The ODDC Network hosted an Open Session at the ICT for Development Conference in Cape Town, South Africa - 10th December 2013. These slides present an overview of the discussions.
Benefits of Open Government Data (Expanded)Jennifer Bell
The document discusses the benefits of open government data and citizen engagement. It provides examples of how governments can publish structured data feeds, enable data visualization, and support crowdsourcing to engage citizens in monitoring government. When governments adopt open systems, it allows external groups and third parties to build tools for data analysis and oversight, and helps citizens detect issues and provide feedback.
One portion of a presentation organized by the BroadbandUSA Office, National Telecommunications and Information Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, under this description:
"Whether your focus is economic self-sufficiency, community change, health, or education, the Internet is changing the way you achieve your goals. As more information and services move online, people who are “digitally isolated” grow more excluded from opportunity and less connected to their communities. Although most American households are now online, a large minority – about 30 percent, including many whose members are poorer, less educated, and older – are not. Since 2010, investments in community-based Internet education and training, including $450 million from a federal grant program (the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program, or BTOP) and $210 million in matching funds, have demonstrated the power of the Internet to change lives, improving educational outcomes, job readiness, social isolation, and health care. As a result of these investments, there is substantial new capacity available to bring families and communities online – including comprehensive models and resources for program planning, implementation, and evaluation.
This session will describe ways to leverage this untapped intellectual and social capital."
Open Data Institute // オープンデータ研究所 // 开放式数据研究所theODI
The document discusses the Open Data Institute (ODI), which aims to catalyze open data culture to create economic, environmental, and social value. The ODI brings together experts to help unlock data supply and demand, and communicate data's value. It provides standards, research, training and helps startups. The ODI has received over £10 million in public funding and £500k in philanthropic funding to further its mission of inspiring open data innovation.
"Big Data" gets thrown around a lot, but what does it really mean?
This presentation, from SES Chicago, breaks down three of the main elements of Big Data, Volume, Variety, and Velocity.
Professor Rob Kitchin from the Programmable City and Maynooth University presents the possible pitfalls to opening data in addition to the costs associated with this practice.
The ODDC Network hosted an Open Session at the ICT for Development Conference in Cape Town, South Africa - 10th December 2013. These slides present an overview of the discussions.
Benefits of Open Government Data (Expanded)Jennifer Bell
The document discusses the benefits of open government data and citizen engagement. It provides examples of how governments can publish structured data feeds, enable data visualization, and support crowdsourcing to engage citizens in monitoring government. When governments adopt open systems, it allows external groups and third parties to build tools for data analysis and oversight, and helps citizens detect issues and provide feedback.
One portion of a presentation organized by the BroadbandUSA Office, National Telecommunications and Information Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, under this description:
"Whether your focus is economic self-sufficiency, community change, health, or education, the Internet is changing the way you achieve your goals. As more information and services move online, people who are “digitally isolated” grow more excluded from opportunity and less connected to their communities. Although most American households are now online, a large minority – about 30 percent, including many whose members are poorer, less educated, and older – are not. Since 2010, investments in community-based Internet education and training, including $450 million from a federal grant program (the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program, or BTOP) and $210 million in matching funds, have demonstrated the power of the Internet to change lives, improving educational outcomes, job readiness, social isolation, and health care. As a result of these investments, there is substantial new capacity available to bring families and communities online – including comprehensive models and resources for program planning, implementation, and evaluation.
This session will describe ways to leverage this untapped intellectual and social capital."
Open Data Institute // オープンデータ研究所 // 开放式数据研究所theODI
The document discusses the Open Data Institute (ODI), which aims to catalyze open data culture to create economic, environmental, and social value. The ODI brings together experts to help unlock data supply and demand, and communicate data's value. It provides standards, research, training and helps startups. The ODI has received over £10 million in public funding and £500k in philanthropic funding to further its mission of inspiring open data innovation.
