The document discusses online reference services and the use of technology in libraries. It explores how different age groups use technology, including digital natives and digital immigrants. Common online reference services like email and chat-based services are examined. Emerging technologies that could shape the future of reference services are also presented, such as video chat, virtual worlds, co-browsing, and self-service inquiry databases. The conclusion emphasizes that collaboration and communication will be important for reference services going forward.
The document discusses how emerging technologies can complement different pedagogical approaches and practices. It outlines various technologies throughout history that have enabled new forms of communication and knowledge sharing, from wireless telegraphy to the modern internet. The document then examines different types of knowledge, from declarative to synthetic, and how different instructional methods and technologies are suited to imparting each type of knowledge.
Abstract—Composing a scientific workflow from scratch may be time-consuming, even if the scientist is fully aware of the semantics, the inputs, and the outputs of the expected workflow.
Reusing existing services and parts from already composed workflows can aid in reducing the total workflow composition time. However, matching the semantics and the inputs and outputs of these reusable components manually is not an easy task, especially when there are hundreds of such components available. Even components are annotated with information on the semantics of their inputs and outputs, the complex nature of the semantic languages may make manual component selection even harder. In this paper, we propose a Case-Based Reasoning (CBR) approach to assist composition of workflows based on the characteristics of the inputs and the outputs of the reusable workflow components, facilitating user exploitation of existing services and workflows during workflow composition. The architecture can also be extended to utilize the semantics of the various components improving the precision of the identified reusable components.
An overview of standards and related technology in web servicesPapa Cheikh Cisse
Ce document présente brièvement des standards et autre normes des Services Web. Pour cela, il expose d'abord le concept de Service Web en parlant de son modèle et des avantages. Ensuite, il énonce des technologies telles que le triplet WSDL/UDDI/SOAP et ebXML. Enfin, une conclusion est faite après avoir fait ressortir les défis techniques rencontrés dans l'implémentation des Services Web.
The document discusses semantic web, ontology languages, and case-based reasoning. It provides an overview of semantic web and its motivations. It describes ontology languages like RDF, RDF Schema, OWL, and others. It then discusses how case-based reasoning can utilize semantic web technologies by applying an AI technique to retrieve metadata related to codes for earthquake science.
Deriving Specifications for Composite Web ServicesGeorge Baryannis
We address the problem of synthesizing specifications for composite
Web services, starting from those of their component services.
Unlike related work in programming languages, we assume the
definition of the component services (i.e. their code) to be
unavailable --- at best, they are known by a specification which
(safely) approximates their functional behavior. Within this
scenario, we deduce general formula schemes to derive specifications
for basic constructs such as sequential, parallel compositions and
conditionals and provide details on how to handle the special cases of
loops and asynchronous execution. The resulting specifications facilitate
service verification and service evolution as well as auditing processes,
promoting trust between the involved partners.
The document discusses online reference services and the use of technology in libraries. It explores how different age groups use technology, including digital natives and digital immigrants. Common online reference services like email and chat-based services are examined. Emerging technologies that could shape the future of reference services are also presented, such as video chat, virtual worlds, co-browsing, and self-service inquiry databases. The conclusion emphasizes that collaboration and communication will be important for reference services going forward.
The document discusses how emerging technologies can complement different pedagogical approaches and practices. It outlines various technologies throughout history that have enabled new forms of communication and knowledge sharing, from wireless telegraphy to the modern internet. The document then examines different types of knowledge, from declarative to synthetic, and how different instructional methods and technologies are suited to imparting each type of knowledge.
Abstract—Composing a scientific workflow from scratch may be time-consuming, even if the scientist is fully aware of the semantics, the inputs, and the outputs of the expected workflow.
Reusing existing services and parts from already composed workflows can aid in reducing the total workflow composition time. However, matching the semantics and the inputs and outputs of these reusable components manually is not an easy task, especially when there are hundreds of such components available. Even components are annotated with information on the semantics of their inputs and outputs, the complex nature of the semantic languages may make manual component selection even harder. In this paper, we propose a Case-Based Reasoning (CBR) approach to assist composition of workflows based on the characteristics of the inputs and the outputs of the reusable workflow components, facilitating user exploitation of existing services and workflows during workflow composition. The architecture can also be extended to utilize the semantics of the various components improving the precision of the identified reusable components.
