This document discusses improving user experiences. It defines user experience as how a person feels about using a product or service. It also discusses the importance of understanding average users through research and personas. The key elements of user experience design are explained as information architecture, interaction design, and visual design. Information architecture establishes standards for organizing information. Interaction design is the practice of designing interactive products and services. Visual design is how the product or service looks and feels. The document provides examples of each element.
ChangePlayBusiness-MasterClass-Designing Business Models that RockTheThinkingHotel
This document discusses designing business models. It provides an example of the business model of Quirky.com, a co-creation platform and e-shop. Inventors pay $99 to submit ideas, which are then co-designed by a community. If enough pre-sales are made, the product goes to production. Revenues are shared, with 30% going to the inventor and 30% split among influencers. The document encourages learning from other industries and exploring alternative business models through visual design.
The Bernard Group, Graphics, Fixtures, & Displays For RetailCraigOmdal
The document summarizes Inspired Merchandising Solutions, a visual communications firm that specializes in print and merchandising solutions for retailers. They offer services from concept and design through printing and fabrication. They have on-site printing capabilities and work with clients to deliver high quality print projects and custom merchandising fixtures and displays from start to finish. The document provides examples of projects they have worked on for clients in different industries.
Communication is key to effective user experience. User experience encompasses all aspects of a user's interaction with products and services. It is important to focus on making experiences useful, usable, and engaging. Effective communication of user experience work helps increase its value for users, clients, companies, and oneself.
A presentattion done for a master class Social Media for alumni network Pheidippus. What is social media, what are its perks and how does it help an organization in its knowledge sharing. For more about GriDD see http://www.gridd.nl
This document outlines the stages of a language lesson plan, including the presentation stage to introduce new vocabulary and concepts, the practice stage where students work in pairs and groups with decreasing teacher involvement to reinforce the material, and the use stage where students personalize and apply the language creatively and independently to demonstrate their learning.
An introduction in to social media on its characteristics and the way to use it, concluding with some practical tips.
The (Dutch) slides were presented during a session with an entrepreneurial association.
Mammals are characterized by maintaining a constant body temperature, giving birth to live young which they care for, and include a diverse range of animals such as elephants, bats, ungulates like pigs and cows, carnivores like bears and lions, and cetaceans like dolphins and whales. Most mammals walk on four legs but some like bats are able to fly.
ChangePlayBusiness-MasterClass-Designing Business Models that RockTheThinkingHotel
This document discusses designing business models. It provides an example of the business model of Quirky.com, a co-creation platform and e-shop. Inventors pay $99 to submit ideas, which are then co-designed by a community. If enough pre-sales are made, the product goes to production. Revenues are shared, with 30% going to the inventor and 30% split among influencers. The document encourages learning from other industries and exploring alternative business models through visual design.
The Bernard Group, Graphics, Fixtures, & Displays For RetailCraigOmdal
The document summarizes Inspired Merchandising Solutions, a visual communications firm that specializes in print and merchandising solutions for retailers. They offer services from concept and design through printing and fabrication. They have on-site printing capabilities and work with clients to deliver high quality print projects and custom merchandising fixtures and displays from start to finish. The document provides examples of projects they have worked on for clients in different industries.
Communication is key to effective user experience. User experience encompasses all aspects of a user's interaction with products and services. It is important to focus on making experiences useful, usable, and engaging. Effective communication of user experience work helps increase its value for users, clients, companies, and oneself.
A presentattion done for a master class Social Media for alumni network Pheidippus. What is social media, what are its perks and how does it help an organization in its knowledge sharing. For more about GriDD see http://www.gridd.nl
This document outlines the stages of a language lesson plan, including the presentation stage to introduce new vocabulary and concepts, the practice stage where students work in pairs and groups with decreasing teacher involvement to reinforce the material, and the use stage where students personalize and apply the language creatively and independently to demonstrate their learning.
An introduction in to social media on its characteristics and the way to use it, concluding with some practical tips.
The (Dutch) slides were presented during a session with an entrepreneurial association.
Mammals are characterized by maintaining a constant body temperature, giving birth to live young which they care for, and include a diverse range of animals such as elephants, bats, ungulates like pigs and cows, carnivores like bears and lions, and cetaceans like dolphins and whales. Most mammals walk on four legs but some like bats are able to fly.
