructs him to go to the small town of Blue Diamond, Texas. He leaves his job to search for answers. Upon arriving, he takes a new position as Chief of Police and investigates the possible homicide of a four-year-old girl. As he delves deeper, he sees similarities between the accused man and his own troubled past. Alton eventually realizes his wife's spirit guided him to Blue Diamond to fulfill his dream of starting anew.
This document provides instructions for preparing a paper using the ENTCS macro style package. It explains that the prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty files should be used and can be found at the ENTCS Macro Home Page. It also provides information on the document structure, including the frontmatter environment for the title, author names, abstract, and keywords, and describes some of the sectioning and environments that can be used, such as theorems, lemmas, definitions and algorithms.
This document provides reference information about the Gecko DOM (Document Object Model) API. It includes sections that describe the DOM window, DOM document, DOM elements, DOM events, DOM styles, and DOM ranges. The document is intended for web developers and explains how to access and manipulate web page content and structure using the DOM.
This document provides an overview of the QuickTime file format, including its use of atoms to structure metadata and media data. Atoms include movie atoms, track atoms, media atoms, and sample atoms. Movie atoms contain overall information about a file, while track atoms contain metadata for individual video or audio tracks. Media atoms describe media formats and handlers, and sample atoms contain sample descriptions and reference compressed media data. The document also describes common media data formats like video, audio, text, and sprites that can be contained in QuickTime files.
The document describes the QuickTime File Format, including the structure and types of atoms used to store media data. Key points:
- QuickTime uses a hierarchical structure of atoms to store media data, with parent atoms able to contain child atoms.
- Common atom types include movie atoms, track atoms, media atoms and sample atoms. Movie atoms can contain track atoms, which can contain media and sample atoms.
- Atoms store metadata like movie headers, track headers and media information. They also store media data like video frames, audio samples and text content.
- Sample atoms associate samples of media data with metadata on timing and location within a track. This allows random access to the media.
This screenplay is a drama/romance titled "Blue Diamond". It follows a Los Angeles homicide detective named Alton Graham whose wife has passed away from cancer. After her death, Alton believes his wife's spirit appears to him and tells him to go to the small town of Blue Diamond, Texas. Desperate for answers, he leaves his job and travels there. Upon arriving, he finds the town filled with colorful characters and gets caught up in investigating the death of a four-year-old girl which the powerful grandfather believes was done by his negligent son-in-law. As Alton investigates, he starts to see himself in the young man and questions the true motives of the town's leaders.
After his wife passes away from cancer, a Los Angeles homicide detective believes he sees her spirit, which instructs him to go to the small town of Blue Diamond, Texas. He leaves his job to search for answers. Upon arriving, he takes a new position as Chief of Police and investigates the possible homicide of a four-year-old girl. As he delves deeper, he sees similarities between the accused man and his own troubled past. Alton eventually realizes his wife's spirit guided him to Blue Diamond to fulfill his dream of starting anew.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It explains that the package includes two files, entcs.cls and entcsmacro.sty, that should be used to format papers uniformly for the ENTCS series. The frontmatter, including title, authors, abstract, and keywords, should be included within the frontmatter environment. Sectioning, references, and various theorem-like environments are also supported. PDF files are the required final output and instructions are provided for generating them using different LaTeX compilation methods.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It discusses replacing files with prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty, including required frontmatter elements like the title, author names and addresses, abstract, and keywords. It also describes available sectioning, environments like theorems and proofs, and formatting references and cross-references.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It discusses replacing files with prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty, including required frontmatter elements like the title, author names and addresses, abstract, and keywords. It also describes available sectioning, environments like theorems and proofs, and formatting references and cross-references.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It discusses replacing files with prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty, including required frontmatter elements like the title, author names and addresses, abstract, and keywords. It also describes available sectioning, environments like theorems and proofs, and formatting references and cross-references.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It discusses replacing files with prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty, including required frontmatter elements like the title, author names and addresses, abstract, and keywords. It also describes available sectioning, environments like theorems and proofs, and referencing other works.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It discusses replacing files with prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty, including required frontmatter elements like the title, author names and addresses, abstract, and keywords. It also describes available sectioning, environments like theorems and proofs, and referencing other works.
A Hitchhiker S Guide To LaTex (Or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Wri...Jim Webb
This document provides an introduction to using LaTeX to write scientific documents. It discusses how to set up the document header and preamble, insert titles and authors, define sections and subsections, and format text. It also covers inserting mathematical equations, symbols, and formatting such as lists, footnotes, and comments. Examples are provided throughout to demonstrate how to write equations, integrals, and other mathematical expressions in LaTeX. The purpose is to give a minimalist introduction to using LaTeX for writing up research.
The document announces a LaTeX workshop to be held on May 17-18, 2017 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, covering LaTeX essentials, practical applications, and producing high quality articles and documents, and is presented by Dr. Mohamed A. Alrshah who has over 15 years of academic experience.