An overview of standards and related technology in web servicesPapa Cheikh Cisse
Ce document présente brièvement des standards et autre normes des Services Web. Pour cela, il expose d'abord le concept de Service Web en parlant de son modèle et des avantages. Ensuite, il énonce des technologies telles que le triplet WSDL/UDDI/SOAP et ebXML. Enfin, une conclusion est faite après avoir fait ressortir les défis techniques rencontrés dans l'implémentation des Services Web.
The document discusses semantic web, ontology languages, and case-based reasoning. It provides an overview of semantic web and its motivations. It describes ontology languages like RDF, RDF Schema, OWL, and others. It then discusses how case-based reasoning can utilize semantic web technologies by applying an AI technique to retrieve metadata related to codes for earthquake science.
Deriving Specifications for Composite Web ServicesGeorge Baryannis
We address the problem of synthesizing specifications for composite
Web services, starting from those of their component services.
Unlike related work in programming languages, we assume the
definition of the component services (i.e. their code) to be
unavailable --- at best, they are known by a specification which
(safely) approximates their functional behavior. Within this
scenario, we deduce general formula schemes to derive specifications
for basic constructs such as sequential, parallel compositions and
conditionals and provide details on how to handle the special cases of
loops and asynchronous execution. The resulting specifications facilitate
service verification and service evolution as well as auditing processes,
promoting trust between the involved partners.
This document provides an overview of service-oriented architecture (SOA) composition and existing solutions. It discusses key concepts like orchestration and choreography in composing services. Industry standards like UDDI, WSDL, and BPEL are described for discovering, describing, and composing services but have limitations regarding semantics. Semantic approaches like OWL-S aim to address these limitations by adding machine-readable semantics to enable automatic discovery and composition of services. Research issues in areas like quality of service, monitoring, and computing optimal compositions are also discussed. The document surveys various technologies and approaches for SOA composition.
Web Service Composition as a Planning Task: Experiments using Knowledge-Based...Erick Ornio
Motivated by the problem of automated Web service composition (WSC), we present some empirical evidence to validate the effectiveness of using knowledge-based planning techniques for solving WSC problems. In our experiments we utilize the PKS (Planning with Knowledge and Sensing) planning system which is derived from a generalization of STRIPS. In PKS, the agent’s (incomplete) knowledge is represented by a set of databases and actions are modelled as revisions to the agent’s knowledge state rather than the state of the world. We argue that, despite the intrinsic limited expressiveness of this approach, typical WSC problems can be specified and solved at the knowledge level. We show that this approach scales relatively well under changing conditions (e.g. user constraints). Finally, we discuss implementation issues and propose some architectural guidelines within the context of an agent-oriented framework for inter-operable, intelligent, multi-agent systems for WSC and provisioning.
The document outlines an approach for scalable quality-driven semantic web service composition. It discusses semantic links between services' input and output parameters, and defines quality criteria for these links and services. A composition is modeled as a statechart with states as services and transitions as semantic links. Quality of a link is measured by its common description rate and matching quality, while services have associated non-functional properties for quality of service. The approach aims to select compositions based on functional constraints from semantic links and quality of service constraints.
Ai Planning For Semantic Web Service Compositionahmad bassiouny
The document discusses AI planning approaches for semantic web service composition and identifies several open challenges. It notes that classical planning makes simplifying assumptions that are invalid for web services, which exhibit features like incomplete knowledge, non-determinism, and complex interfaces. Non-classical planning approaches that relax some assumptions are discussed. Several examples of applying planning to web service composition are described, but many open challenges remain around scalability, automation, and dealing with real-world complexities of web services.
This document summarizes a paper that presents a system called CommunityCook that extracts adaptation knowledge from internet cooking communities. It crawls forums to gather recipes and user comments, classifies comments into categories related to adaptations, and aggregates this to form adaptation suggestions. An evaluation with expert chefs found that while dependent suggestions were often applicable, independent suggestions usually included ingredients that could not substitute. Future work aims to improve the knowledge model and semantic analysis.