Slides of a workshop by TriMM and GriDD showing the power of visualization. Using examples of infographics, process models, book summaries and more... For more about GriDD see http://www.gridd.nl
The British film industry struggled with competition from the larger American film industry and implemented a quota system requiring a minimum number of British-made films per year. While some American films were made in British studios in the 1970s-1980s, the British industry experienced declines, only producing 31 films in one year, 50% less than the previous year. The American film industry produced hundreds of movies annually in the mid-1940s, dwarfing British production. Both industries suffered from recessions, with American studios cutting back on financing for British films and overall production declining. The quality of films also dropped, with fewer cinema audiences.
Este documento propone la creación de una República Alimentaria para conectar a productores y consumidores individuales y grupales, con el objetivo de mejorar la economía y la salud. Proporciona enlaces a fondos europeos, asesoría jurídica, portales de venta en línea y organizaciones que ofrecen formación y asesoramiento en producción sostenible.
Organizational Microblogging and its effect on Knowledge SharingJeroen Grit
What effect does the implementation of microblogging have on an organization? This presentation of the Master thesis "Stumble upon hidden Knowledge - Microblogging in Organizations" gives insight in this matter. For more about GriDD see http://www.gridd.nl
Fast Track UX: leading a global lighting multi-national to digital success - ...Jeroen Grit
Jeroen Grit discusses leading a global lighting company to digital success through embracing change, utilizing visual thinking methods like mind maps in a "war room", breaking down barriers between clients and UX teams, and leveraging collective brainstorming. Some key aspects include progress meetings, creating integrated UX concepts, and using Fast Track UX when you need instant support and recognition for a design concept from business stakeholders.
Effective input management: managing stakeholder input effectively using mind...Jeroen Grit
This presentation will present the method of translating ideas to tangible requirements within a mindmap, zooming in on the approach used, pointing out benefits and specifics and mentioning drawbacks to take into account. This approach is a great way to collaboratively work on ideas and requirements, and a proof point of the fact that to make complex information effective, visual ways of handling are the right way to go.
APRV, or Airway Pressure Release Ventilation, is a form of bilevel ventilation that utilizes a very short expiratory time for pressure release. Patients breathe spontaneously at the upper pressure level without needing paralysis or deep sedation. Earlier weaning and preservation of respiratory muscle function are possible benefits. The time at the lower pressure should be short, around 0.8 seconds, to prevent full exhalation and maintain alveolar recruitment gained at the higher pressure.
This document provides instructions for use of the Evita 4 Intensive Care Ventilator. It outlines new features in the latest software version 4.n including additional weaning parameters, extended alarm settings, and monitoring improvements. The contents section lists chapters covering safety, intended use, operation, preparation, troubleshooting, maintenance, and technical specifications. Strict adherence to the instructions is important for safe use of the ventilator by medical professionals.
This document provides a tutorial on using the ventilator interface of a Siemens ventilator. It describes the main screen, menu options, alarms, settings that can be adjusted, and additional features like trends and recorded waveforms. The tutorial takes the user through adjusting settings like tidal volume, respiratory rate and PEEP level to ventilate a patient. It also explains how to view measured ventilation parameters and alarms.
Designing for User Experience (UX) with Atlassian ToolsAtlassian
The document discusses integrating design and development. It outlines 5 steps to solve challenges: 1) braindump to brief, 2) brief to wireframes, 3) wireframes to design, 4) design to implementation, and 5) implementation to validation. Key points include using tools like JIRA and Confluence for collaboration, bringing designs to life with prototypes, and validating designs through internal and external testing.
My ultimate product is one that everybody uses without thinking. Years of research including eye tracking in labs provides valuable knowledge, but it is scattered across many sources. The solution is to get usability out of labs and into the field by either educating teams or providing ready-to-use guidelines, design patterns, and best practices.
The document discusses building sustainable large Android apps. It recommends establishing project conventions for naming, dependencies, resources and more. It also recommends structuring the app based on features and using fragments to separate UI from logic. The document discusses architectural patterns like MVP and implementing MVP with a passive view to make the code testable, reusable and maintainable.
This document discusses best practices for managing product releases and software engineering teams. It provides the following recommendations:
1) Establish clear processes for releases, including regular intervals, versioning, distribution, and metrics to measure success. Ensure everyone understands their role in the release cycle.
2) Use the Dreyfus model of skill acquisition to balance team skills and experience levels. Recruit for "smart and get things done" attitudes. Apply practices according to where the team stands.
3) Automate aspects like releases, reporting, and testing when possible, but also retain some manual processes to aid understanding of what to automate. Team learning takes time.