This document provides an introduction to LaTeX, a document preparation system. It discusses how LaTeX allows authors to focus on content over visual formatting, is widely used in academia, and provides numerous features for typesetting mathematical and scientific documents. Installation instructions and examples of basic LaTeX code for formatting equations are also included.
The document describes the algorithm2e LaTeX package for writing algorithms. It provides environments like algorithm and procedure for defining algorithms, and macros for typesetting different parts of algorithms. Some key features include predefined language keywords, options for customizing appearances, and abilities to number lines or add side comments. The package aims to make algorithm writing in LaTeX easy and customizable.
The document provides an overview of LaTeX and discusses:
- LaTeX is a typesetting system that incorporates a macro processor to typeset documents.
- LaTeX uses markup tags and commands to specify formatting rather than using a graphical user interface.
- The document discusses LaTeX document classes, packages, file types, basic commands, environments, cross referencing, fonts, graphics, and tables. It also provides an overview of LaTeX editors like TeXstudio and distributions like MiKTeX.
This document provides an introduction and overview of LaTeX. It discusses the basic structure of a LaTeX document including the preamble, body, and back matter. It describes LaTeX input files as plain text files that can be edited in any text editor. The document structure typically includes a title page, abstract, main content divided into sections and subsections, and bibliography. Numbering and formatting of section headings is automatic in LaTeX. The document serves as an online tutorial for LaTeX basics.
1. Include the algorithm2e package in the preamble
2. Define keywords like Initialize, Function, Input using \SetKwProg and \SetKwInOut
3. Begin the algorithm environment and add a caption
4. Use the defined keywords and other instructions to describe the algorithm steps
5. End the algorithm environment
This allows algorithms to be clearly presented with customized keywords in a formatted manner. The algorithm2e package is very useful for presenting pseudocode in LaTeX documents.
This document provides an introduction and overview of LaTeX. It discusses what LaTeX is, why it is useful, and how to set it up. It covers document structure, formatting text, references, equations, lists, algorithms, and figures. Recommended editors are also presented. The document serves as a helpful LaTeX survival guide for new users.
This document provides instructions for enhancing SAM boards by adding filters when creating a new board, saving the board, and then accessing it from the boards page. It also mentions options for setting rolling dates and conditional formatting when using SAM boards.
A person expresses fear to someone else whose actions are scaring them. The document then mentions feeling powerful using multiple punctuation marks to emphasize an exclamation. Overall the short document seems to describe a situation where one person's actions are intimidating another person and making them feel powerful.
Lorem ipsum is placeholder text commonly used to demonstrate the visual form of a document without relying on meaningful content. It allows designers to design pages visually without needing final content. The Latin words, "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet", are used to generate sentences that appear reasonable but are not coherent.
Lorem ipsum is placeholder text commonly used to demonstrate the visual form of a document without relying on meaningful content. It allows designers to design pages visually without needing final content. The Latin words, "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet", are used to generate sentences that appear random.
This document provides guidelines for designing effective PowerPoint presentations. It discusses making text and visuals big and simple to view from a distance, keeping content clear by using sans-serif fonts, high contrast colors, and focal points, progressing information in a step-by-step manner, and maintaining consistency in designs and formatting. The overall goals are to communicate content simply and clearly without distracting visuals or text, and to use visual aids and animations purposefully to enhance understanding rather than distract the audience.
This document provides guidelines for designing effective PowerPoint presentations. It discusses making text and visuals big and simple to view from a distance, keeping content clear by using sans-serif fonts, high contrast colors, and focal points, progressing information in a step-by-step manner, and maintaining consistency in designs. The overall goals are to communicate effectively through visual aids that simplify concepts and support rather than distract from the presenter's message. For more information, readers are instructed to contact the author Victor Chen at ERAU.
This document provides guidelines for designing effective PowerPoint presentations. It discusses making text and visuals big and simple to view from a distance, keeping content clear by using sans-serif fonts, high contrast colors, and focal points, progressing information in a step-by-step manner, and maintaining consistency in designs and formatting. The overall goals are to communicate content simply and clearly without distracting visuals or text, and to use visual aids and animations purposefully to enhance understanding rather than distract the audience.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It explains that the package includes two files, entcs.cls and entcsmacro.sty, that should be used to format papers uniformly for the ENTCS series. The frontmatter, including title, authors, abstract, and keywords, should be included within the frontmatter environment. Sectioning, references, and various theorem-like environments are also supported. PDF files are the required final output and instructions are provided for generating them using different LaTeX compilation methods.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It discusses replacing files with prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty, including required frontmatter elements like the title, author names and addresses, abstract, and keywords. It also describes available sectioning, environments like theorems and proofs, and formatting references and cross-references.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It discusses replacing files with prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty, including required frontmatter elements like the title, author names and addresses, abstract, and keywords. It also describes available sectioning, environments like theorems and proofs, and formatting references and cross-references.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It discusses replacing files with prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty, including required frontmatter elements like the title, author names and addresses, abstract, and keywords. It also describes available sectioning, environments like theorems and proofs, and formatting references and cross-references.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It discusses replacing files with prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty, including required frontmatter elements like the title, author names and addresses, abstract, and keywords. It also describes available sectioning, environments like theorems and proofs, and referencing other works.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It discusses replacing files with prentcsmacro.sty or entcsmacro.sty, including required frontmatter elements like the title, author names and addresses, abstract, and keywords. It also describes available sectioning, environments like theorems and proofs, and referencing other works.
