This document discusses various business models for open source software including donations, merchandise sales, consulting and training, product bundling, dual licensing, software as a service, and controlling audience through proprietary services. It notes that open source software is free to use and modify but users may have to pay for maintenance and support, while closed source software requires payment to use but provides a unified experience.
Empowering Women Technology Startup Founders to Succeed - Voices 2015Deanna Kosaraju
Empowering Women Technology Startup Founders to Succeed
Ari Horie, CEO & Founder, Women's Startup Lab
Voices 2015 - www.globaltechwomen.com
Mon March 9 10:00 PST
Mon March 9 13:00 EST
Mon March 9 17:00 UTC
Tue March 10 22:30 IST
Tue March 10 4:00 Sydney
Session Length: 1 Hour
As Founder and CEO of Women's Startup lab, Ari Horie will share her knowledge on the entrepreneurial journey, obstacles facing female technology founders, and her tips and tricks for women looking to overcome these barriers. In addition, Ari will be able to discuss her philosophy, “The Hito Rule,” which calls on women to not only lean in, but on and up their communities to gather the skills, network, and support needed to advance their companies and how she has successfully implemented this philosophy during her own entrepreneurial journey.
The document is about a startup conference presentation on co-founders. It discusses the two main questions around co-founders: how to find one and how to split equity. It then lists the top 5 mistakes made in co-founder situations: not deciding the CEO, unequal equity splits when responsibilities differ, protecting the idea too closely, not having the full team in place, and assuming only a developer is needed to complete the team. It provides advice on how to convince a developer to join by demonstrating traction in customers or partnerships.
Startup Conference LA - raising your first roundAlain Raynaud
This document provides advice for first-time founders on raising money from investors. It recommends meeting as many people as possible to grow your network, finding advisors and connectors who can introduce you to investors, getting meetings with investors by using introductions and following up, and getting investors to say "yes" at meetings by inspiring them with your vision and team. The key steps are meeting tons of people through events and affiliations, finding advocates who will help with introductions, getting the introductions and scheduling meetings, and nailing the meetings to inspire investors.
Mark Suster - The Startup Conference LA 2011Alain Raynaud
The document provides advice for entrepreneurs on getting started with a business, raising money, and building a successful company. It recommends having passion for an idea and taking the first leap rather than waiting. For raising money, it advises avoiding friends and family as investors and securing an anchor investor first. When building the business, the document stresses the importance of shipping products frequently, measuring key metrics, learning from competitors, and solving real problems for customers.
Sales God is the concept for an iPhone/Android app that allows sales people to quickly recognize key prospects at a conference, based on face recognition from a picture they snap on the cell phone.
An Analysis Of Open Source Business ModelsSandra Long
An open source business model summary:
1) Open source software is developed by a community of volunteers who freely share the source code. This allows many developers to improve the product at low cost.
2) Companies can build businesses around open source software in several ways - by distributing the software, providing support services, or developing proprietary products that incorporate open source code.
3) The main business models are distributors (who sell support for open source software), software producers (who develop proprietary products using open source components), and third party service providers (who offer paid support for open source projects). These models generate revenue from support contracts, software/service sales, and consulting.
This document provides guidance for starting an open source software project. It discusses introducing FOSS and getting started by choosing a name and mission statement. It covers technical infrastructure like version control, bug tracking, and hosting. It also addresses social infrastructure such as communication channels and announcing the project. Managing volunteers, earning or spending money, packaging releases, and choosing an appropriate license are also covered. The document aims to help software developers and managers launch and maintain successful open source projects.
This document discusses various business models for open source software including donations, merchandise sales, consulting and training, product bundling, dual licensing, software as a service, and controlling audience through proprietary services. It notes that open source software is free to use and modify but users may have to pay for maintenance and support, while closed source software requires payment to use but provides a unified experience.
Empowering Women Technology Startup Founders to Succeed - Voices 2015Deanna Kosaraju
Empowering Women Technology Startup Founders to Succeed
Ari Horie, CEO & Founder, Women's Startup Lab
Voices 2015 - www.globaltechwomen.com
Mon March 9 10:00 PST
Mon March 9 13:00 EST
Mon March 9 17:00 UTC
Tue March 10 22:30 IST
Tue March 10 4:00 Sydney
Session Length: 1 Hour
As Founder and CEO of Women's Startup lab, Ari Horie will share her knowledge on the entrepreneurial journey, obstacles facing female technology founders, and her tips and tricks for women looking to overcome these barriers. In addition, Ari will be able to discuss her philosophy, “The Hito Rule,” which calls on women to not only lean in, but on and up their communities to gather the skills, network, and support needed to advance their companies and how she has successfully implemented this philosophy during her own entrepreneurial journey.