Towards Logic Programming as a Service: Experiments in tuPrologAndrea Omicini
The document discusses experiments with logic programming as a service (LPaaS) using tuProlog. It proposes an LPaaS architecture with local APIs for creating engines, loading theories, and querying. It also describes implementing tuProlog as a service (2PaaS) on iOS, where tuProlog is embedded in an app and provides an API via URL schemes for other apps to interface with it. Example application scenarios are presented, including using tuProlog for symbolic derivatives and multi-language programming. Further work is outlined to better define and extend the LPaaS paradigm.
WUD2010 Sophia 05 - B. Caramel (UNICE/CNRS) : Composition d'applications inte...Use Age
WUD (World Usability Day 2010 à Sophia Antipolis organisé par Use Age)
Partie 05 - B. Caramel (UNICE/CNRS) : "Composition d'applications interactives : et l’utilisateur dans tout ça?"
Plus d'infos en: http://www.use-age.org/journee-mondiale-de-l-utilisabilite/wud-2010
Case-based reasoning (CBR) classifiers use a database of problem solutions to solve
new problems. Unlike nearest-neighbor classifiers, which store training tuples as points
in Euclidean space, CBR stores the tuples or “cases” for problem solving as complex
symbolic descriptions.
This document discusses using case-based reasoning for diet menu planning. It provides an overview of related work using CBR for domains like psychiatry and Alzheimer's care. It then describes DietMaster, a knowledge-intensive CBR system for diet menu planning that uses domain knowledge from experts. DietMaster's architecture and functional components are explained, including its representation of knowledge through rules and cases. Finally, the structures for input cases, cases in process, and output/learned cases are defined.
Présentation sur les ontologie :
le concept de base, les langages, et les applications dans les différents domaines.
Exposé présenté par Benouini Rachid dans FST Fès 2014-2015.
Présentation sur les ontologie :
le concept de base, les langages, et les applications dans les différents domaines.
Exposé présenté par Benouini Rachid, Adnane Eddariouache dans FST Fès 2013-2014.
This document discusses the concept of mobile learning in context. It describes how computers and mobile devices are becoming ubiquitous and context-aware. Sensors in environments and on mobile devices can provide contextual information to enhance learning experiences. However, mobile phones are still often seen only as toys in classrooms rather than learning tools. The document advocates for leveraging context through ubiquitous computing to design new approaches to mobile and ambient learning.
The document discusses requirements engineering (RE) and how language, knowledge, and mirror neurons impact the RE process. RE involves elicitation and analysis activities between customers and software vendors. It is a social process that requires understanding stakeholders' perspectives which can be hindered by differences in language and domain knowledge. Mirror neurons activate when observing and understanding behaviors and help with social cognition and empathy. For effective RE, organizations need methods to expose participants to different domains early to overcome knowledge and language barriers, clearly define business objects, and recognize the social nature of RE where technical tools enable human understanding.
This document provides an overview of service-oriented architecture (SOA) composition and existing solutions. It discusses key concepts like orchestration and choreography in composing services. Industry standards like UDDI, WSDL, and BPEL are described for discovering, describing, and composing services but have limitations regarding semantics. Semantic approaches like OWL-S aim to address these limitations by adding machine-readable semantics to enable automatic discovery and composition of services. Research issues in areas like quality of service, monitoring, and computing optimal compositions are also discussed. The document surveys various technologies and approaches for SOA composition.
Web Service Composition as a Planning Task: Experiments using Knowledge-Based...Erick Ornio
Motivated by the problem of automated Web service composition (WSC), we present some empirical evidence to validate the effectiveness of using knowledge-based planning techniques for solving WSC problems. In our experiments we utilize the PKS (Planning with Knowledge and Sensing) planning system which is derived from a generalization of STRIPS. In PKS, the agent’s (incomplete) knowledge is represented by a set of databases and actions are modelled as revisions to the agent’s knowledge state rather than the state of the world. We argue that, despite the intrinsic limited expressiveness of this approach, typical WSC problems can be specified and solved at the knowledge level. We show that this approach scales relatively well under changing conditions (e.g. user constraints). Finally, we discuss implementation issues and propose some architectural guidelines within the context of an agent-oriented framework for inter-operable, intelligent, multi-agent systems for WSC and provisioning.