A Hitchhiker S Guide To LaTex (Or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Wri...Jim Webb
This document provides an introduction to using LaTeX to write scientific documents. It discusses how to set up the document header and preamble, insert titles and authors, define sections and subsections, and format text. It also covers inserting mathematical equations, symbols, and formatting such as lists, footnotes, and comments. Examples are provided throughout to demonstrate how to write equations, integrals, and other mathematical expressions in LaTeX. The purpose is to give a minimalist introduction to using LaTeX for writing up research.
The document announces a LaTeX workshop to be held on May 17-18, 2017 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, covering LaTeX essentials, practical applications, and producing high quality articles and documents, and is presented by Dr. Mohamed A. Alrshah who has over 15 years of academic experience.
This document provides an introduction to LaTeX, a document preparation system. It discusses how LaTeX allows authors to focus on content over visual formatting, is widely used in academia, and provides numerous features for typesetting mathematical and scientific documents. Installation instructions and examples of basic LaTeX code for formatting equations are also included.
The document describes the algorithm2e LaTeX package for writing algorithms. It provides environments like algorithm and procedure for defining algorithms, and macros for typesetting different parts of algorithms. Some key features include predefined language keywords, options for customizing appearances, and abilities to number lines or add side comments. The package aims to make algorithm writing in LaTeX easy and customizable.
The document provides an overview of LaTeX and discusses:
- LaTeX is a typesetting system that incorporates a macro processor to typeset documents.
- LaTeX uses markup tags and commands to specify formatting rather than using a graphical user interface.
- The document discusses LaTeX document classes, packages, file types, basic commands, environments, cross referencing, fonts, graphics, and tables. It also provides an overview of LaTeX editors like TeXstudio and distributions like MiKTeX.
This document provides an introduction and overview of LaTeX. It discusses the basic structure of a LaTeX document including the preamble, body, and back matter. It describes LaTeX input files as plain text files that can be edited in any text editor. The document structure typically includes a title page, abstract, main content divided into sections and subsections, and bibliography. Numbering and formatting of section headings is automatic in LaTeX. The document serves as an online tutorial for LaTeX basics.
1. Include the algorithm2e package in the preamble
2. Define keywords like Initialize, Function, Input using \SetKwProg and \SetKwInOut
3. Begin the algorithm environment and add a caption
4. Use the defined keywords and other instructions to describe the algorithm steps
5. End the algorithm environment
This allows algorithms to be clearly presented with customized keywords in a formatted manner. The algorithm2e package is very useful for presenting pseudocode in LaTeX documents.
This document provides an introduction and overview of LaTeX. It discusses what LaTeX is, why it is useful, and how to set it up. It covers document structure, formatting text, references, equations, lists, algorithms, and figures. Recommended editors are also presented. The document serves as a helpful LaTeX survival guide for new users.
This document provides instructions for enhancing SAM boards by adding filters when creating a new board, saving the board, and then accessing it from the boards page. It also mentions options for setting rolling dates and conditional formatting when using SAM boards.
A person expresses fear to someone else whose actions are scaring them. The document then mentions feeling powerful using multiple punctuation marks to emphasize an exclamation. Overall the short document seems to describe a situation where one person's actions are intimidating another person and making them feel powerful.
Lorem ipsum is placeholder text commonly used to demonstrate the visual form of a document without relying on meaningful content. It allows designers to design pages visually without needing final content. The Latin words, "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet", are used to generate sentences that appear reasonable but are not coherent.
Lorem ipsum is placeholder text commonly used to demonstrate the visual form of a document without relying on meaningful content. It allows designers to design pages visually without needing final content. The Latin words, "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet", are used to generate sentences that appear random.
This document provides guidelines for designing effective PowerPoint presentations. It discusses making text and visuals big and simple to view from a distance, keeping content clear by using sans-serif fonts, high contrast colors, and focal points, progressing information in a step-by-step manner, and maintaining consistency in designs and formatting. The overall goals are to communicate content simply and clearly without distracting visuals or text, and to use visual aids and animations purposefully to enhance understanding rather than distract the audience.