"Big Data" gets thrown around a lot, but what does it really mean?
This presentation, from SES Chicago, breaks down three of the main elements of Big Data, Volume, Variety, and Velocity.
Professor Rob Kitchin from the Programmable City and Maynooth University presents the possible pitfalls to opening data in addition to the costs associated with this practice.
August 29, 2017 Purdue Honors College Call-Out Presentation Purdue RCODI
The document outlines an agenda for an info session on the Gold IronHacks Fall 2017 hackathon organized by the Research Center of Open Digital Innovation at Purdue University, which brings together students to develop digital innovations using open data over 4 phases with training, feedback, and prizes awarded to winning projects. The hackathon follows the Purdue IronHacks model of an iterative hacking process to turn open data into interactive web applications that address societal challenges through training, mentoring, and competitive evaluation of submissions.
A presentation of the Daniel Dietrich, Open Government Data for civic engagement Guidelines (OGDCE Guidelines) presentet by Daniel Dietrich co-author, on behalf of the DPADM team at UNDESA at OKCon, 17th September 2013, Geneva, Switzerland
This document provides the agenda for the International Open Government Data Conference taking place from July 10-12, 2012 in Washington D.C., sponsored by Data.gov and the World Bank. The agenda outlines the schedule of presentations, speakers, topics to be discussed, and networking activities. Key topics include opening up financial data, engaging citizens around open data, standards and accessibility, and delivering value from open data. Speakers include government officials, advocates, and experts from around the world.
The document discusses digital futures and community ecosystems. It notes that data volumes are growing exponentially and open data provides opportunities for innovation. It outlines different ecosystems like natural, social, economic and digital ecosystems. The digital community ecosystem has many interconnected parts. Emerging technologies like social media, analytics, cloud computing and the internet of everything will impact digital futures. Open data fuels the development of intelligent communities. Sustainable digital communities require metrics, partnerships and leadership across sectors.
Presentation on Open Government Data Tools and Infrastructure for Citizen Engagement at the WSIS Forum, May 2012 in Geneva Switzerland.
See: http://groups.itu.int/wsis-forum2012/Agenda/DraftAgenda.aspx?se=43276
Open data, decision points and distribution of benefitsTim Davies
Slides from a presentation at the ICA 2014 Pre-conference on Data and Discrimination - http://oti.newamerica.net/events/2014/05/22/data-and-discrimination
Brief overview of Moldova's Government achievements and plans in the context of the Open Data efforts. Presented at the 2014 Global eGovernment Forum in Astana, Kazakhstan, within the preliminary event on Open Data and eGOV for CIS countries, organized by the World Bank and UNDESA
A call to librarians to use their library powers in the community beyond the walls of their institutions as the open data folks need their knowledge!
Title:
Open Sesame: Open Data, Data Liberation and New Opportunities for Libraries
Abstract:
Cities and data producers are quickly embracing Open Data, albeit unevenly. The Data Liberation Initiative (DLI) has been a pioneer in broadening access to data for nearly two decades. This session will examine the relevance of Data Liberation in terms of Open Data and explore how librarians can step up to the plate to make Open Data/Open Government as successful as DLI.
Speakers:
- Wendy Watkins, Data Librarian, Carleton University
- Ernie Boyko, Adjunct Data Librarian, Carleton University
- Tracey P. Lauriault, Post Doctoral Fellow, Carleton University (tlauriau@gmail.com)
- Margaret Haines, University Librarian, Carleton University
Community Engagements with Open Government Data (OGD) PlatformData Portal India
The document summarizes community engagements with India's Open Government Data platform from 2012 to 2014. It discusses how over 100 government departments published over 12,000 datasets which were downloaded over 8 lakh times. It also details outreach activities including hackathons, workshops, and collaborations with government agencies, civil society, academia, industry, and international partners. The engagements aimed to increase awareness and use of open data, facilitate data contribution and identify new datasets, and foster innovation through app development and visualizations.