The document outlines an approach for scalable quality-driven semantic web service composition. It discusses semantic links between services' input and output parameters, and defines quality criteria for these links and services. A composition is modeled as a statechart with states as services and transitions as semantic links. Quality of a link is measured by its common description rate and matching quality, while services have associated non-functional properties for quality of service. The approach aims to select compositions based on functional constraints from semantic links and quality of service constraints.
Ai Planning For Semantic Web Service Compositionahmad bassiouny
The document discusses AI planning approaches for semantic web service composition and identifies several open challenges. It notes that classical planning makes simplifying assumptions that are invalid for web services, which exhibit features like incomplete knowledge, non-determinism, and complex interfaces. Non-classical planning approaches that relax some assumptions are discussed. Several examples of applying planning to web service composition are described, but many open challenges remain around scalability, automation, and dealing with real-world complexities of web services.
This document summarizes a paper that presents a system called CommunityCook that extracts adaptation knowledge from internet cooking communities. It crawls forums to gather recipes and user comments, classifies comments into categories related to adaptations, and aggregates this to form adaptation suggestions. An evaluation with expert chefs found that while dependent suggestions were often applicable, independent suggestions usually included ingredients that could not substitute. Future work aims to improve the knowledge model and semantic analysis.
Towards Logic Programming as a Service: Experiments in tuPrologAndrea Omicini
The document discusses experiments with logic programming as a service (LPaaS) using tuProlog. It proposes an LPaaS architecture with local APIs for creating engines, loading theories, and querying. It also describes implementing tuProlog as a service (2PaaS) on iOS, where tuProlog is embedded in an app and provides an API via URL schemes for other apps to interface with it. Example application scenarios are presented, including using tuProlog for symbolic derivatives and multi-language programming. Further work is outlined to better define and extend the LPaaS paradigm.
WUD2010 Sophia 05 - B. Caramel (UNICE/CNRS) : Composition d'applications inte...Use Age
WUD (World Usability Day 2010 à Sophia Antipolis organisé par Use Age)
Partie 05 - B. Caramel (UNICE/CNRS) : "Composition d'applications interactives : et l’utilisateur dans tout ça?"
Plus d'infos en: http://www.use-age.org/journee-mondiale-de-l-utilisabilite/wud-2010
Case-based reasoning (CBR) classifiers use a database of problem solutions to solve
new problems. Unlike nearest-neighbor classifiers, which store training tuples as points
in Euclidean space, CBR stores the tuples or “cases” for problem solving as complex
symbolic descriptions.
This document discusses using case-based reasoning for diet menu planning. It provides an overview of related work using CBR for domains like psychiatry and Alzheimer's care. It then describes DietMaster, a knowledge-intensive CBR system for diet menu planning that uses domain knowledge from experts. DietMaster's architecture and functional components are explained, including its representation of knowledge through rules and cases. Finally, the structures for input cases, cases in process, and output/learned cases are defined.
Présentation sur les ontologie :
le concept de base, les langages, et les applications dans les différents domaines.
Exposé présenté par Benouini Rachid dans FST Fès 2014-2015.
Présentation sur les ontologie :
le concept de base, les langages, et les applications dans les différents domaines.
Exposé présenté par Benouini Rachid, Adnane Eddariouache dans FST Fès 2013-2014.
This document discusses the concept of mobile learning in context. It describes how computers and mobile devices are becoming ubiquitous and context-aware. Sensors in environments and on mobile devices can provide contextual information to enhance learning experiences. However, mobile phones are still often seen only as toys in classrooms rather than learning tools. The document advocates for leveraging context through ubiquitous computing to design new approaches to mobile and ambient learning.
The document discusses requirements engineering (RE) and how language, knowledge, and mirror neurons impact the RE process. RE involves elicitation and analysis activities between customers and software vendors. It is a social process that requires understanding stakeholders' perspectives which can be hindered by differences in language and domain knowledge. Mirror neurons activate when observing and understanding behaviors and help with social cognition and empathy. For effective RE, organizations need methods to expose participants to different domains early to overcome knowledge and language barriers, clearly define business objects, and recognize the social nature of RE where technical tools enable human understanding.