StockPodium at MicroStock Expo in BerlinStockPodium
The document discusses an upcoming micro-stock photography expo in Berlin, including presentations on topics like optimizing workflow, distribution strategies, and lifestyle design for professional micro-stock photographers. Several photographers and representatives from stock agencies will be speaking at the expo on their experiences and tips. The expo will provide attendees opportunities to learn more about being successful in the micro-stock industry through various presentations and workshops over two days.
This document discusses top mistakes made when purchasing a new printer and provides tips to avoid them. It notes that attendees of an upcoming webinar will include those working with graphic, garment, industrial, and other printers. It then lists the top 10 mistakes people make, such as failing to compare printers adequately, making an impulse purchase, and not properly educating staff on printer usage. The document aims to help readers make an informed decision when purchasing a new printer.
This document discusses assistive technology and job accommodations. It provides statistics showing lower employment and higher unemployment rates among people with disabilities. Assistive technologies like smartphones, e-readers, and software can help employees with disabilities perform job tasks. Examples are given of using these technologies to take notes, read text, and control a power wheelchair. The document also outlines a process for selecting, trialing, and implementing assistive technologies and job accommodations.
Slides of a workshop by TriMM and GriDD showing the power of visualization. Using examples of infographics, process models, book summaries and more... For more about GriDD see http://www.gridd.nl
The British film industry struggled with competition from the larger American film industry and implemented a quota system requiring a minimum number of British-made films per year. While some American films were made in British studios in the 1970s-1980s, the British industry experienced declines, only producing 31 films in one year, 50% less than the previous year. The American film industry produced hundreds of movies annually in the mid-1940s, dwarfing British production. Both industries suffered from recessions, with American studios cutting back on financing for British films and overall production declining. The quality of films also dropped, with fewer cinema audiences.
Este documento propone la creación de una República Alimentaria para conectar a productores y consumidores individuales y grupales, con el objetivo de mejorar la economía y la salud. Proporciona enlaces a fondos europeos, asesoría jurídica, portales de venta en línea y organizaciones que ofrecen formación y asesoramiento en producción sostenible.
Organizational Microblogging and its effect on Knowledge SharingJeroen Grit
What effect does the implementation of microblogging have on an organization? This presentation of the Master thesis "Stumble upon hidden Knowledge - Microblogging in Organizations" gives insight in this matter. For more about GriDD see http://www.gridd.nl
Fast Track UX: leading a global lighting multi-national to digital success - ...Jeroen Grit
Jeroen Grit discusses leading a global lighting company to digital success through embracing change, utilizing visual thinking methods like mind maps in a "war room", breaking down barriers between clients and UX teams, and leveraging collective brainstorming. Some key aspects include progress meetings, creating integrated UX concepts, and using Fast Track UX when you need instant support and recognition for a design concept from business stakeholders.
Effective input management: managing stakeholder input effectively using mind...Jeroen Grit
This presentation will present the method of translating ideas to tangible requirements within a mindmap, zooming in on the approach used, pointing out benefits and specifics and mentioning drawbacks to take into account. This approach is a great way to collaboratively work on ideas and requirements, and a proof point of the fact that to make complex information effective, visual ways of handling are the right way to go.
APRV, or Airway Pressure Release Ventilation, is a form of bilevel ventilation that utilizes a very short expiratory time for pressure release. Patients breathe spontaneously at the upper pressure level without needing paralysis or deep sedation. Earlier weaning and preservation of respiratory muscle function are possible benefits. The time at the lower pressure should be short, around 0.8 seconds, to prevent full exhalation and maintain alveolar recruitment gained at the higher pressure.
This document provides instructions for use of the Evita 4 Intensive Care Ventilator. It outlines new features in the latest software version 4.n including additional weaning parameters, extended alarm settings, and monitoring improvements. The contents section lists chapters covering safety, intended use, operation, preparation, troubleshooting, maintenance, and technical specifications. Strict adherence to the instructions is important for safe use of the ventilator by medical professionals.
This document provides a tutorial on using the ventilator interface of a Siemens ventilator. It describes the main screen, menu options, alarms, settings that can be adjusted, and additional features like trends and recorded waveforms. The tutorial takes the user through adjusting settings like tidal volume, respiratory rate and PEEP level to ventilate a patient. It also explains how to view measured ventilation parameters and alarms.
Designing for User Experience (UX) with Atlassian ToolsAtlassian
The document discusses integrating design and development. It outlines 5 steps to solve challenges: 1) braindump to brief, 2) brief to wireframes, 3) wireframes to design, 4) design to implementation, and 5) implementation to validation. Key points include using tools like JIRA and Confluence for collaboration, bringing designs to life with prototypes, and validating designs through internal and external testing.
