The document discusses the challenges of managing performance for modern web applications. It notes that traditional monitoring tools are inadequate as they do not measure from the user's perspective and cannot account for factors like third-party content and dynamic architectures. The document advocates for a new approach that directly measures response time at the browser level to provide accurate, correlated data across tiers. This real user monitoring allows teams to quickly triage issues, understand business impact, and optimize performance.
The document summarizes research into how young people between the ages of 18-25 collect, organize, and interact with their personal music collections. It finds that while CD collections were once important, digital music files downloaded online have replaced CDs as the primary format. Participants had large digital music libraries of over 3,000 songs and valued being able to customize playlists and access their entire collections anywhere via portable devices. Music was an important part of both leisure activities and constructing personal space for many participants.
Laird Best Practices Ajax World West2008rajivmordani
The document outlines best practices for delivering framework products that include Ajax features, discussing selecting an open source framework over custom, providing a public client-side API, and enabling client-side event publishing and subscription. It also presents case studies of Oracle products that demonstrate these practices, such as using Dojo or jQuery and providing APIs for WebLogic Portal and Application Express.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is everywhere, promising self-driving cars, medical breakthroughs, and new ways of working. But how do you separate hype from reality? How can your company apply AI to solve real business problems?
Here’s what AI learnings your business should keep in mind for 2017.
This document discusses using data visualizations with Java Server Faces (JSF) technology. It provides an overview of data visualizations and their use in web applications. It then demonstrates several data visualization components available in Oracle's Application Development Framework, including graphs, gauges, maps, pivot tables, Gantt charts, and a hierarchy viewer. The document explains that JSF simplifies web development and that ADF data visualization components provide powerful and productive tools for building rich internet applications.
The document discusses data services and service-oriented architectures. It provides an overview of XAware, a technology that offers a real-time data integration environment and composite data services. It describes how XAware can be used to develop data services for rich internet applications and service-oriented architectures by rationalizing data from multiple sources and abstracting away physical implementations. The document also outlines XAware's components, metadata model, deployment options and provides an example demonstration of an auto insurance policy service.
The document discusses the beauty of JavaScript and its many features. It covers how JavaScript offers classless object-oriented programming and functional programming. It also discusses how JavaScript can run on both the client-side and server-side. The document provides examples of JavaScript syntax like variables, functions, objects, inheritance through prototypes, and AJAX requests. It emphasizes how libraries help create abstractions and beautiful patterns in JavaScript code.
The document discusses different types of email applications, including one-way broadcast services like mailing lists and Google Alerts that send requested information to users, command line interfaces that allow users to email commands and receive responses, data transfer services that parse forwarded emails and extract structured data, and intelligent agents that enrich structured email data by retrieving related information from other sites. Examples provided include TripIt, Flickr, Blogger, I Want Sandy, and services for tracking shipments and flights.
The document discusses the challenges of managing performance for modern web applications. It notes that traditional monitoring tools are inadequate as they do not measure from the user's perspective and cannot account for factors like third-party content and dynamic architectures. The document advocates for a new approach that directly measures response time at the browser level to provide accurate, correlated data across tiers. This real user monitoring allows teams to quickly triage issues, understand business impact, and optimize performance.
The document summarizes research into how young people between the ages of 18-25 collect, organize, and interact with their personal music collections. It finds that while CD collections were once important, digital music files downloaded online have replaced CDs as the primary format. Participants had large digital music libraries of over 3,000 songs and valued being able to customize playlists and access their entire collections anywhere via portable devices. Music was an important part of both leisure activities and constructing personal space for many participants.
Laird Best Practices Ajax World West2008rajivmordani
The document outlines best practices for delivering framework products that include Ajax features, discussing selecting an open source framework over custom, providing a public client-side API, and enabling client-side event publishing and subscription. It also presents case studies of Oracle products that demonstrate these practices, such as using Dojo or jQuery and providing APIs for WebLogic Portal and Application Express.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is everywhere, promising self-driving cars, medical breakthroughs, and new ways of working. But how do you separate hype from reality? How can your company apply AI to solve real business problems?
Here’s what AI learnings your business should keep in mind for 2017.
This document discusses using data visualizations with Java Server Faces (JSF) technology. It provides an overview of data visualizations and their use in web applications. It then demonstrates several data visualization components available in Oracle's Application Development Framework, including graphs, gauges, maps, pivot tables, Gantt charts, and a hierarchy viewer. The document explains that JSF simplifies web development and that ADF data visualization components provide powerful and productive tools for building rich internet applications.