The document is about a startup conference presentation on co-founders. It discusses the two main questions around co-founders: how to find one and how to split equity. It then lists the top 5 mistakes made in co-founder situations: not deciding the CEO, unequal equity splits when responsibilities differ, protecting the idea too closely, not having the full team in place, and assuming only a developer is needed to complete the team. It provides advice on how to convince a developer to join by demonstrating traction in customers or partnerships.
Startup Conference LA - raising your first roundAlain Raynaud
This document provides advice for first-time founders on raising money from investors. It recommends meeting as many people as possible to grow your network, finding advisors and connectors who can introduce you to investors, getting meetings with investors by using introductions and following up, and getting investors to say "yes" at meetings by inspiring them with your vision and team. The key steps are meeting tons of people through events and affiliations, finding advocates who will help with introductions, getting the introductions and scheduling meetings, and nailing the meetings to inspire investors.
Mark Suster - The Startup Conference LA 2011Alain Raynaud
The document provides advice for entrepreneurs on getting started with a business, raising money, and building a successful company. It recommends having passion for an idea and taking the first leap rather than waiting. For raising money, it advises avoiding friends and family as investors and securing an anchor investor first. When building the business, the document stresses the importance of shipping products frequently, measuring key metrics, learning from competitors, and solving real problems for customers.
Sales God is the concept for an iPhone/Android app that allows sales people to quickly recognize key prospects at a conference, based on face recognition from a picture they snap on the cell phone.
An Analysis Of Open Source Business ModelsSandra Long
An open source business model summary:
1) Open source software is developed by a community of volunteers who freely share the source code. This allows many developers to improve the product at low cost.
2) Companies can build businesses around open source software in several ways - by distributing the software, providing support services, or developing proprietary products that incorporate open source code.
3) The main business models are distributors (who sell support for open source software), software producers (who develop proprietary products using open source components), and third party service providers (who offer paid support for open source projects). These models generate revenue from support contracts, software/service sales, and consulting.
This document provides guidance for starting an open source software project. It discusses introducing FOSS and getting started by choosing a name and mission statement. It covers technical infrastructure like version control, bug tracking, and hosting. It also addresses social infrastructure such as communication channels and announcing the project. Managing volunteers, earning or spending money, packaging releases, and choosing an appropriate license are also covered. The document aims to help software developers and managers launch and maintain successful open source projects.
FrOSCon: The business value of open sourceSimon Phipps
Open source is now at the heart of business and society. We need more than ever to understand that what's important is not just software but the freedom to use, study, improve and share software -- software freedom.
This is the talk I presented at FrOSCON in St Augustin, Germany, on Saturday August 22, 2015.
Can end user apps also be open source? OW2online'20, June 2020OW2
Open-Source is highly present. However, the competition in the end-user app space with Cloud providers is tough. A lot of proprietary solutions exist and are build on Open-Source libraries and technologies, but are not shared as Open-Source.
XWiki SAS is a provider of open-source collaboration apps (XWiki, CryptPad) for now 15 years living only off it's Open-Source technologies.
How is it possible to develop Open Source end-user apps ? What are the challenges to achieve this ? How do you finance the technology ? How do you sell it ? How do you differentiate your software from proprietary solutions ?
This is the aim of this presentation, to share our experience and our history.
Open Source & What It Means For Self-Sovereign Identity (SSI)Evernym
Open source and open standards have been two pillars of self-sovereign identity since the beginning. Only by breaking down barriers to both development and production can we ensure that SSI works for everyone, everywhere.
Openness is also at the core of how Evernym operates, and our motivation for launching Sovrin, subsequently donating Hyperledger Indy to the world, and more recently, open-sourcing our own products.