My ultimate product is one that everybody uses without thinking. Years of research including eye tracking in labs provides valuable knowledge, but it is scattered across many sources. The solution is to get usability out of labs and into the field by either educating teams or providing ready-to-use guidelines, design patterns, and best practices.
The document discusses building sustainable large Android apps. It recommends establishing project conventions for naming, dependencies, resources and more. It also recommends structuring the app based on features and using fragments to separate UI from logic. The document discusses architectural patterns like MVP and implementing MVP with a passive view to make the code testable, reusable and maintainable.
This document discusses best practices for managing product releases and software engineering teams. It provides the following recommendations:
1) Establish clear processes for releases, including regular intervals, versioning, distribution, and metrics to measure success. Ensure everyone understands their role in the release cycle.
2) Use the Dreyfus model of skill acquisition to balance team skills and experience levels. Recruit for "smart and get things done" attitudes. Apply practices according to where the team stands.
3) Automate aspects like releases, reporting, and testing when possible, but also retain some manual processes to aid understanding of what to automate. Team learning takes time.
StockPodium at MicroStock Expo in BerlinStockPodium
The document discusses an upcoming micro-stock photography expo in Berlin, including presentations on topics like optimizing workflow, distribution strategies, and lifestyle design for professional micro-stock photographers. Several photographers and representatives from stock agencies will be speaking at the expo on their experiences and tips. The expo will provide attendees opportunities to learn more about being successful in the micro-stock industry through various presentations and workshops over two days.
This document discusses top mistakes made when purchasing a new printer and provides tips to avoid them. It notes that attendees of an upcoming webinar will include those working with graphic, garment, industrial, and other printers. It then lists the top 10 mistakes people make, such as failing to compare printers adequately, making an impulse purchase, and not properly educating staff on printer usage. The document aims to help readers make an informed decision when purchasing a new printer.
This document discusses assistive technology and job accommodations. It provides statistics showing lower employment and higher unemployment rates among people with disabilities. Assistive technologies like smartphones, e-readers, and software can help employees with disabilities perform job tasks. Examples are given of using these technologies to take notes, read text, and control a power wheelchair. The document also outlines a process for selecting, trialing, and implementing assistive technologies and job accommodations.
Why do mobile projects (still) fail - September 2014 editionIndiginox
My talk around the reasons mobile projects fail and what you can do to prevent some of the pitfalls. This talk doesn't talk about code or deep dive technical development - but about the "other" problems that can befall a mobile project - especially in large organizations.
Building Beautiful and Highly Usable Products by Simon ValleeProductHuntTO
Keynote by Simon Vallee at Product Hunt Toronto's 1 Year Anniversary Event. Simon Vallee is an entrepreneur and product enthusiast. He currently works at Slack, which he joined when Slack acquired his latest startup, Spaces. Before that, he co-founded OpenCal, acquired by Groupon in 2011 and Sitemasher, acquired by Salesforce in 2010. He holds an engineering degree from Polytechnique of Montreal.
This document discusses user experience (UX), agile product management, and delivering software that meets user needs. It advocates for an iterative development process that incorporates UX research and testing. Product managers are advised to work closely with UX designers to validate assumptions through usability testing, measure outcomes, and prioritize addressing UX issues. An agile, lean approach that rapidly builds and learns from user feedback is presented as the best way to deliver innovative products that customers want and provide a competitive advantage.
Introducing Workspaces, a New Experience for Neo4j Developer ToolsNeo4j
Neo4j is introducing a new Workspace experience that will integrate its various user tools into a single interface. The document discusses issues users currently have with having to use separate tools for different tasks and lack of consistency. Workspace aims to address these problems by creating a common design system and framework to bring the tools together in a more coherent manner. It provides a demo of the Workspace and outlines plans for early access and future releases to refine the user experience and integration of tools like Bloom, Browser and Importer.
Rapid Prototyping 2015: Its a Mad Mad WorldMarti Gold
Given at BigDesign 2015. Discussing the benefits of rapid prototyping, the stress of selecting a prototyping tool, and an overview of available apps for desktop and mobile.