This document provides guidelines for designing effective PowerPoint presentations. It discusses making text and visuals big and simple to view from a distance, keeping content clear by using sans-serif fonts, high contrast colors, and focal points, progressing information in a step-by-step manner, and maintaining consistency in designs. The overall goals are to communicate effectively through visual aids that simplify concepts and support rather than distract from the presenter's message. For more information, readers are instructed to contact the author Victor Chen at ERAU.
This document provides guidelines for designing effective PowerPoint presentations. It discusses making text and visuals big and simple to view from a distance, keeping content clear by using sans-serif fonts, high contrast colors, and focal points, progressing information in a step-by-step manner, and maintaining consistency in designs and formatting. The overall goals are to communicate content simply and clearly without distracting visuals or text, and to use visual aids and animations purposefully to enhance understanding rather than distract the audience.
This very short document contains 3 brief statements with no clear connection. It opens with the greeting "hello" followed by stating "This is cool" and concludes by noting "Last slide" without any other context.
This document provides instructions for formatting papers using the ENTCS macro package. It describes replacing the default LaTeX file with the entcsmacro.sty file. It also outlines the key elements that must be included in the frontmatter like the title, author names, abstract, and keywords. Sectioning, environments, references, and cross-referencing are also discussed.
This document provides tips for creating effective PowerPoint slides by avoiding common pitfalls. It addresses how to structure slides with outlines and bullet points, use fonts and colors that are easy to read, include graphs and charts to visualize data, check for spelling and grammar errors, and conclude with a strong summary and invitation for questions. Key recommendations include using a large font size, limiting each slide to 4-5 main points, choosing high contrast colors, including descriptive titles on all visuals, and proofreading for errors.
This very short document contains 3 brief statements with no clear connection. It opens with the greeting "hello" and then states "This is cool" followed by two blank lines and ending with "Last slide".
The document discusses social media trends from Wave 6 research conducted in 62 countries. Some key findings include:
1) Growth in social networking has slowed globally and in many countries, though some like Brazil, India, and Russia saw a decline in the number of people managing social media profiles.
2) In Serbia, the percentage of active internet users managing a social media profile declined slightly from Wave 5 to Wave 6, but was still lower than neighboring Macedonia and Croatia.
3) While growth in creating social media profiles may be plateauing, active management and engagement on platforms continues to increase, such as uploading video clips to sharing websites.
This document tests the compatibility of document formatting and elements across different applications. It contains various formatted text, images, tables, and other elements to check if they display correctly when opened in other word processors besides the original Microsoft Word format. The document tests things like bulleted lists, styles, colors, links, fonts, headers/footers, comments, track changes, comments, and more. The goal is to determine what formatting and elements can be reliably preserved when editing the same document across different devices and applications.
19 elite firefighters known as "hotshots" were killed while battling a wildfire in Yarnell, Arizona, marking the deadliest wildfire involving firefighters in at least 30 years. The firefighters were forced to deploy emergency fire shelters when flames overtook them near the town. The deceased firefighters were part of the Prescott Fire department.
This document provides information about the HelloPT application, which allows users to control PowerPoint presentations from an iPhone or iPod touch. HelloPT allows users to view slides, navigate between slides, and use the screen as a digital whiteboard. It also displays notes entered in PowerPoint files. To use HelloPT, it must be installed on a Windows server along with PowerPoint 2000/2003/2007/2010. The application works for iPhone/iPod touch devices running iOS 2.2.1 or higher.
This very short document does not contain enough contextual information to generate a meaningful 3 sentence summary. The document simply states "This is test" without any other details.
The document proposes two solutions for secure internet banking authentication - one based on short-time passwords using smart cards and symmetric cryptography, and the other based on digital certificates. It discusses attacks on authentication like offline credential stealing and online channel breaking. The short-time password solution involves the user copying a response from their smart card to a bank login form. The certificate-based solution establishes an SSL/TLS channel without client authentication initially, then uses the user's certificates once their smart card is available in the browser. Both solutions offer high security against common attacks, and the certificate solution is attractive for the future with changing legislation and widespread e-IDs.
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/temporal-event-neural-networks-a-more-efficient-alternative-to-the-transformer-a-presentation-from-brainchip/
Chris Jones, Director of Product Management at BrainChip , presents the “Temporal Event Neural Networks: A More Efficient Alternative to the Transformer” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
The expansion of AI services necessitates enhanced computational capabilities on edge devices. Temporal Event Neural Networks (TENNs), developed by BrainChip, represent a novel and highly efficient state-space network. TENNs demonstrate exceptional proficiency in handling multi-dimensional streaming data, facilitating advancements in object detection, action recognition, speech enhancement and language model/sequence generation. Through the utilization of polynomial-based continuous convolutions, TENNs streamline models, expedite training processes and significantly diminish memory requirements, achieving notable reductions of up to 50x in parameters and 5,000x in energy consumption compared to prevailing methodologies like transformers.