In this webinar, we covered:
- The importance of open source software, and why it's needed for self-sovereign identity
- The open source tools available today, from Hyperledger Indy and Aries to Evernym's Verity
- What Evernym's open-sourcing of Verity means for developers
- Getting started with either open source or our free Sandbox plan
Ethical Consideration of Open Source SoftwareLarry Jennings
This document discusses ethical considerations around corporate use of open source software. It begins by defining open source software and licenses, noting corporations are often using open source code without fulfilling obligations to contribute modifications back to the community. Stakeholders impacted include developers, organizations using software, and communities supporting open source projects. Utilitarian and deontological analyses are presented on different approaches corporations can take toward using and contributing to open source projects. Overall, the document argues corporations and communities both benefit when open source use and contributions are balanced to support continued collaboration and progress.
The document discusses various open source business models including support sellers, loss leader, widget frosting, sell it free it, service enabler, and software franchising. It provides details on how each model generates revenue, such as selling support services for a free open source product, using a free product to sell other goods and services, or licensing the commercial use of an open source product. The goal of these models is to use free or low-cost open source software to attract customers and build brand loyalty in order to generate revenue through other means.
Delivered to SFSCon in Bozano, Italy in November to 2019, speaker Deborah Bryant discussions challenges and the need for greater awareness and understanding of open source software licenses, growing confusions and challenges.
The OSGeo Foundation: Professionally Leveraging Open Source GeospatialArnulf Christl
The OSGeo Foundation is a global non-profit organization that supports open source geospatial software. It provides resources for projects, promotes open data and standards, and organizes conferences like FOSS4G. OSGeo has a board of directors and committees that oversee its growing number of projects. It sees open source as superior to proprietary software and aims to support open source globally.
Open Source can be a great foundation for building a business. That being said, keeping the balance between community building and commercial activities can be tricky. In this talk I want to share my experience and practical tips, which can help you leverage OS and boost your business, while meeting fantastic people and learning a lot in the process.
Open source software follows the Open Source Definition which requires that the source code be accessible, there be no copyright restrictions, and it be freely redistributable without restrictions. The Open Source Initiative promotes open source software by defining these standards. Open source offers $60 billion in savings annually to consumers and provides developers freedom to improve software. However, open source may lack stability, dedicated support, and funding which draws some away from it. The ethics of open source involve collaborative development where ideas are improved by many versus proprietary models where creators are financially rewarded.
"Open Source licensing and software quality" by Monty Michael Widenius @ eLib...eLiberatica
This is a presentation held at eLiberatica 2009.
http://www.eliberatica.ro/2009/
One of the biggest events of its kind in Eastern Europe, eLiberatica brings community leaders from around the world to discuss about the hottest topics in FLOSS movement, demonstrating the advantages of adopting, using and developing Open Source and Free Software solutions.
The eLiberatica organizational committee together with our speakers and guests, have graciously allowed media representatives and all attendees to photograph, videotape and otherwise record their sessions, on the condition that the photos, videos and recordings are licensed under the Creative Commons Share-Alike 3.0 License.
The document discusses open source solutions for e-governance in India. It outlines the benefits of open source software such as lower costs, customizability, and independence from proprietary vendors. Open source is well-suited for e-governance in India due to its ability to support localization to many languages and its more secure and economical alternatives to proprietary software that are important for government systems that handle citizen data and services. However, adoption of open source faces hurdles such as a lack of policy and skills development.
The document discusses open source solutions for e-governance in India. It outlines the benefits of open source software such as lower costs, customizability, and independence from proprietary vendors. Open source is better suited for e-governance in India due to its ability to support localization to many languages, provide better security than proprietary alternatives, and give independence from foreign software companies. However, adoption of open source faces hurdles such as a lack of policy support and skills development.
Ethical consideration in open source softwareaamatya
Developers who create open source software hold the copyright to their work but grant users a license, typically the GPL, to use and modify the software. However, users have obligations under these licenses, such as making any modified versions of the software freely available. Some companies download and use open source software without attending to their license obligations, risking legal issues. Stakeholders in open source software include developers, companies that use or develop software, programmers, and general users. Utilitarian and deontological analyses both support following open source licenses to maximize benefits and fulfill duties around intellectual property. Developers should give credit to original creators and make any modifications publicly available, while companies should verify that license terms are followed.
Ethical consideration in open source softwareaamatya
The document discusses ethical considerations around open source software usage from utilitarian and deontological perspectives. It outlines how open source software comes with license obligations that some companies fail to follow, potentially facing legal consequences. Both utilitarian and deontological analyses indicate the benefits of open source software if its terms are properly followed to respect intellectual property rights and fulfill duties and responsibilities.