How to Implement Domain Driven Design in Real Life SDLCAbdul Karim
The document discusses the traditional approach to software development and some of its shortcomings. It then introduces Domain-Driven Design (DDD) as an alternative approach that focuses on designing the system around the problem domain from the top-down rather than the bottom-up. Some key DDD concepts discussed include ubiquitous language, core domain, bounded contexts, entities, value objects, aggregates and aggregate roots, and persistence ignorance. The document uses examples from designing a residential building to help explain these DDD concepts.
This is a presentation made to Surge Accelerator in Houston in March 2013. This serves as a Guide to Early Stage Technology Companies, building enterprise class software.
This covers the typical lifecycle of a software start-up, fundamentals of Agile software development, and some do's and don't for how to build successful software companies.
UX as a core competence - TYPO3 conference Asia 2012samng
User experience (UX) design is about understanding how people feel when interacting with something that has been built. The document discusses UX and provides examples of companies like Zappos and Apple that are focused on designing positive user experiences. It recommends that to be in demand, one should get good at designing experiences across interactions and channels using UX design tools and methods like field studies, persona development, and usability testing.
Thrillophilia is an online portal for activity and adventure travel in India. They connect local activity providers with customers and offer managed experiences focused on eco-tourism. The company is looking to hire several roles including a UI/UX head, lead web developer, and others to help expand their platform. Thrillophilia offers perks like ownership, flat structure, fun work culture, and stock options to attract top talent. They have grown 300% in the past two years and are funded by an angel investor.
Slides from the "Much ado about Agile", Agile Vancouver Conference 2015. This talk is around examples of MVP on small startups and Enterprise level. What's the ultimate MVP?
[OReilly Superstream] Occupy the Space: A grassroots guide to engineering (an...Jason Yip
The typical problem in product engineering is not bad strategy, so much as “no strategy”. This leads to confusion, lack of motivation, and incoherent action. The next time you look for a strategy and find an empty space, instead of waiting for it to be filled, I will show you how to fill it in yourself. If you’re wrong, it forces a correction. If you’re right, it helps create focus. I’ll share how I’ve approached this in the past, both what works and lessons for what didn’t work so well.
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?
Attributes & automation parameters enable the automation author to pass data values from one automation component to the next. During this webinar, our FME Flow Specialists will cover leveraging the three types of these output attributes & parameters in FME Flow: Event, Custom, and Automation. As a bonus, they’ll also be making use of the Split-Merge Block functionality.
You’ll leave this webinar with a better understanding of how to maximize the potential of automations by making use of attributes & automation parameters, with the ultimate goal of setting your enterprise integration workflows up on autopilot.
Driving Business Innovation: Latest Generative AI Advancements & Success StorySafe Software
Are you ready to revolutionize how you handle data? Join us for a webinar where we’ll bring you up to speed with the latest advancements in Generative AI technology and discover how leveraging FME with tools from giants like Google Gemini, Amazon, and Microsoft OpenAI can supercharge your workflow efficiency.
During the hour, we’ll take you through:
Guest Speaker Segment with Hannah Barrington: Dive into the world of dynamic real estate marketing with Hannah, the Marketing Manager at Workspace Group. Hear firsthand how their team generates engaging descriptions for thousands of office units by integrating diverse data sources—from PDF floorplans to web pages—using FME transformers, like OpenAIVisionConnector and AnthropicVisionConnector. This use case will show you how GenAI can streamline content creation for marketing across the board.
Ollama Use Case: Learn how Scenario Specialist Dmitri Bagh has utilized Ollama within FME to input data, create custom models, and enhance security protocols. This segment will include demos to illustrate the full capabilities of FME in AI-driven processes.
Custom AI Models: Discover how to leverage FME to build personalized AI models using your data. Whether it’s populating a model with local data for added security or integrating public AI tools, find out how FME facilitates a versatile and secure approach to AI.
We’ll wrap up with a live Q&A session where you can engage with our experts on your specific use cases, and learn more about optimizing your data workflows with AI.
This webinar is ideal for professionals seeking to harness the power of AI within their data management systems while ensuring high levels of customization and security. Whether you're a novice or an expert, gain actionable insights and strategies to elevate your data processes. Join us to see how FME and AI can revolutionize how you work with data!
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!
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
Generating privacy-protected synthetic data using Secludy and MilvusZilliz
During this demo, the founders of Secludy will demonstrate how their system utilizes Milvus to store and manipulate embeddings for generating privacy-protected synthetic data. Their approach not only maintains the confidentiality of the original data but also enhances the utility and scalability of LLMs under privacy constraints. Attendees, including machine learning engineers, data scientists, and data managers, will witness first-hand how Secludy's integration with Milvus empowers organizations to harness the power of LLMs securely and efficiently.