Integration with BrainChip’s Akida neuromorphic hardware IP further enhances TENNs’ capabilities, enabling the realization of highly capable, portable and passively cooled edge devices. This presentation delves into the technical innovations underlying TENNs, presents real-world benchmarks, and elucidates how this cutting-edge approach is positioned to revolutionize edge AI across diverse applications.
inQuba Webinar Mastering Customer Journey Management with Dr Graham HillLizaNolte
HERE IS YOUR WEBINAR CONTENT! 'Mastering Customer Journey Management with Dr. Graham Hill'. We hope you find the webinar recording both insightful and enjoyable.
In this webinar, we explored essential aspects of Customer Journey Management and personalization. Here’s a summary of the key insights and topics discussed:
Key Takeaways:
Understanding the Customer Journey: Dr. Hill emphasized the importance of mapping and understanding the complete customer journey to identify touchpoints and opportunities for improvement.
Personalization Strategies: We discussed how to leverage data and insights to create personalized experiences that resonate with customers.
Technology Integration: Insights were shared on how inQuba’s advanced technology can streamline customer interactions and drive operational efficiency.
"Scaling RAG Applications to serve millions of users", Kevin GoedeckeFwdays
How we managed to grow and scale a RAG application from zero to thousands of users in 7 months. Lessons from technical challenges around managing high load for LLMs, RAGs and Vector databases.
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).
The Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) invited Taylor Paschal, Knowledge & Information Management Consultant at Enterprise Knowledge, to speak at a Knowledge Management Lunch and Learn hosted on June 12, 2024. All Office of Administration staff were invited to attend and received professional development credit for participating in the voluntary event.
The objectives of the Lunch and Learn presentation were to:
- Review what KM ‘is’ and ‘isn’t’
- Understand the value of KM and the benefits of engaging
- Define and reflect on your “what’s in it for me?”
- Share actionable ways you can participate in Knowledge - - Capture & Transfer
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.
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.
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.
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.
Essentials of Automations: Exploring Attributes & Automation ParametersSafe Software
Building automations in FME Flow can save time, money, and help businesses scale by eliminating data silos and providing data to stakeholders in real-time. One essential component to orchestrating complex automations is the use of attributes & automation parameters (both formerly known as “keys”). In fact, it’s unlikely you’ll ever build an Automation without using these components, but what exactly are they?
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example.pdf
1. Replace this file with prentcsmacro.sty for your meeting,
or with entcsmacro.sty for your meeting. Both can be
found at the ENTCS Macro Home Page.
An Example Paper
My Name 1,2
My Department
My University
My City, My Country
My Co-author 3
My Co-author’s Department
My Co-author’s University
My Co-author’s City, My Co-author’s Country
Abstract
This is a short example to show the basics of using the ENTCS style macro files.
Ample examples of how files should look may be found among the published volumes
of the series at the ENTCS Home Page http://www.elsevier.nl/locate/entcs.
Key words: Please list keywords from your paper here, separated
by commas.
1 Introduction
This short note provides a guide to using the ENTCS macro package for
preparing papers for publication in your conference Proceedings. The Pro-
ceedings may be printed and hard copies distributed to participants at the
meeting; this is an option to Conference Organizers may choose to exercise.
The Proceedings also will be par of a volume in the series Electronic Notes
in Theoretical Computer Science (ENTCS), which is published under the aus-
pices of Elsevier Science B. V., the publishers of Theoretical Computer Science.
It’s home page is http://www.elsevier.nl/locate/entcs
The ENTCS macro package consists of two files:
entcs.cls, the basic style file, and
1
Thanks to everyone who should be thanked
2
Email: myuserid@mydept.myinst.myedu
3
Email: couserid@codept.coinst.coedu
c 2003 Published by Elsevier Science B. V.
2. Please list Your Lastname Here
entcsmacro.sty, a macro file containing the definitions of some of the theorem-
like environments and a few other tidbits.
The formatting these style files impose should not be altered – the reason for
using them is to attain a uniform format for all papers in the Proceedings of
which your paper is a part.
Additional macro files can be added using usepackage{...}. The file
entcsmacro.sty must be included in the list, as is done at the start of the
source file for this paper.
The ENTCS package requires a relatively up-to-date LATEX system in order
to be successfully used. This is reflected in two other packages that are called
by entcs.cls, which must be available on your machine. These are:
• The hyperref package. This package allows the use of hyperlinks in files
prepared using LATEX2e, one of the main features of Adobe’s Acrobat c
Reader software. Be sure that you have at least version 6.69d of this pack-
age.
• The ifpdf package. This is used by hyperref to differentiate between the
use of pdfLATEX and LATEX2e, followed by dvips and then ps2pdf.
The file instraut.dvi contains information about the use of LATEXto pre-
pare files for online publication by Elsevier. This file refers to the older version
of LATEX that is no longer suppported, and that is inadequate for preparing
.pdf files for online publication. Reading this file should answer most of the
basic questions about LATEX that might arise.