This document discusses the implications of open data for teaching and learning. It notes that vast amounts of data are created every day both publicly and within governments. Open data refers to data that is accessible, machine-readable and free to use. Open data can provide new resources for teaching, influence what topics are taught by emphasizing digital literacy, and change academic publishing by making more research openly accessible. Overall, the document argues that Ireland is well-positioned to benefit from open data and should work to publish more public sector data through a central portal using open standards. This could provide economic and civic benefits if used to improve education.
Workshop on next stage in open government data using data for transparency a...Open Knowledge Foundation
The document discusses open government data and the Open Knowledge Foundation. It provides an overview of the Open Knowledge Foundation, which promotes open data and builds tools to publish and use open data. It describes some of the Foundation's projects, such as hosting open data camps and competitions, developing open data portals and visualization tools, setting open data standards, and providing open data training. It also discusses how to design an open data strategy and the importance of open data for government transparency and accountability.
Peter Bjørn Larsen - Öresund Smart City HubBigDataViz
This document discusses the Öresund Smart City Hub project, which aims to create an open data platform to spur innovation using public sector data from municipalities in the Öresund region. The project seeks to (1) use challenges related to sustainability goals in municipalities to drive economic growth, (2) create a cross-border platform for collaboration opportunities, and (3) make the region a leading smart city test bed. Examples of similar open data platforms from Dublin, Helsinki, Amsterdam, and London are provided.
The document summarizes a presentation on open government data and its potential benefits. It discusses the exponential growth of digital data and how open data can power sustainable development goals. It defines open data and its economic benefits, providing examples of companies created and jobs generated using open data. Finally, it outlines the World Bank's support for countries' open data initiatives through tools like the Open Data Readiness Assessment and examples of projects in various countries.
Presentation on eGovernance and Open Governance products launched/under development in Moldova, in the context of building e-Democracy. 6th Internet Governance Forum, Kyiv, Ukraine, September 30, 2015
1) The document discusses how open data and interoperability can drive innovation by empowering people and communities through access to government data.
2) Key points include how open data can meet regulatory needs, communicate with citizens, and spur new economic development and innovation.
3) An open data ecosystem is created by gathering and connecting data, infrastructure, developers, and communities to empower choices and change behavior.
August 29, 2017 Purdue Honors College Call-Out Presentation Purdue RCODI
The document outlines an agenda for an info session on the Gold IronHacks Fall 2017 hackathon organized by the Research Center of Open Digital Innovation at Purdue University, which brings together students to develop digital innovations using open data over 4 phases with training, feedback, and prizes awarded to winning projects. The hackathon follows the Purdue IronHacks model of an iterative hacking process to turn open data into interactive web applications that address societal challenges through training, mentoring, and competitive evaluation of submissions.
A presentation of the Daniel Dietrich, Open Government Data for civic engagement Guidelines (OGDCE Guidelines) presentet by Daniel Dietrich co-author, on behalf of the DPADM team at UNDESA at OKCon, 17th September 2013, Geneva, Switzerland
This document provides the agenda for the International Open Government Data Conference taking place from July 10-12, 2012 in Washington D.C., sponsored by Data.gov and the World Bank. The agenda outlines the schedule of presentations, speakers, topics to be discussed, and networking activities. Key topics include opening up financial data, engaging citizens around open data, standards and accessibility, and delivering value from open data. Speakers include government officials, advocates, and experts from around the world.
The document discusses digital futures and community ecosystems. It notes that data volumes are growing exponentially and open data provides opportunities for innovation. It outlines different ecosystems like natural, social, economic and digital ecosystems. The digital community ecosystem has many interconnected parts. Emerging technologies like social media, analytics, cloud computing and the internet of everything will impact digital futures. Open data fuels the development of intelligent communities. Sustainable digital communities require metrics, partnerships and leadership across sectors.