The document discusses designing distributed user interfaces (DUIs) that span multiple devices. It proposes developing a design patterns language to provide interaction designers with options for how to distribute interfaces across devices and a rationale for choosing different design options. Example patterns could illustrate concepts like distribution of interactions and activities. Future work involves clarifying the pattern language concepts, evaluating existing DUIs with the patterns, designing a mobile DUI using the patterns, and assessing the patterns' usefulness for designers.
The mediaX “Thinking Tools for Wicked Problems” webinar series concludes with Martha Russell as she examines how we are interconnected in this networked world and how to orchestrate relational capital and shared vision to create the future we want to live in.
This document outlines a research agenda for Web 3.0 technologies focusing on location awareness, ubiquitous collaboration, and their impacts. Key questions are proposed around how location-aware information delivery and contextualization in space affects memorability and knowledge organization, and how optimal collaboration structures can be measured and supported online to enhance learning, content production, and social outcomes. Relevant learning and social theories are discussed. Usability factors like task-fit and multimodal information are also addressed.
The document discusses the basics of ontologies, including their origin in philosophy, definitions, types, benefits and application areas. Some key points are:
- An ontology is a formal specification of a conceptualization used to help humans and programs share knowledge. It establishes a shared vocabulary for exchanging information.
- Ontologies describe domain knowledge and provide an agreed-upon understanding of a domain through concepts and relations. They help solve problems of ambiguity and enable knowledge sharing.
- Ontologies benefit applications like information retrieval, digital libraries, knowledge engineering and natural language processing by facilitating semantic search and integration of data.
The document discusses co-creation of learning and social CRM from an academic perspective. It summarizes the author's research on how actors within value networks, including customer, supplier, partner, and internal networks, collaborate and learn from each other. Interactive technologies help foster emergent learning and creativity within these networks by enabling adaptive leadership and increasing interactions between diverse agents. Organizations play an enabling role through social initiatives like social CRM and enterprise 2.0 to foster co-creation of learning and adaptability across various value networks.
Here are the key points about using content-based filtering techniques:
- Content-based filtering relies on analyzing the content or description of items to recommend items similar to what the user has liked in the past. It looks for patterns and regularities in item attributes/descriptions to distinguish highly rated items.
- The item content/descriptions are analyzed automatically by extracting information from sources like web pages, or entered manually from product databases.
- It focuses on objective attributes about items that can be extracted algorithmically, like text analysis of documents.
- However, personal preferences and what makes an item appealing are often subjective qualities not easily extracted algorithmically, like writing style or taste.
- So while content-based filtering can
This document discusses using multi-agent systems in a context-aware environment for global software development. It proposes an architecture called ContextP-GSD that uses an ontology called OntoDiSEN to capture context information. A case study demonstrates how ContextP-GSD can use time zone information to determine the appropriate communication method. The document also presents the DiSEN Agency framework for distributed knowledge management using agents and describes future work to improve integration with the DiSEN environment and evaluate semantic repositories.
SEMANTIC NETWORK BASED MECHANISMS FOR KNOWLEDGE ACQUISITIONcscpconf
The document describes a semantic network-based algorithm for knowledge acquisition from text. The algorithm uses the WiSENet semantic network to generate rules representing lexical relationships between concepts. It then applies these rules to text data as a finite state automaton to identify matches and acquire new concepts and relationships for expanding the semantic network. The algorithm tolerates variations in word order through its use of a "bag of concepts" approach during rule matching. Experiments showed the algorithm was effective at knowledge acquisition from text in a flexible manner.
Designing for Collaboration: Challenges & Considerations of Multi-Use Informa...Stephanie Steinhardt
Slides assembled for Human Centered Design & Engineering Preliminary Exam talk at the University of Washington Allen Library Auditorium 4.8.2011.
Thanks to Mark Zachry, David McDonald, Elly Searle, Carol Allen, and NSF IIS-0811210.