2 Frontmatter
The biggest difference between a “usual” LATEX style such as article.sty
and the ENTCS package is that the ENTCS macro package requires the title,
author’s name or names, abstract, keywords and “thanks” all to be included
within the frontmatter environment. At the beginning of the source file for
this paper, you’ll notice this. Also, you’ll notice that the usual maketitle
is absent; it no longer is needed. The ENTCS style package automatically
generates the title, author’s name and address, and related material at the
beginning of the paper. Note also that hyperref has been disabled in this part
of the entcs.cls file, so references to footnotes aren’t linked to the appropriate
footenotes or addresses. This is an old problem with LATEX, involving the fact
that the references within the frontmatter aren’t passed cleanly to the linking
software.
For those who have used the ENTCS package before, the one new thing
to note is the inclusion of Keywords; these are now required by Elsevier –
they’re also required by ACM’s Computing Reviews which reviews ENTCS
publications.
The ENTCS macro package provides two alternatives to listing authors
names and addresses. These are described in detail in the file instraut.dvi.
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Basically, listing each author and his or her address in turn, is the simplest
method. But, if there are several authors and two or more share the same
address (but not all authors are at this address), then the method of listing
authors first, and then the addresses, and of referencing addresses to authors
should be used.
Also, notice that acknowledgment of support (the contents of thanks)
should be done by a separate listing of thanks[NSF]{To the NSF} with the
optional argument – [NSF] – being used for thanksref which is attached to
those authors acknowledging such support. It is important that the thanks
not be included within the scope of author{} or of title{}, but it must
be within the scope of the environment frontmatter.
More details about added terms such as collab can be found in inst.dvi,
if they are needed.
Also, notice that the command lastname{My Lastname} has been in-
cluded before the frontmatter begins. This command should contain the
last names of the authors of the paper. If there are no more than three au-
thors, then they should be listed with the word “and” between the last two;
if more than three authors collaborated on the paper, then the first author
only should be listed, together with emph{et al}. This command creates
the headline for each page after page 1.
Finally, please be sure to include an abstract for your paper.
3 Sectioning and Environments
Since ENTCS is published through the auspices of Elsevier Science B. V., their
style files have been used to create the ENTCS macro package. Here’s a proof
that this package is not much different than most of the ones one encounters:
Definition 3.1 A file is derived from another if it is obtained with only a few
modifications from the original file.
Theorem 3.2 The file entcs.cls is derived from elsart.sty.
Proof. This is clear from the similarity of the output to the output from
Elsevier’s style files. 2
If one wants to start a proof with a descriptive word, such as “sketch”,
then one can use the begin{proof*}...end{proof*} environment, as in
Proof (Sketch) This can be derived from simple observations. 2
The main differences between the file entcs.cls and the elsartr.cls file
used by Elsevier are the more precise format we use – Elsevier’s generic files are
meant for preliminary editing, and more precise formatting is imposed using
a macro file designed for the specific Elsevier journal in which the paper will
eventually appear. The entcs.cls and entcsmacro.sty files format papers
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uniformly so that they all are easily recognizable as being from the series
Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science.
All of the usual features of LATEX are available with these style files –
it is only the formatting that has been rigorously defined. Thus, one has
available the sectioning commands section,subsection, paragraph and
subparagraph. The numbering scheme used is one under which Theorem
1.2.3 is the third numbered item in second subsection of the first section of
the paper. In order to facilitate cross-references, all of the named environments
given below are numbered, and all use the same number scheme.
The file entcsmacro.sty contains additional information that is needed to
typeset a paper. It also has the definitions of the AMS euler and blackboard
bold fonts builtin. If you want to use symbols for the natural numbers, the
reals, etc., then we prefer that you use the blackboard bold fonts, and not
plain bold fonts. This is accomplished by using the mathbb font, as in N or
R.
The names of theorem-like environments are provided in entcsmacro.sty.
With the exception of the environment Algorithm, the names of all of these
are full name, rather than a shortened version. The environments provided
and their names are
• begin{theorem} ... end{theorem} for Theorems,
• begin{lemma} ... end{lemma} for Lemmas,
• begin{corollary} ... end{corollary} for Corollaries,
• begin{proposition} ... end{proposition} for Propositions,
• begin{criterion} ... end{criterion} for Criteria,
• begin{alg} ... end{alg} for Algorithms,
• begin{definition} ... end{definition} for Definitions,
• begin{conjecture} ... end{conjecture} for Conjectures,
• begin{example} ... end{example} for Examples,
• begin{problem} ... end{problem} for Problems,
• begin{remark} ... end{remark} for Remarks,
• begin{note} ... end{note} for Notes,
• begin{claim} ... end{claim} for Claims,
• begin{summary} ... end{summary} for Summary,
• begin{case} ... end{case} for Cases, and
• begin{ack} ... end{ack} for Acknowledgements.