The document discusses data services and service-oriented architectures. It provides an overview of XAware, a technology that offers a real-time data integration environment and composite data services. It describes how XAware can be used to develop data services for rich internet applications and service-oriented architectures by rationalizing data from multiple sources and abstracting away physical implementations. The document also outlines XAware's components, metadata model, deployment options and provides an example demonstration of an auto insurance policy service.
The document discusses the beauty of JavaScript and its many features. It covers how JavaScript offers classless object-oriented programming and functional programming. It also discusses how JavaScript can run on both the client-side and server-side. The document provides examples of JavaScript syntax like variables, functions, objects, inheritance through prototypes, and AJAX requests. It emphasizes how libraries help create abstractions and beautiful patterns in JavaScript code.
The document discusses different types of email applications, including one-way broadcast services like mailing lists and Google Alerts that send requested information to users, command line interfaces that allow users to email commands and receive responses, data transfer services that parse forwarded emails and extract structured data, and intelligent agents that enrich structured email data by retrieving related information from other sites. Examples provided include TripIt, Flickr, Blogger, I Want Sandy, and services for tracking shipments and flights.
Turbo Enterprise Web 2.0 Ajax World 20081rajivmordani
The document discusses using TURBO to build rich internet applications (RIAs) from Oracle databases. TURBO provides an AJAX development library and virtual 3-tier architecture stored in PL/SQL to enable developers to create RIAs without coding AJAX. It allows leveraging existing Oracle investments and skills while bringing AJAX and Flash capabilities to more users and applications. TURBO aims to simplify and optimize RIA development for the enterprise.
1. Social networking has become the "killer app" for intranets by allowing employees to discover information through their social connections within the company.
2. For intranets to succeed, they must be seen as an integral part of employees' work days rather than just a place for company policies.
3. By including social features like forums, polls, photos and blogs, intranets can become vibrant company communities and better serve the needs of organizational goals and employee engagement.
Ian Selby introduces server-side JavaScript (SSJS), which allows JavaScript code to run on the server. SSJS offers benefits like sharing code between the client-side and server-side. Ian recommends getting excited about SSJS and provides a link to download Jaxer from Aptana to start writing server-side JavaScript code.
This document discusses the history and future of JSF and Ajax. It begins with an overview of JSF and how it works. It then discusses early approaches to adding Ajax functionality to JSF such as Shale Remoting and Dynamic Faces. Next, it covers component libraries that integrated Ajax more fully like Ajax4JSF, Apache Trinidad, and ICEFaces. It concludes by looking ahead to further improvements in JSF 2.0.
Practical Thin Server Architecture With Dojo Peter Svenssonrajivmordani
The document discusses thin server architecture, which moves user interface code from servers to clients. This improves scalability by distributing processing across clients. It also enhances responsiveness by allowing immediate client-side reactions to user input. Key benefits include improved scalability, responsiveness, programming model, and support for offline/interoperable applications. The document provides examples using Dojo to demonstrate how client-side widgets and data stores can be implemented following thin server principles.
Phobos is a lightweight JavaScript web application framework that allows all application logic to be written in JavaScript. It runs on the Java platform and supports full-featured IDE development. Phobos integrates JavaScript and Java libraries and allows JavaScript code to be run across client, server, and database tiers for a unified programming model.
This document summarizes Force.com, a platform as a service (PaaS) that allows developers to build and host enterprise applications without managing the underlying infrastructure. It outlines Force.com's capabilities such as the Apex programming language, workflow tools, integration features, and Visualforce for building custom user interfaces. Force.com handles all infrastructure maintenance so developers can focus solely on their application logic and features.
The document discusses pushing data from a server to a browser using Comet techniques like long polling and streaming. It describes how Comet allows for real-time updates without polling by keeping connections open. The Bayeux protocol is presented as an open standard for implementing Comet with publish/subscribe messaging on both the client-side and server-side in Java. Examples of using Comet for chat applications and sensor data updates are provided.
I Phone Dev Summit Prezo Guy Naor Finalrajivmordani
This document discusses scaling iPhone applications. It notes that the future is uncertain so developers need to save money and effort by optimizing risk and expenditure. It recommends scaling web servers, application servers, static files, storage, and databases. Specific technologies mentioned for scaling include caching with memcached and Rails caching, load balancing with nginx and HAProxy, and database clustering. The document stresses that there is no one-size-fits-all solution and scaling plans need testing. It estimates that better code and caching can address 90% of scaling needs.