Swoogle: Showcasing the Significance of Semantic SearchIDES Editor
The World Wide Web hosts vast repositories of
information. The retrieval of required information from the
Internet is a great challenge since computer applications
understand only the structure and layout of web pages and
they do not have access to their intended meaning. Semantic
web is an effort to enhance the Internet, so that computers
can process the information presented on WWW, interpret
and communicate with it, to help humans find required
essential knowledge. Application of Ontology is the
predominant approach helping the evolution of the Semantic
web. The aim of our work is to illustrate how Swoogle, a
semantic search engine, helps make computer and WWW
interoperable and more intelligent. In this paper, we discuss
issues related to traditional and semantic web searching. We
outline how an understanding of the semantics of the search
terms can be used to provide better results. The experimental
results establish that semantic search provides more focused
results than the traditional search.
RESEARCH ARTICLEDEVELOPER CENTRALITY AND THE IMPACT OF VAL.docxaudeleypearl
RESEARCH ARTICLE
DEVELOPER CENTRALITY AND THE IMPACT OF VALUE
CONGRUENCE AND INCONGRUENCE ON COMMITMENT
AND CODE CONTRIBUTION ACTIVITY IN OPEN
SOURCE SOFTWARE COMMUNITIES1
Likoebe M. Maruping
J. Mack Robinson College of Business, Georgia State University,
Atlanta, GA 30303 U.S.A. {[email protected]}
Sherae L. Daniel
Carl H. Linder College of Business, University of Cincinnati,
Cincinnati, OH 45221 U.S.A. {[email protected]}
Marcelo Cataldo
Google, New York, NY 10011 U.S.A. {[email protected]}
Open source software (OSS) communities are dependent on the code contributions of developers who, in many
cases, never meet face-to-face and collaborate primarily through technology-enabled means. With their fluid
membership, such communities often rely on engaging the commitment of developers to their cause. Given the
changing nature of OSS communities, developers face barriers in appreciating appropriate ways of con-
tributing to the collaborative effort. Such uncertainty about how to contribute results in OSS communities
losing developers as they devote their attention to other, more welcoming, communities. In this research, we
draw upon uncertainty reduction theory to argue that developers have two alternative avenues at their disposal
to gain certainty about how to contribute: passive and interactive. Leveraging the person–environment fit
perspective, we argue that congruence and incongruence in the OSS values of a developer and an OSS com-
munity serve as an avenue for passive approaches to gaining certainty, to the degree that appropriate ways
of contributing are encoded in these values. Further, leveraging social network theory, we argue that centrality
within a community’s communication network constitutes an avenue for interactive approaches for gaining
certainty about how to contribute. Using polynomial regression analysis, we analyze survey and archival data
from 410 developers in an OSS community. Results suggest that developer centrality moderates the impact of
congruence and incongruence in OSS values on commitment. Moreover, commitment fully mediates the impact
of OSS value congruence and incongruence on developer contribution activity. We discuss the implications
of our findings for research and practice.
1
Keywords: Open source software, P-E fit, uncertainty reduction theory, social networks, centrality, value
congruence, value incongruence, commitment, code contribution, polynomial regression analysis
1Sue Brown was the accepting senior editor for this paper. Robert Fuller served as the associate editor.
The appendices for this paper are located in the “Online Supplements” section of MIS Quarterly’s website (https://misq.org).
DOI: 10.25300/MISQ/2019/13928 MIS Quarterly Vol. 43 No. 3, pp. 951-976/September 2019 951
Maruping et al./Commitment & Code Contribution Activity in OSS Communities
Introduction
The open source software (OSS) development model has
grown in popularity from a fledgling mov ...
Joe Corneli is a PhD student at the Knowledge Media Institute studying semantic adaptivity and social networking in personal learning environments. His research focuses on developing a unified methodology to map activity patterns in social contexts to better support the learning process. He plans to implement his ideas using tools like Etherpad for analyzing live social interactions, RDF for managing relationship data, and WordNet for clustering and annotating content to help simplify information and connect resources for learners. By the end of his PhD, he hopes to build a "PLE IDE" tool to offer personalized support for learners and developers.