Presentation on Open Government Data Tools and Infrastructure for Citizen Engagement at the WSIS Forum, May 2012 in Geneva Switzerland.
See: http://groups.itu.int/wsis-forum2012/Agenda/DraftAgenda.aspx?se=43276
Open data, decision points and distribution of benefitsTim Davies
Slides from a presentation at the ICA 2014 Pre-conference on Data and Discrimination - http://oti.newamerica.net/events/2014/05/22/data-and-discrimination
Brief overview of Moldova's Government achievements and plans in the context of the Open Data efforts. Presented at the 2014 Global eGovernment Forum in Astana, Kazakhstan, within the preliminary event on Open Data and eGOV for CIS countries, organized by the World Bank and UNDESA
A call to librarians to use their library powers in the community beyond the walls of their institutions as the open data folks need their knowledge!
Title:
Open Sesame: Open Data, Data Liberation and New Opportunities for Libraries
Abstract:
Cities and data producers are quickly embracing Open Data, albeit unevenly. The Data Liberation Initiative (DLI) has been a pioneer in broadening access to data for nearly two decades. This session will examine the relevance of Data Liberation in terms of Open Data and explore how librarians can step up to the plate to make Open Data/Open Government as successful as DLI.
Speakers:
- Wendy Watkins, Data Librarian, Carleton University
- Ernie Boyko, Adjunct Data Librarian, Carleton University
- Tracey P. Lauriault, Post Doctoral Fellow, Carleton University (tlauriau@gmail.com)
- Margaret Haines, University Librarian, Carleton University
Community Engagements with Open Government Data (OGD) PlatformData Portal India
The document summarizes community engagements with India's Open Government Data platform from 2012 to 2014. It discusses how over 100 government departments published over 12,000 datasets which were downloaded over 8 lakh times. It also details outreach activities including hackathons, workshops, and collaborations with government agencies, civil society, academia, industry, and international partners. The engagements aimed to increase awareness and use of open data, facilitate data contribution and identify new datasets, and foster innovation through app development and visualizations.
This document discusses the implications of open data for teaching and learning. It notes that vast amounts of data are created every day both publicly and within governments. Open data refers to data that is accessible, machine-readable and free to use. Open data can provide new resources for teaching, influence what topics are taught by emphasizing digital literacy, and change academic publishing by making more research openly accessible. Overall, the document argues that Ireland is well-positioned to benefit from open data and should work to publish more public sector data through a central portal using open standards. This could provide economic and civic benefits if used to improve education.
Workshop on next stage in open government data using data for transparency a...Open Knowledge Foundation
The document discusses open government data and the Open Knowledge Foundation. It provides an overview of the Open Knowledge Foundation, which promotes open data and builds tools to publish and use open data. It describes some of the Foundation's projects, such as hosting open data camps and competitions, developing open data portals and visualization tools, setting open data standards, and providing open data training. It also discusses how to design an open data strategy and the importance of open data for government transparency and accountability.
Peter Bjørn Larsen - Öresund Smart City HubBigDataViz
This document discusses the Öresund Smart City Hub project, which aims to create an open data platform to spur innovation using public sector data from municipalities in the Öresund region. The project seeks to (1) use challenges related to sustainability goals in municipalities to drive economic growth, (2) create a cross-border platform for collaboration opportunities, and (3) make the region a leading smart city test bed. Examples of similar open data platforms from Dublin, Helsinki, Amsterdam, and London are provided.
The document summarizes a presentation on open government data and its potential benefits. It discusses the exponential growth of digital data and how open data can power sustainable development goals. It defines open data and its economic benefits, providing examples of companies created and jobs generated using open data. Finally, it outlines the World Bank's support for countries' open data initiatives through tools like the Open Data Readiness Assessment and examples of projects in various countries.
Presentation on eGovernance and Open Governance products launched/under development in Moldova, in the context of building e-Democracy. 6th Internet Governance Forum, Kyiv, Ukraine, September 30, 2015
1) The document discusses how open data and interoperability can drive innovation by empowering people and communities through access to government data.