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.
"Frontline Battles with DDoS: Best practices and Lessons Learned", Igor IvaniukFwdays
At this talk we will discuss DDoS protection tools and best practices, discuss network architectures and what AWS has to offer. Also, we will look into one of the largest DDoS attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure that happened in February 2022. We'll see, what techniques helped to keep the web resources available for Ukrainians and how AWS improved DDoS protection for all customers based on Ukraine experience
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.
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).
Digital Banking in the Cloud: How Citizens Bank Unlocked Their MainframePrecisely
Inconsistent user experience and siloed data, high costs, and changing customer expectations – Citizens Bank was experiencing these challenges while it was attempting to deliver a superior digital banking experience for its clients. Its core banking applications run on the mainframe and Citizens was using legacy utilities to get the critical mainframe data to feed customer-facing channels, like call centers, web, and mobile. Ultimately, this led to higher operating costs (MIPS), delayed response times, and longer time to market.
Ever-changing customer expectations demand more modern digital experiences, and the bank needed to find a solution that could provide real-time data to its customer channels with low latency and operating costs. Join this session to learn how Citizens is leveraging Precisely to replicate mainframe data to its customer channels and deliver on their “modern digital bank” experiences.
Discover top-tier mobile app development services, offering innovative solutions for iOS and Android. Enhance your business with custom, user-friendly mobile applications.
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.
5. Wat
is
User
Experience?
“User
experience
(UX)
is
the
way
a
person
feels
about
using
a
product,
system
or
service.”
“User
experience
highlights
the
experien/al,
affec/ve,
meaningful
and
valuable
aspects
of
human-‐computer
interac/on
and
product
ownership,
but
it
also
includes
a
person’s
percep/ons
of
the
prac/cal
aspects
such
as
u"lity,
ease
of
use
and
efficiency
of
the
system.
User
experience
is
subjec"ve
in
nature,
because
it
is
about
an
individual’s
feelings
and
thoughts
about
the
system.”
6. Wat
is
User
Experience?
“The
level
of
sa9sfac9on
an
average
user
gets
from
using
a
product”
8. Average
user
Eric
is
38
years
old
and
a
married
father
of
two.
He
lives
in
• Specific
knowledge/proficiency
Finland,
where
he
works
at
Nokia
as
an
engineer.
He
gets
a
true
• Eric
studied
[X]
and
has
now
been
working
the
last
kick
out
of
designing
the
perfect
product.
Together
with
the
ten
years
on
the
same
product
in
which
he
architect
he
decides
on
which
product
to
buy.
specialized.
• He
stays
up
to
date
on
trends,
but
doesn’t
follow
any
extra
courses
to
extend
his
knowledge.
• Media
preferences
• Specific
goals/needs/aItudes
• He
reads
a
few
newssites.
• Eric
works
hard
to
create
the
best
product
possible.
• He
likes
his
workrelated
informaGon
on
paper.
na
• He
loves
his
work.
GeTng
his
work
done
like
he
• Any
search
funcGon
should
be
fast
and
easy
to
use.
wants
to,
gives
him
saGsfacGon.
erso
• When
reading
informaGon
on
products
he
should
be
• He
is
always
very
interested
in
new
products.
Even
P
able
to
idenGfy
the
needed
informaGon
quickly.
the
slightest
adjustment
to
an
exisGng
product
is
• He
reads
around
the
markeGng
talk.
He
is
interested
interesGng
to
him.
to
read
the
technical
part.
• He
is
not
doing
much
with
social
media.
• From
an
[company]
he
wants
specific
know-‐how
and
• Rela9onship
with
[company]
a
high
preference
to
test
new
products.
• Eric
knows
his
way
around
with
[company].
He
is
• When
his
expectaGons
of
a
product
are
high
he
familiar
with
the
amount
of
support
[company]
doesn’t
want
to
wait.
offers
and
the
design
benefit
[company]
[X]
products
• He
is
interested
in
block
diagrams
and
some
other
can
offer.
content.
• He
is
not
aware
that
[company]
has
so
much
[X]
• He
uses
the
[X]
manual
heavily
acGvity
in
Nijmegen.
• According
to
Eric,
[company]
doesn’t
innovate
their
product
oRen
enough.
Eric
Järvinen
-‐
Engineer
17. Informa9on
architecture
“An
informaGon
architecture
(IA)
establishes
decision
making
principles
and
standards
for
the
use
of
informaGon
as
a
resource”