OpenKollab is a social venture that aims to connect projects to solve social problems through building open collaboration ecosystems. It operates as a virtual organization providing ecosystem development consulting services and managing an ecosystem pooled fund. Its goals are to build technology platforms, mature ecosystems around issues like climate change, and early-stage ecosystems in fields like distributed manufacturing and local foods. Revenue comes from consulting fees and fund management. OpenKollab communicates through blogs, wikis and online groups to participate in ecosystems and drive collaboration.
OpenKollab is a social venture that aims to connect projects to solve social problems through building open collaboration ecosystems. It operates as a virtual organization providing ecosystem development consulting services and managing an ecosystem pooled fund. Its goals are to build technology platforms, mature ecosystems around issues like climate change, and early-stage ecosystems in fields like distributed manufacturing and local foods. Revenue comes from consulting fees and fund management. OpenKollab communicates through blogs, wikis and online groups to participate in ecosystems and drive collaboration to solve massive social challenges at scale.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
The simplified electron and muon model, Oscillating Spacetime: The Foundation...RitikBhardwaj56
Discover the Simplified Electron and Muon Model: A New Wave-Based Approach to Understanding Particles delves into a groundbreaking theory that presents electrons and muons as rotating soliton waves within oscillating spacetime. Geared towards students, researchers, and science buffs, this book breaks down complex ideas into simple explanations. It covers topics such as electron waves, temporal dynamics, and the implications of this model on particle physics. With clear illustrations and easy-to-follow explanations, readers will gain a new outlook on the universe's fundamental nature.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
South African Journal of Science: Writing with integrity workshop (2024)
Jydodenterprisearch2010talk
1. Evolutionary Shared Knowledge Architecture Perspective and Principles (Networking enables social evolution of knowledge.) Panelist: John A. Yanosy Jr. [email_address] 972-705-1807
2. Architecture Challenge: Enabling dynamic evolution of social knowledge relevant to mission goals and needs of collaborative communities Action Readiness Mission Relevance Effort Unity Coordination Knowledge Mission Requirements Knowledge Tasking Decision Knowledge Shared knowledge Architecture defined capabilities to collect, fuse, discover, represent, relate, understand, and reason about knowledge
3.
4. <Domain Knowledge> <Domain Knowledge> Intentional Comm Agent B Ex p = <Context, Domain, Intention, Language Intentional Expressions Semantic Interaction Domain Knowledge Intentional speech acts Intentional Speech acts Collaborative knowledge Cognitive Reasoning & Logics Perception, Actions Perception, Actions Intensional knowledge Context Knowledge Cognitive Reasoning & Logics Domain of Interest - Real & Social- Cultural Worlds External Knowledge( Schemas, Taxonomies, Ontologies, Namespaces, Metadata) Semantic Interactions & Query Language Semantic Interactions & Query Language Ontologies & Logic Taxonomies Domain Schemas Vocabularies Namespaces Common Logic Upper Ontologies Semantic Rules Context KR Intensional Logic XML Data Elements Ontologies & Logic Taxonomies Domain Schemas Vocabularies Namespaces Common Logic Upper Ontologies Semantic Rules Context KR Intensional Logic XML Data Elements Intensional Semantics Intensional Semantics Collaboration Multi Agent Semantic Model Distributed & Common Knowledge) Collaboration Multi Agent Semantic Model Distributed & Common Knowledge Context knowledge Context knowledge
5.
6.
7. Agent Knowledge Social Knowledge Sharing of Semantic Interactions Leading to Social Knowledge Evolution
Knowledge is dynamic and evolves with human experience, networks and systems are partners in this evolution. Architectures will focus on providing knowledge required to its user community by defining dynamic and evolutionary capabilities to gather, search, analyze, interpret, model, predict, and share consistent information relevant to their mission and purpose Architectures will be more extensible and flexible through dynamic coordination of knowledge resources at different levels of scope, semantic compatibility, and granularity for different user roles and capabilities An overarching knowledge perspective is required across all architecture views as to identifying the enabling or impeding capabilities for knowledge sharing and mutually consistent interpretation A careful assessment should be made of the nature of the architectural semantic definitions for all messages, data, schemas, interfaces, protocols, etc. (machine, human, hybrid) to identify possible semantic impediments preventing shared knowledge