2) Key points include how open data can meet regulatory needs, communicate with citizens, and spur new economic development and innovation.
3) An open data ecosystem is created by gathering and connecting data, infrastructure, developers, and communities to empower choices and change behavior.
Web samia mehlem open data and wb main presentationGlobalForum
The document discusses open data and its benefits. Open data refers to data that is publicly available, machine-readable, and can be used, reused and redistributed without restrictions. Open data benefits governments and citizens by increasing transparency, accountability and engagement. It also enables innovation and economic growth. The document provides examples of how open data has been used to create business opportunities and jobs, improve public services, and develop apps for citizens. It emphasizes that successful open data initiatives require connecting data suppliers to users and engaging stakeholders across sectors through ongoing collaboration.
Moldova Open Data Agenda, OGP/European Regional Meeting, Dublin, May 8-9, 2014Stela Mocan
Moldova Government Open Data Initiative: Status-quo and Strategic Priorities, presented at the Open Government Partnership European Regional Meeting in Dublin, May 8-9th, 2014
Open Government Data: What it is, Where it is Going, and the Opportunities fo...OECD Governance
Keynote presentation given by Ryan Androsoff (Digital Government Policy Analyst, OECD) at the 2015 EUROSAI-OLACEFS conference in Quito, Ecuador on 25 June 2015. Focus of the presentation is on Open Government Data and the opportunities for Supreme Audit Institutions presented by open data. Video of the presentation is available at: https://youtu.be/SlBfxmecJhI?t=1h50m19s
For more information on OECD's work relating to Open Government Data please see: http://www.oecd.org/gov/public-innovation/open-government-data.htm
Government agencies are using the power of analytics to understand government performance as well as analyze key trends, catch fraud, and drive better citizen engagement. In this session, you will learn tips on using data to effectively do your job better. Learn key analytical strategies that will help you become an analytical star within your agency or organization.
Open Source & Open Data Session report from imaGIne 2014 ConferenceGSDI Association
Session report from the imaGIne 2014 Conference held in Berlin, Germany, in October 2014. Session was chaired by Dr. Gabor Remetey-Fulopp, of HUNAGI, who were co-organisers for Session 8C1.
Working Group Reports - facilitator slidesogpireland
The document summarizes reports from four working groups - Transparency, Accountability, Citizen Participation, and Technology & Innovation - at a consultation meeting on open government in Ireland. Key challenges discussed were overcoming cultural barriers to transparency, engaging the public, and a lack of coordination and standards around open data. Solutions proposed included creating a central open data portal, setting common data standards, educating on the benefits of open data, and enforcing existing open data policies.
How Data is Transforming Health and SocietyJeanne Holm
Open data refers to data that can be freely used, shared, and modified by anyone for any purpose. Many sectors benefit from open data including healthcare, financial services, government, and non-profits. Open data is estimated to create $3 trillion in economic growth annually in the US by powering innovation. The open data movement aims to provide transparency and allow people to make better decisions by democratizing access to data.
Data for Good: How Data is Transforming Business and SocietyJeanne Holm
From high tech to rural Uganda, the data that companies and governments share is being used around the world by all kinds of people to make life better.
The document discusses open satellite data and geospatial information systems (GIS). It notes that satellites gather high-fidelity, real-time data about locations and conditions on Earth, oceans, atmosphere and socioeconomic factors. Examples are given of how such data has been used for applications like analyzing global climate change, earthquake activity, earth and ocean science, helping with disasters through early warnings, and creating a multi-billion dollar weather and GPS industry. The document advocates for open data and citizen science, including crowdsourcing to solve food security challenges and correcting data. It asks what GIS data is needed in Uganda and suggests ways to utilize and explore such open data.
Connections between big data and open data. Includes a case study of Data.gov and the ways that companies, charities, and others are using open data to improve the lives of people around the planet.