The document summarizes a debate on open source versus proprietary software. It discusses definitions of open source software, popular open source licenses, and advantages of open source such as customizability, security, and lower costs. Open source is gaining adoption in government and enterprise due to benefits like avoiding vendor lock-in, lower costs, and higher quality from community contributions. Surveys find increasing enterprise adoption rates, with over 50% of new software to be open source in the next 5 years. Microsoft is also increasingly supporting open source.
A talk I gave on NATO's Cyber Security Symposium in 2015. It was meant to introduce NATO decision makers to the subject of Open Source and how that can help the pace of innovation.
Video recording will also be available later.
The document provides an overview of a proposed social media app called "Reqstr". It summarizes the company's mission to create an app that allows users to request and view live videos of events. It outlines the product vision, competitive landscape, target markets, revenue model, team, capital requirements, and risks. The company is seeking $1.1 million in funding in exchange for 39.5% equity to launch the app.
The document discusses collaboration on free and open source software (FOSS) projects in Africa. It addresses challenges such as bandwidth constraints, the need for communication tools optimized for low bandwidth, and leveraging social media for marketing with limited budgets. It emphasizes sharing code and documentation through open licensing to benefit from peer review and contributions from the global FOSS community while mitigating legal risks from patents.
IDCEE 2013: How to do a successful company around open source - Michael Widen...IDCEE
http://idcee.org/p/michael-widenius-monty/
Monty is creator and original developer of MySQL, Founder of MySQL Ab.
He is an open source advocate with firsthand experience in creating and enhancing an open source community. A software architect and designer with experience in creating big complex applications alone and with a virtual team.
Currently, Monty is CTO of the MariaDB foundation. Previously to that, he was CEO & VP Community of Monty Program Ab, as well as Partner and owner of Open Ocean Capital (since 2009).
In 2008-2009, he was a MySQL Fellow and Sun DE at Sun Microsystems. He was working in Sun CTO Lab under Sun's CTO Greg Papadopoulos.
For 12 years (1983 – 1995) Monty was a Developer for Tranfor Data AB, Software Architect, TCX Datakonsult AB.
From 1981 to 1995 he was CEO of Monty Program Ab; CEO, Coder, architect and user of UNIREG (The origin of MySQL).
Pic's are here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/idcee/sets/
More @ http://idcee.org
Follow us on:
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/OfficialIDCEEChannel
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/IDCEE
Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/groups/IDCEE-3940138
Twitter: https://twitter.com/idcee_eu
Google+: http://gplus.to/idcee
Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/idcee/collections/
Sudheer Mechineni, Head of Application Frameworks, Standard Chartered Bank
Discover how Standard Chartered Bank harnessed the power of Neo4j to transform complex data access challenges into a dynamic, scalable graph database solution. This keynote will cover their journey from initial adoption to deploying a fully automated, enterprise-grade causal cluster, highlighting key strategies for modelling organisational changes and ensuring robust disaster recovery. Learn how these innovations have not only enhanced Standard Chartered Bank’s data infrastructure but also positioned them as pioneers in the banking sector’s adoption of graph technology.
FrOSCon: The business value of open sourceSimon Phipps
Open source is now at the heart of business and society. We need more than ever to understand that what's important is not just software but the freedom to use, study, improve and share software -- software freedom.
This is the talk I presented at FrOSCON in St Augustin, Germany, on Saturday August 22, 2015.
Can end user apps also be open source? OW2online'20, June 2020OW2
Open-Source is highly present. However, the competition in the end-user app space with Cloud providers is tough. A lot of proprietary solutions exist and are build on Open-Source libraries and technologies, but are not shared as Open-Source.
XWiki SAS is a provider of open-source collaboration apps (XWiki, CryptPad) for now 15 years living only off it's Open-Source technologies.
How is it possible to develop Open Source end-user apps ? What are the challenges to achieve this ? How do you finance the technology ? How do you sell it ? How do you differentiate your software from proprietary solutions ?
This is the aim of this presentation, to share our experience and our history.
Open Source & What It Means For Self-Sovereign Identity (SSI)Evernym
Open source and open standards have been two pillars of self-sovereign identity since the beginning. Only by breaking down barriers to both development and production can we ensure that SSI works for everyone, everywhere.
Openness is also at the core of how Evernym operates, and our motivation for launching Sovrin, subsequently donating Hyperledger Indy to the world, and more recently, open-sourcing our own products.