This document discusses the emerging pattern of networked applications, where applications are built with a more distributed architecture between the client and server compared to traditional web applications. With networked applications, more processing is done on the client side in JavaScript to reduce server load and bandwidth usage. This allows for improved performance, mobility as applications are not tied to specific servers, and less dependency on browser limitations. The document explores different technologies for building such applications like JavaScript widget kits, Google Web Toolkit, Flex, and others.
Mike Grushin Developing Ugc Sites That Scalerajivmordani
The document discusses developing user-generated content (UGC) sites that can scale. It outlines key challenges in uploading, converting, storing, streaming and scaling large volumes of UGC. The author recommends using open-source technologies and cloud computing platforms like Amazon Web Services which allow sites to pay only for resources used and easily scale on demand. Case studies compare traditional hosting versus cloud for both a large sports media company and a startup UGC site, noting the cloud's cost advantages and ability to quickly scale large traffic growth.
This document discusses JavaFX and its capabilities for incorporating media and animation. It provides an overview of the JavaFX platform and roadmap, and describes features of the JavaFX Script programming language like binding, animation, and media playback. It also covers tools for JavaFX development and deployment basics, including software requirements and the JavaFX SDK.
This document discusses the use of flying pixels, or animations and transitions, in both consumer-facing and enterprise applications. It notes pros and cons of flying pixels, including that they can enhance the user experience but also be distracting. The document also discusses challenges in balancing client-side and server-side functionality in enterprise applications. It compares client/server and distributed MVC architectures, and provides seven pieces of advice for developing modern enterprise applications.
The document discusses creating on-demand enterprise applications for the iPhone using the Force Platform. It outlines three approaches: using Visualforce for web-based apps, using Force Platform Mobile for easier native apps that leverage the full Force Platform, or using the iPhone SDK and Force SOAP API for native apps with full SDK features but requiring a connection. Force Platform Mobile is described as the quickest way to create a native app while Visualforce is best for quick prototyping and the iPhone SDK provides the most UI options but requires connectivity.
The document discusses VoIP capabilities on the iPhone and the possibilities it enables. It outlines technology challenges including network impairments like latency, packet loss, and jitter. It also discusses challenges of mobile environments like background noise and acoustic echo. The iPhone is positioned as the most VoIP friendly phone due to its open APIs and resources, but running many apps can drain resources and impact voice quality.
The document discusses Corent Technology and its product which allows for agile development of Rich Internet Applications. It enables defining schemas and rules through a graphical interface to automatically generate default user interfaces for applications. Components can then be added, properties edited, and projects downloaded without any code required. The product aims to provide a loosely coupled, service oriented architecture for developing applications that can run on various RIA platforms.
The document discusses openness in mobile platforms and operating systems. It summarizes the approaches taken by various platforms including iPhone, Android, mainstream mobile Linux platforms, and others. iPhone and Android are not fully open source and have limited open development environments. Mainstream mobile Linux platforms are more open source, have open development processes, and support a variety of programming languages and environments. Being more open leads to greater third-party development, which drives further platform improvements and reduced fragmentation.
The document discusses challenges and responses to adopting the iPhone in the enterprise. It addresses concerns around email/calendaring, enterprise application support, device/software support, and security. Regarding email/calendaring, the iPhone supports push IMAP and Exchange with calendar integration. For applications, the iPhone allows powerful native apps and standards-based web apps. Device support utilizes iTunes and configuration profiles. Security concerns are addressed through built-in VPN and following best practices. Overall, the document argues that the iPhone improves user experience and that organizations should evaluate total cost of ownership for specific use cases.
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.
Turbo Enterprise Web 2.0 Ajax World 20081rajivmordani
The document discusses using TURBO to build rich internet applications (RIAs) from Oracle databases. TURBO provides an AJAX development library and virtual 3-tier architecture stored in PL/SQL to enable developers to create RIAs without coding AJAX. It allows leveraging existing Oracle investments and skills while bringing AJAX and Flash capabilities to more users and applications. TURBO aims to simplify and optimize RIA development for the enterprise.
1. Social networking has become the "killer app" for intranets by allowing employees to discover information through their social connections within the company.