Data.gov provides access to over 400,000 datasets from 180 US agencies and organizations in easy to use formats. It encourages developers to build innovative applications using open data and drives knowledge sharing and innovation globally and across 18 communities. Data.gov is migrating its platform to the open source Open Government Platform to improve search capabilities, enable application statistics tracking, and allow federated searching of agency and local government catalogs. The presentation calls for continued collaboration to securely share and link government data and empower communities and businesses to use data to address global issues.
Using Data.gov Communities to Drive Innovation and Collaboration aims to foster communities on Data.gov around priority topics to connect innovators, industry, academia, and government. Communities are public spaces that present data from multiple organizations on a single topic. Examples include Health, Energy, Education, and Ocean communities. Agencies are encouraged to lead or contribute to communities, engage their networks, and sponsor challenges to drive innovation using government data.
Knowledge Sharing and Social Media at NASAJeanne Holm
This represents work done while I was serving as the Chief Knowledge Architect at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory using social media to encourage collaboration inside and outside the agency
The document discusses how open data and knowledge sharing can drive innovation. It provides examples of how government data from sources like NASA, NOAA, and Health and Human Services have been used by developers to create applications that improve lives. Open data initiatives like Data.gov and Health.Data.gov aim to gather data, connect communities of developers and experts, and encourage the creation of technologies and visualizations that empower citizens. The ultimate goal is to fuel innovation and economic opportunities through making vast amounts of government data openly available.
The document discusses the goals and progress of Data.gov, a US government platform that provides access to government data. It aims to 1) gather data from agencies and make it openly available, 2) connect developers, scientists and citizens to find solutions, 3) provide infrastructure based on standards, and 4) encourage apps and visualizations using the data. Since 2009, Data.gov has grown from 47 to over 400,000 datasets and driven the creation of hundreds of applications and visualizations that have improved lives. The document outlines plans to further open data internationally and drive innovation.
A presentation on knowledge sharing, innovation, and open government data presented to the University of Adelaide MBA program during Dr. David Pender's class
Best 20 SEO Techniques To Improve Website Visibility In SERPPixlogix Infotech
Boost your website's visibility with proven SEO techniques! Our latest blog dives into essential strategies to enhance your online presence, increase traffic, and rank higher on search engines. From keyword optimization to quality content creation, learn how to make your site stand out in the crowded digital landscape. Discover actionable tips and expert insights to elevate your SEO game.
How to Interpret Trends in the Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart.pdfChart Kalyan
A Mix Chart displays historical data of numbers in a graphical or tabular form. The Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart specifically shows the results of a sequence of numbers over different periods.
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.
AI 101: An Introduction to the Basics and Impact of Artificial IntelligenceIndexBug
Imagine a world where machines not only perform tasks but also learn, adapt, and make decisions. This is the promise of Artificial Intelligence (AI), a technology that's not just enhancing our lives but revolutionizing entire industries.
Introduction of Cybersecurity with OSS at Code Europe 2024Hiroshi SHIBATA
I develop the Ruby programming language, RubyGems, and Bundler, which are package managers for Ruby. Today, I will introduce how to enhance the security of your application using open-source software (OSS) examples from Ruby and RubyGems.
The first topic is CVE (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures). I have published CVEs many times. But what exactly is a CVE? I'll provide a basic understanding of CVEs and explain how to detect and handle vulnerabilities in OSS.
Next, let's discuss package managers. Package managers play a critical role in the OSS ecosystem. I'll explain how to manage library dependencies in your application.
I'll share insights into how the Ruby and RubyGems core team works to keep our ecosystem safe. By the end of this talk, you'll have a better understanding of how to safeguard your code.
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
Salesforce Integration for Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions A...Jeffrey Haguewood
Sidekick Solutions uses Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions Apricot) and automation solutions to integrate data for business workflows.