In this webinar, we covered:
- The importance of open source software, and why it's needed for self-sovereign identity
- The open source tools available today, from Hyperledger Indy and Aries to Evernym's Verity
- What Evernym's open-sourcing of Verity means for developers
- Getting started with either open source or our free Sandbox plan
Ethical Consideration of Open Source SoftwareLarry Jennings
This document discusses ethical considerations around corporate use of open source software. It begins by defining open source software and licenses, noting corporations are often using open source code without fulfilling obligations to contribute modifications back to the community. Stakeholders impacted include developers, organizations using software, and communities supporting open source projects. Utilitarian and deontological analyses are presented on different approaches corporations can take toward using and contributing to open source projects. Overall, the document argues corporations and communities both benefit when open source use and contributions are balanced to support continued collaboration and progress.
The document discusses various open source business models including support sellers, loss leader, widget frosting, sell it free it, service enabler, and software franchising. It provides details on how each model generates revenue, such as selling support services for a free open source product, using a free product to sell other goods and services, or licensing the commercial use of an open source product. The goal of these models is to use free or low-cost open source software to attract customers and build brand loyalty in order to generate revenue through other means.
Delivered to SFSCon in Bozano, Italy in November to 2019, speaker Deborah Bryant discussions challenges and the need for greater awareness and understanding of open source software licenses, growing confusions and challenges.
The OSGeo Foundation: Professionally Leveraging Open Source GeospatialArnulf Christl
The OSGeo Foundation is a global non-profit organization that supports open source geospatial software. It provides resources for projects, promotes open data and standards, and organizes conferences like FOSS4G. OSGeo has a board of directors and committees that oversee its growing number of projects. It sees open source as superior to proprietary software and aims to support open source globally.
Open Source can be a great foundation for building a business. That being said, keeping the balance between community building and commercial activities can be tricky. In this talk I want to share my experience and practical tips, which can help you leverage OS and boost your business, while meeting fantastic people and learning a lot in the process.
Open source software follows the Open Source Definition which requires that the source code be accessible, there be no copyright restrictions, and it be freely redistributable without restrictions. The Open Source Initiative promotes open source software by defining these standards. Open source offers $60 billion in savings annually to consumers and provides developers freedom to improve software. However, open source may lack stability, dedicated support, and funding which draws some away from it. The ethics of open source involve collaborative development where ideas are improved by many versus proprietary models where creators are financially rewarded.
"Open Source licensing and software quality" by Monty Michael Widenius @ eLib...eLiberatica
This is a presentation held at eLiberatica 2009.
http://www.eliberatica.ro/2009/
One of the biggest events of its kind in Eastern Europe, eLiberatica brings community leaders from around the world to discuss about the hottest topics in FLOSS movement, demonstrating the advantages of adopting, using and developing Open Source and Free Software solutions.
The eLiberatica organizational committee together with our speakers and guests, have graciously allowed media representatives and all attendees to photograph, videotape and otherwise record their sessions, on the condition that the photos, videos and recordings are licensed under the Creative Commons Share-Alike 3.0 License.
The document discusses open source solutions for e-governance in India. It outlines the benefits of open source software such as lower costs, customizability, and independence from proprietary vendors. Open source is well-suited for e-governance in India due to its ability to support localization to many languages and its more secure and economical alternatives to proprietary software that are important for government systems that handle citizen data and services. However, adoption of open source faces hurdles such as a lack of policy and skills development.
The document discusses open source solutions for e-governance in India. It outlines the benefits of open source software such as lower costs, customizability, and independence from proprietary vendors. Open source is better suited for e-governance in India due to its ability to support localization to many languages, provide better security than proprietary alternatives, and give independence from foreign software companies. However, adoption of open source faces hurdles such as a lack of policy support and skills development.
Ethical consideration in open source softwareaamatya
Developers who create open source software hold the copyright to their work but grant users a license, typically the GPL, to use and modify the software. However, users have obligations under these licenses, such as making any modified versions of the software freely available. Some companies download and use open source software without attending to their license obligations, risking legal issues. Stakeholders in open source software include developers, companies that use or develop software, programmers, and general users. Utilitarian and deontological analyses both support following open source licenses to maximize benefits and fulfill duties around intellectual property. Developers should give credit to original creators and make any modifications publicly available, while companies should verify that license terms are followed.