For example,
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Algorithm 1 Step 1: Write the paper
Step 2: Format it with the ENTCS macro package
Step 3: Ship the whole thing to the Guest Editors
4 References and Cross-references
All the cross-referencing facilities of LATEX are supported, so one can use
ref{} and cite{} for cross-references within the paper and for references
to bibliographic items. As is done in this note, the References section 6 can
be composed with begin{thebibliography}...end{thebibliography}.
Alternatively, BibTEX can be used to compile the bibliography. Whichever
one is used, the references are to be numbered consecutively, rather than by
author-defined acronyms. Of course you can use your own acronyms for easy
reference to each of the items in the bibliography, as has been done with the
listing for this short note.
However, note that the references should not be started with a new section
command.
The package hyperref is automatically loaded by entcs.cls, and this makes
all the cross-references within the document “active” when the pdf file of the
paper is viewed with Adobe’s Acrobat c
Reader. The format for including
a link is simple: simply insert href{URL} {text} where URL is the URL
to which you want the link to point, and text is the text you want to be
highlighted, which when clicked upon will bring up the desired web page.
4.1 Particulars about .pdf files
We now require that .pdf files be provided for publication online. A .pdf
file is viewable by Adobe’s Acrobat c
viewer, which can be configured to load
automatically within a browser. Viewing a properly formatted .pdf file with
Acrobat c
allows the cross-references and links to URLs to be active. In fact,
Elsevier utilizes .pdf files in order to take better advantage of the web’s ca-
pabilities.
But one point we want to emphasize is that you should be sure to use Type
1 fonts when you typeset your LATEX source file. These fonts are scalable,
meaning that they carry information that allows the devise viewing the final
output to scale the fonts to suit the viewer being used – from an onscreen
viewer such as Adobe’s Acrobat c
Reader, to printing the file on a printer.
You can tell if you have used the right fonts by viewing the final output on
your machine. It the fonts look grainy, then you have not used Type 1 fonts.
They can be located at the CTAN archive http://www.ctan.org – they are
public domain fonts, and don’t cost anything to add them to your system.
Assuming you have Type 1 fonts available, then there are there methods
for producing .pdf files.
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Using dvips and ps2pdf
We list this option first since it appears to be the most reliable and the
easiest to use, especially if you include embedded PostScript graphics (.eps
files) in your source file. Simply run LATEX2e on your source file, then apply
dvips to produce a PostScript file, and finally apply ps2pdf to obtain a .pdf
file.
The DVIPDFM utility
Another easy method for producing acceptable .pdf files is via the utility
dvipdfm. This utility is included in distributions of MikTEX, which runs
on Windows machines, but it probably needs to be added to your teTEX
distribution, if you are running LATEX on a UNIX machine. The utility and
precise information about installing it on your system can be found at the
web page http://gaspra.kettering.edu/dvipdfm/. In essence, this utility
converts a .dvi file into a .pdf file. So, one can first prepare the .dvi file
using LATEX, and then apply the utility dvipdfm to produce the needed .pdf
file. 4
This utility makes inclusion of graphics particularly simple – those that
are included in the LATEX source file are simply converted to the .pdf format.
As we note below, things are not so simple with the second alternative, which
is to use pdfLATEX.
pdfLATEX
An alternative to the first possibilities to produce .pdf files is to process
the source file with pdfLATEX. This format is available from the standard
CTAN sites http://www.ctan.org. It appears that pdfLATEX and hyperref
have some problems when used together. It is necessary to use pdfLATEX
version 14d or later in order to minimize these issues. If your system has
an earlier version (most teTEX distributions have version 13d), then you
can update your system by retrieving the latest version of pdfLATEX from
ftp://ftp.cstug.cz/pub/tex/local/cstug/thanh/pdftex/. Even if the
recent versions are used, pdfLATEX has the same dealing with references em-
bedded with the frontmatter section described above for LATEX.
But there is one aspect of pdfLATEX that creates problems. Many authors
include EPS 5
files within their papers. While this is fairly straightforward
with LATEX, there are a couple of points to note when attempting this with
pdfLATEX.
To include a PostScript image in a .pdf file produced with pdfLATEX,
you first have to convert the image to a .pdf file, and then it can be in-
cluded using the same command sequence as above. The conversion can be
4
Beware! The utility dvipdf does not produce acceptable .pdf files, and should not be
used. Only dvipdfm should be used to produce .pdf files.
5
EPS stands for embedded PostScript, which affords a mechanism for including pre-
prepared PostScript files within a LATEX document.
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accomplished most easily using Ghostscript; you can simply view the file in
Ghostview and then print the image to a .pdf file using the pdfwriter option
within Ghostview. The result for a standard chess board that is part of the
Ghostview distribution is the following image:
Here as well is a copy of a color image. While pdfLATEX can handle image files
in other formats, LATEX can only handle .eps images reliably.