2. For intranets to succeed, they must be seen as an integral part of employees' work days rather than just a place for company policies.
3. By including social features like forums, polls, photos and blogs, intranets can become vibrant company communities and better serve the needs of organizational goals and employee engagement.
Ian Selby introduces server-side JavaScript (SSJS), which allows JavaScript code to run on the server. SSJS offers benefits like sharing code between the client-side and server-side. Ian recommends getting excited about SSJS and provides a link to download Jaxer from Aptana to start writing server-side JavaScript code.
This document discusses the history and future of JSF and Ajax. It begins with an overview of JSF and how it works. It then discusses early approaches to adding Ajax functionality to JSF such as Shale Remoting and Dynamic Faces. Next, it covers component libraries that integrated Ajax more fully like Ajax4JSF, Apache Trinidad, and ICEFaces. It concludes by looking ahead to further improvements in JSF 2.0.
Practical Thin Server Architecture With Dojo Peter Svenssonrajivmordani
The document discusses thin server architecture, which moves user interface code from servers to clients. This improves scalability by distributing processing across clients. It also enhances responsiveness by allowing immediate client-side reactions to user input. Key benefits include improved scalability, responsiveness, programming model, and support for offline/interoperable applications. The document provides examples using Dojo to demonstrate how client-side widgets and data stores can be implemented following thin server principles.
Phobos is a lightweight JavaScript web application framework that allows all application logic to be written in JavaScript. It runs on the Java platform and supports full-featured IDE development. Phobos integrates JavaScript and Java libraries and allows JavaScript code to be run across client, server, and database tiers for a unified programming model.
This document summarizes Force.com, a platform as a service (PaaS) that allows developers to build and host enterprise applications without managing the underlying infrastructure. It outlines Force.com's capabilities such as the Apex programming language, workflow tools, integration features, and Visualforce for building custom user interfaces. Force.com handles all infrastructure maintenance so developers can focus solely on their application logic and features.
The document discusses pushing data from a server to a browser using Comet techniques like long polling and streaming. It describes how Comet allows for real-time updates without polling by keeping connections open. The Bayeux protocol is presented as an open standard for implementing Comet with publish/subscribe messaging on both the client-side and server-side in Java. Examples of using Comet for chat applications and sensor data updates are provided.
I Phone Dev Summit Prezo Guy Naor Finalrajivmordani
This document discusses scaling iPhone applications. It notes that the future is uncertain so developers need to save money and effort by optimizing risk and expenditure. It recommends scaling web servers, application servers, static files, storage, and databases. Specific technologies mentioned for scaling include caching with memcached and Rails caching, load balancing with nginx and HAProxy, and database clustering. The document stresses that there is no one-size-fits-all solution and scaling plans need testing. It estimates that better code and caching can address 90% of scaling needs.
This document discusses the emerging pattern of networked applications, where applications are built with a more distributed architecture between the client and server compared to traditional web applications. With networked applications, more processing is done on the client side in JavaScript to reduce server load and bandwidth usage. This allows for improved performance, mobility as applications are not tied to specific servers, and less dependency on browser limitations. The document explores different technologies for building such applications like JavaScript widget kits, Google Web Toolkit, Flex, and others.
Mike Grushin Developing Ugc Sites That Scalerajivmordani
The document discusses developing user-generated content (UGC) sites that can scale. It outlines key challenges in uploading, converting, storing, streaming and scaling large volumes of UGC. The author recommends using open-source technologies and cloud computing platforms like Amazon Web Services which allow sites to pay only for resources used and easily scale on demand. Case studies compare traditional hosting versus cloud for both a large sports media company and a startup UGC site, noting the cloud's cost advantages and ability to quickly scale large traffic growth.
This document discusses JavaFX and its capabilities for incorporating media and animation. It provides an overview of the JavaFX platform and roadmap, and describes features of the JavaFX Script programming language like binding, animation, and media playback. It also covers tools for JavaFX development and deployment basics, including software requirements and the JavaFX SDK.
This document discusses the use of flying pixels, or animations and transitions, in both consumer-facing and enterprise applications. It notes pros and cons of flying pixels, including that they can enhance the user experience but also be distracting. The document also discusses challenges in balancing client-side and server-side functionality in enterprise applications. It compares client/server and distributed MVC architectures, and provides seven pieces of advice for developing modern enterprise applications.