Ethical consideration in open source softwareaamatya
The document discusses ethical considerations around open source software usage from utilitarian and deontological perspectives. It outlines how open source software comes with license obligations that some companies fail to follow, potentially facing legal consequences. Both utilitarian and deontological analyses indicate the benefits of open source software if its terms are properly followed to respect intellectual property rights and fulfill duties and responsibilities.
The document summarizes a debate on open source versus proprietary software. It discusses definitions of open source software, popular open source licenses, and advantages of open source such as customizability, security, and lower costs. Open source is gaining adoption in government and enterprise due to benefits like avoiding vendor lock-in, lower costs, and higher quality from community contributions. Surveys find increasing enterprise adoption rates, with over 50% of new software to be open source in the next 5 years. Microsoft is also increasingly supporting open source.
A talk I gave on NATO's Cyber Security Symposium in 2015. It was meant to introduce NATO decision makers to the subject of Open Source and how that can help the pace of innovation.
Video recording will also be available later.
The document provides an overview of a proposed social media app called "Reqstr". It summarizes the company's mission to create an app that allows users to request and view live videos of events. It outlines the product vision, competitive landscape, target markets, revenue model, team, capital requirements, and risks. The company is seeking $1.1 million in funding in exchange for 39.5% equity to launch the app.
The document discusses collaboration on free and open source software (FOSS) projects in Africa. It addresses challenges such as bandwidth constraints, the need for communication tools optimized for low bandwidth, and leveraging social media for marketing with limited budgets. It emphasizes sharing code and documentation through open licensing to benefit from peer review and contributions from the global FOSS community while mitigating legal risks from patents.
IDCEE 2013: How to do a successful company around open source - Michael Widen...IDCEE
http://idcee.org/p/michael-widenius-monty/
Monty is creator and original developer of MySQL, Founder of MySQL Ab.
He is an open source advocate with firsthand experience in creating and enhancing an open source community. A software architect and designer with experience in creating big complex applications alone and with a virtual team.
Currently, Monty is CTO of the MariaDB foundation. Previously to that, he was CEO & VP Community of Monty Program Ab, as well as Partner and owner of Open Ocean Capital (since 2009).
In 2008-2009, he was a MySQL Fellow and Sun DE at Sun Microsystems. He was working in Sun CTO Lab under Sun's CTO Greg Papadopoulos.
For 12 years (1983 – 1995) Monty was a Developer for Tranfor Data AB, Software Architect, TCX Datakonsult AB.
From 1981 to 1995 he was CEO of Monty Program Ab; CEO, Coder, architect and user of UNIREG (The origin of MySQL).
Pic's are here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/idcee/sets/
More @ http://idcee.org
Follow us on:
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/OfficialIDCEEChannel
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/IDCEE
Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/groups/IDCEE-3940138
Twitter: https://twitter.com/idcee_eu
Google+: http://gplus.to/idcee
Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/idcee/collections/
Sudheer Mechineni, Head of Application Frameworks, Standard Chartered Bank
Discover how Standard Chartered Bank harnessed the power of Neo4j to transform complex data access challenges into a dynamic, scalable graph database solution. This keynote will cover their journey from initial adoption to deploying a fully automated, enterprise-grade causal cluster, highlighting key strategies for modelling organisational changes and ensuring robust disaster recovery. Learn how these innovations have not only enhanced Standard Chartered Bank’s data infrastructure but also positioned them as pioneers in the banking sector’s adoption of graph technology.
Cosa hanno in comune un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ?Speck&Tech
ABSTRACT: A prima vista, un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ potrebbero avere in comune il fatto di essere entrambi blocchi di costruzione, o dipendenze di progetti creativi e software. La realtà è che un mattoncino Lego e il caso della backdoor XZ hanno molto di più di tutto ciò in comune.
Partecipate alla presentazione per immergervi in una storia di interoperabilità, standard e formati aperti, per poi discutere del ruolo importante che i contributori hanno in una comunità open source sostenibile.
BIO: Sostenitrice del software libero e dei formati standard e aperti. È stata un membro attivo dei progetti Fedora e openSUSE e ha co-fondato l'Associazione LibreItalia dove è stata coinvolta in diversi eventi, migrazioni e formazione relativi a LibreOffice. In precedenza ha lavorato a migrazioni e corsi di formazione su LibreOffice per diverse amministrazioni pubbliche e privati. Da gennaio 2020 lavora in SUSE come Software Release Engineer per Uyuni e SUSE Manager e quando non segue la sua passione per i computer e per Geeko coltiva la sua curiosità per l'astronomia (da cui deriva il suo nickname deneb_alpha).