It also should be noted that we have included two separate source files for
this example file – one for LATEX and one for pdfLATEX – because we want
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to illustrate how to insert graphics images into the file. If your paper does
not include such images, then the same source file can be formatted by either
LATEX orf by pdfLATEX.
Using ENTCS Macros with Mac OS X
Of course, if your file doesn’t require .eps or other PostScript files, then
you can create the required .pdf file using any of the standard TEX imple-
mentations for the Macintosh. If you need to include PostScript files, and if
you are using TEXShop, then you can specify to use dvips and ghostview in
processing your file, and then you can apply ps2pdf to create the needed .pdf
file. Alternatibely, the Mac OS X operating system is based on UNIX, so it
supports the use of teTEX as described above.
5 Summary
The ENTCS macro package is relatively easy to use and provides a uniform
layout for all the papers that appear in ENTCS.
Problem 5.1 Finish your paper and get it to your Program Chairman on
time!
When you have finished preparing your paper, send a copy of the source file,
together with any macro files that are needed to your Program Chairman. If
the files are extensive, you can place copies in the pub/incoming sub-directory
of the ftp directory on the machine indicated by your Program Chairman using
anonymous ftp. If you do this, please send me email to alert me that the file(s)
are here.
Assigning Volume / Issue Numbers
One additional point worth mentioning is that ENTCS is moving to Sci-
enceDirect, Elsevier’s main platform for publishing electronic series, Because
ScienceDirect must publish entire volumes at the same time, we have changed
the procedure for preparing final versions so that volume numbers will not
be assigned until the final versions are ready. Guest Editors will now have
to receive the final version of all papers in their Proceedings before a volume
and issue number will be assigned for the Proceedings. Even with the move to
ScienceDirect, the reference scheme already used for publications in ENTCS –
http://www.elsevier/nl/locate/entcs/ NNnn.html remains the valid way
to cite papers published in ENTCS, where NN denotes the number of the vol-
ume, and nn denotes the issue number. Publications consisting of an entire
volume should use 1 as the issue number.
Copyright Transfer Forms
One result of the move to ScienceDirect is that the corresponding author
of each paper published in ENTCS must submit a signed Copyright Transfer
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Form to Elsevier in order for their paper to be published. A copy of this form
will be sent to each author by the Guest Editors of each volume. Details about
this agreement specifying the rights of the authors and the rights of Elsevier
are available at Elsevier’s Author Gateway.
Publication of Final Versions
Because ScienceDirect cannot easily accommodate changes to published
material, the Proceedings in its entirety must be ready before it can be pub-
lished. This is one reason why the volume and issue number is not assigned
until the final versions of all papers have been sent to the Guest Editors for
final processing.
6 Bibliographical references
ENTCS employs the plain style of bibliographic references in which references
are listed in alphabetical order, according the the first author’s last name, and
are sequentially numbered. Please utilize this style. We have a BibTEX style
file, for those who wish to use it. It is the file entcs.bst which is included in
this package. The basic rules we have employed are the following:
• Authors’ names should be listed in alphabetical order, with the first author’s
last name being the first listing, followed by the author’s initials or first
name, and with the other authors names listed as first name, last name.
• Titles of articles in journals should be in emphasized type.
• Titles of books, monographs, etc. should be in quotations.
• Journal names should be in plain roman type.
• Journal volume numbers should be in boldface type, with the year of pub-
lication immediately following in roman type, and enclosed in parentheses.
• References to URLs on the net should be “active” and the URL itself should
be in typewriter font.
• Articles should include page numbers.
The criteria are illustrated in the following.
References
[1] Civin, P., and B. Yood, Involutions on Banach algebras, Pacific J. Math. 9
(1959), 415–436.
[2] Clifford, A. H., and G. B. Preston, “The Algebraic Theory of Semigroups,”
Math. Surveys 7, Amer. Math. Soc., Providence, R.I., 1961.
[3] Freyd, Peter, Peter O’Hearn, John Power, Robert Tennent and Makoto
Takeyama, Bireflectivity, Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science 1
(1995), URL: http://www.elsevier.nl/locate/entcs/volume1.html.
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[4] Easdown, D., and W. D. Munn, Trace functions on inverse semigroup algebras,
U. of Glasgow, Dept. of Math., preprint 93/52.
[5] Roscoe, A. W., “The Theory and Practice of Concurrency,” Prentice Hall Series
in Computer Science, Prentice Hall Publishers, London, New York (1198),
565pp. With associated web site
http://www.comlab.ox.ac.uk/oucl/publications/books/concurrency/.
[6] Shehadah, A. A., “Embedding theorems for semigroups with involution, “ Ph.D.
thesis, Purdue University, Indiana, 1982.
[7] Weyl, H., “The Classical Groups,” 2nd Ed., Princeton U. Press, Princeton, N.J.,
1946.
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