The document discusses creating on-demand enterprise applications for the iPhone using the Force Platform. It outlines three approaches: using Visualforce for web-based apps, using Force Platform Mobile for easier native apps that leverage the full Force Platform, or using the iPhone SDK and Force SOAP API for native apps with full SDK features but requiring a connection. Force Platform Mobile is described as the quickest way to create a native app while Visualforce is best for quick prototyping and the iPhone SDK provides the most UI options but requires connectivity.
The document discusses VoIP capabilities on the iPhone and the possibilities it enables. It outlines technology challenges including network impairments like latency, packet loss, and jitter. It also discusses challenges of mobile environments like background noise and acoustic echo. The iPhone is positioned as the most VoIP friendly phone due to its open APIs and resources, but running many apps can drain resources and impact voice quality.
The document discusses Corent Technology and its product which allows for agile development of Rich Internet Applications. It enables defining schemas and rules through a graphical interface to automatically generate default user interfaces for applications. Components can then be added, properties edited, and projects downloaded without any code required. The product aims to provide a loosely coupled, service oriented architecture for developing applications that can run on various RIA platforms.
The document discusses openness in mobile platforms and operating systems. It summarizes the approaches taken by various platforms including iPhone, Android, mainstream mobile Linux platforms, and others. iPhone and Android are not fully open source and have limited open development environments. Mainstream mobile Linux platforms are more open source, have open development processes, and support a variety of programming languages and environments. Being more open leads to greater third-party development, which drives further platform improvements and reduced fragmentation.
The document discusses challenges and responses to adopting the iPhone in the enterprise. It addresses concerns around email/calendaring, enterprise application support, device/software support, and security. Regarding email/calendaring, the iPhone supports push IMAP and Exchange with calendar integration. For applications, the iPhone allows powerful native apps and standards-based web apps. Device support utilizes iTunes and configuration profiles. Security concerns are addressed through built-in VPN and following best practices. Overall, the document argues that the iPhone improves user experience and that organizations should evaluate total cost of ownership for specific use cases.
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.
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.
FREE A4 Cyber Security Awareness Posters-Social Engineering part 3Data Hops
Free A4 downloadable and printable Cyber Security, Social Engineering Safety and security Training Posters . Promote security awareness in the home or workplace. Lock them Out From training providers datahops.com
HCL Notes und Domino Lizenzkostenreduzierung in der Welt von DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-und-domino-lizenzkostenreduzierung-in-der-welt-von-dlau/
DLAU und die Lizenzen nach dem CCB- und CCX-Modell sind für viele in der HCL-Community seit letztem Jahr ein heißes Thema. Als Notes- oder Domino-Kunde haben Sie vielleicht mit unerwartet hohen Benutzerzahlen und Lizenzgebühren zu kämpfen. Sie fragen sich vielleicht, wie diese neue Art der Lizenzierung funktioniert und welchen Nutzen sie Ihnen bringt. Vor allem wollen Sie sicherlich Ihr Budget einhalten und Kosten sparen, wo immer möglich. Das verstehen wir und wir möchten Ihnen dabei helfen!
Wir erklären Ihnen, wie Sie häufige Konfigurationsprobleme lösen können, die dazu führen können, dass mehr Benutzer gezählt werden als nötig, und wie Sie überflüssige oder ungenutzte Konten identifizieren und entfernen können, um Geld zu sparen. Es gibt auch einige Ansätze, die zu unnötigen Ausgaben führen können, z. B. wenn ein Personendokument anstelle eines Mail-Ins für geteilte Mailboxen verwendet wird. Wir zeigen Ihnen solche Fälle und deren Lösungen. Und natürlich erklären wir Ihnen das neue Lizenzmodell.
Nehmen Sie an diesem Webinar teil, bei dem HCL-Ambassador Marc Thomas und Gastredner Franz Walder Ihnen diese neue Welt näherbringen. Es vermittelt Ihnen die Tools und das Know-how, um den Überblick zu bewahren. Sie werden in der Lage sein, Ihre Kosten durch eine optimierte Domino-Konfiguration zu reduzieren und auch in Zukunft gering zu halten.
Diese Themen werden behandelt
- Reduzierung der Lizenzkosten durch Auffinden und Beheben von Fehlkonfigurationen und überflüssigen Konten
- Wie funktionieren CCB- und CCX-Lizenzen wirklich?