“An Outlook of the Ongoing and Future Relationship between Blockchain Technologies and Process-aware Information Systems.” Invited talk at the joint workshop on Blockchain for Information Systems (BC4IS) and Blockchain for Trusted Data Sharing (B4TDS), co-located with with the 36th International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE), 3 June 2024, Limassol, Cyprus.
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
Communications Mining Series - Zero to Hero - Session 1DianaGray10
This session provides introduction to UiPath Communication Mining, importance and platform overview. You will acquire a good understand of the phases in Communication Mining as we go over the platform with you. Topics covered:
• Communication Mining Overview
• Why is it important?
• How can it help today’s business and the benefits
• Phases in Communication Mining
• Demo on Platform overview
• Q/A
Observability Concepts EVERY Developer Should Know -- DeveloperWeek Europe.pdfPaige Cruz
Monitoring and observability aren’t traditionally found in software curriculums and many of us cobble this knowledge together from whatever vendor or ecosystem we were first introduced to and whatever is a part of your current company’s observability stack.
While the dev and ops silo continues to crumble….many organizations still relegate monitoring & observability as the purview of ops, infra and SRE teams. This is a mistake - achieving a highly observable system requires collaboration up and down the stack.
I, a former op, would like to extend an invitation to all application developers to join the observability party will share these foundational concepts to build on:
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdfMalak Abu Hammad
Discover how MongoDB Atlas and vector search technology can revolutionize your application's search capabilities. This comprehensive presentation covers:
* What is Vector Search?
* Importance and benefits of vector search
* Practical use cases across various industries
* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
Perfect for developers, AI enthusiasts, and tech leaders. Learn how to leverage MongoDB Atlas to deliver highly relevant, context-aware search results, transforming your data retrieval process. Stay ahead in tech innovation and maximize the potential of your applications.
#MongoDB #VectorSearch #AI #SemanticSearch #TechInnovation #DataScience #LLM #MachineLearning #SearchTechnology
Introducing Milvus Lite: Easy-to-Install, Easy-to-Use vector database for you...Zilliz
Join us to introduce Milvus Lite, a vector database that can run on notebooks and laptops, share the same API with Milvus, and integrate with every popular GenAI framework. This webinar is perfect for developers seeking easy-to-use, well-integrated vector databases for their GenAI apps.
Climate Impact of Software Testing at Nordic Testing DaysKari Kakkonen
My slides at Nordic Testing Days 6.6.2024
Climate impact / sustainability of software testing discussed on the talk. ICT and testing must carry their part of global responsibility to help with the climat warming. We can minimize the carbon footprint but we can also have a carbon handprint, a positive impact on the climate. Quality characteristics can be added with sustainability, and then measured continuously. Test environments can be used less, and in smaller scale and on demand. Test techniques can be used in optimizing or minimizing number of tests. Test automation can be used to speed up testing.
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.
In his public lecture, Christian Timmerer provides insights into the fascinating history of video streaming, starting from its humble beginnings before YouTube to the groundbreaking technologies that now dominate platforms like Netflix and ORF ON. Timmerer also presents provocative contributions of his own that have significantly influenced the industry. He concludes by looking at future challenges and invites the audience to join in a discussion.
Maruthi Prithivirajan, Head of ASEAN & IN Solution Architecture, Neo4j
Get an inside look at the latest Neo4j innovations that enable relationship-driven intelligence at scale. Learn more about the newest cloud integrations and product enhancements that make Neo4j an essential choice for developers building apps with interconnected data and generative AI.
Pushing the limits of ePRTC: 100ns holdover for 100 daysAdtran
At WSTS 2024, Alon Stern explored the topic of parametric holdover and explained how recent research findings can be implemented in real-world PNT networks to achieve 100 nanoseconds of accuracy for up to 100 days.
Unlocking Productivity: Leveraging the Potential of Copilot in Microsoft 365, a presentation by Christoforos Vlachos, Senior Solutions Manager – Modern Workplace, Uni Systems
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
By highlighting the potential advantages and challenges of integrating AI with XML development tools and languages, the presentation seeks to inspire thoughtful conversation around the future of XML development. We’ll not only delve into the technical aspects of AI-powered XML development but also discuss practical implications and possible future directions.