- Verstehen des DLAU-Tools und wie man es am besten nutzt
- Tipps für häufige Problembereiche, wie z. B. Team-Postfächer, Funktions-/Testbenutzer usw.
- Praxisbeispiele und Best Practices zum sofortigen Umsetzen
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.
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
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.
How to Interpret Trends in the Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart.pdfChart Kalyan
A Mix Chart displays historical data of numbers in a graphical or tabular form. The Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart specifically shows the results of a sequence of numbers over different periods.
Connector Corner: Seamlessly power UiPath Apps, GenAI with prebuilt connectorsDianaGray10
Join us to learn how UiPath Apps can directly and easily interact with prebuilt connectors via Integration Service--including Salesforce, ServiceNow, Open GenAI, and more.
The best part is you can achieve this without building a custom workflow! Say goodbye to the hassle of using separate automations to call APIs. By seamlessly integrating within App Studio, you can now easily streamline your workflow, while gaining direct access to our Connector Catalog of popular applications.
We’ll discuss and demo the benefits of UiPath Apps and connectors including:
Creating a compelling user experience for any software, without the limitations of APIs.
Accelerating the app creation process, saving time and effort
Enjoying high-performance CRUD (create, read, update, delete) operations, for
seamless data management.
Speakers:
Russell Alfeche, Technology Leader, RPA at qBotic and UiPath MVP
Charlie Greenberg, host
For the full video of this presentation, please visit: https://www.edge-ai-vision.com/2024/06/how-axelera-ai-uses-digital-compute-in-memory-to-deliver-fast-and-energy-efficient-computer-vision-a-presentation-from-axelera-ai/
Bram Verhoef, Head of Machine Learning at Axelera AI, presents the “How Axelera AI Uses Digital Compute-in-memory to Deliver Fast and Energy-efficient Computer Vision” tutorial at the May 2024 Embedded Vision Summit.
As artificial intelligence inference transitions from cloud environments to edge locations, computer vision applications achieve heightened responsiveness, reliability and privacy. This migration, however, introduces the challenge of operating within the stringent confines of resource constraints typical at the edge, including small form factors, low energy budgets and diminished memory and computational capacities. Axelera AI addresses these challenges through an innovative approach of performing digital computations within memory itself. This technique facilitates the realization of high-performance, energy-efficient and cost-effective computer vision capabilities at the thin and thick edge, extending the frontier of what is achievable with current technologies.
In this presentation, Verhoef unveils his company’s pioneering chip technology and demonstrates its capacity to deliver exceptional frames-per-second performance across a range of standard computer vision networks typical of applications in security, surveillance and the industrial sector. This shows that advanced computer vision can be accessible and efficient, even at the very edge of our technological ecosystem.
TrustArc Webinar - 2024 Global Privacy SurveyTrustArc
How does your privacy program stack up against your peers? What challenges are privacy teams tackling and prioritizing in 2024?
In the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey, we asked over 1,800 global privacy professionals and business executives to share their perspectives on the current state of privacy inside and outside of their organizations. This year’s report focused on emerging areas of importance for privacy and compliance professionals, including considerations and implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies, building brand trust, and different approaches for achieving higher privacy competence scores.
See how organizational priorities and strategic approaches to data security and privacy are evolving around the globe.
This webinar will review:
- The top 10 privacy insights from the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey
- The top challenges for privacy leaders, practitioners, and organizations in 2024
- Key themes to consider in developing and maintaining your privacy program
Have you ever been confused by the myriad of choices offered by AWS for hosting a website or an API?
Lambda, Elastic Beanstalk, Lightsail, Amplify, S3 (and more!) can each host websites + APIs. But which one should we choose?
Which one is cheapest? Which one is fastest? Which one will scale to meet our needs?
Join me in this session as we dive into each AWS hosting service to determine which one is best for your scenario and explain why!
"Choosing proper type of scaling", Olena SyrotaFwdays
Imagine an IoT processing system that is already quite mature and production-ready and for which client coverage is growing and scaling and performance aspects are life and death questions. The system has Redis, MongoDB, and stream processing based on ksqldb. In this talk, firstly, we will analyze scaling approaches and then select the proper ones for our system.
GraphRAG for Life Science to increase LLM accuracyTomaz Bratanic
GraphRAG for life science domain, where you retriever information from biomedical knowledge graphs using LLMs to increase the accuracy and performance of generated answers