We believe integration and automation are essential to user experience and the promise of efficient work through technology. Automation is the critical ingredient to realizing that full vision. We develop integration products and services for Bonterra Case Management software to support the deployment of automations for a variety of use cases.
This video focuses on integration of Salesforce with Bonterra Impact Management.
Interested in deploying an integration with Salesforce for Bonterra Impact Management? Contact us at sales@sidekicksolutionsllc.com to discuss next steps.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 6DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 6. In this session, we will cover Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI webinar offers an in-depth exploration of leveraging cutting-edge technologies for test automation within the UiPath platform. Attendees will delve into the integration of generative AI, a test automation solution, with Open AI advanced natural language processing capabilities.
Throughout the session, participants will discover how this synergy empowers testers to automate repetitive tasks, enhance testing accuracy, and expedite the software testing life cycle. Topics covered include the seamless integration process, practical use cases, and the benefits of harnessing AI-driven automation for UiPath testing initiatives. By attending this webinar, testers, and automation professionals can gain valuable insights into harnessing the power of AI to optimize their test automation workflows within the UiPath ecosystem, ultimately driving efficiency and quality in software development processes.
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into integrating generative AI.
2. Understanding how this integration enhances test automation within the UiPath platform
3. Practical demonstrations
4. Exploration of real-world use cases illustrating the benefits of AI-driven test automation for UiPath
Topics covered:
What is generative AI
Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath integration with generative AI
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
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!
GraphRAG for Life Science to increase LLM accuracyTomaz Bratanic
GraphRAG for life science domain, where you retriever information from biomedical knowledge graphs using LLMs to increase the accuracy and performance of generated answers
Building Production Ready Search Pipelines with Spark and MilvusZilliz
Spark is the widely used ETL tool for processing, indexing and ingesting data to serving stack for search. Milvus is the production-ready open-source vector database. In this talk we will show how to use Spark to process unstructured data to extract vector representations, and push the vectors to Milvus vector database for search serving.
How to Get CNIC Information System with Paksim Ga.pptxdanishmna97
Pakdata Cf is a groundbreaking system designed to streamline and facilitate access to CNIC information. This innovative platform leverages advanced technology to provide users with efficient and secure access to their CNIC details.
Webinar: Designing a schema for a Data WarehouseFederico Razzoli
Are you new to data warehouses (DWH)? Do you need to check whether your data warehouse follows the best practices for a good design? In both cases, this webinar is for you.
A data warehouse is a central relational database that contains all measurements about a business or an organisation. This data comes from a variety of heterogeneous data sources, which includes databases of any type that back the applications used by the company, data files exported by some applications, or APIs provided by internal or external services.
But designing a data warehouse correctly is a hard task, which requires gathering information about the business processes that need to be analysed in the first place. These processes must be translated into so-called star schemas, which means, denormalised databases where each table represents a dimension or facts.
We will discuss these topics:
- How to gather information about a business;
- Understanding dictionaries and how to identify business entities;
- Dimensions and facts;
- Setting a table granularity;
- Types of facts;
- Types of dimensions;
- Snowflakes and how to avoid them;
- Expanding existing dimensions and facts.
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).
Let's Integrate MuleSoft RPA, COMPOSER, APM with AWS IDP along with Slackshyamraj55
Discover the seamless integration of RPA (Robotic Process Automation), COMPOSER, and APM with AWS IDP enhanced with Slack notifications. Explore how these technologies converge to streamline workflows, optimize performance, and ensure secure access, all while leveraging the power of AWS IDP and real-time communication via Slack notifications.
Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing.pdfssuserfac0301
Read Taking AI to the Next Level in Manufacturing to gain insights on AI adoption in the manufacturing industry, such as:
1. How quickly AI is being implemented in manufacturing.
2. Which barriers stand in the way of AI adoption.
3. How data quality and governance form the backbone of AI.
4. Organizational processes and structures that may inhibit effective AI adoption.
6. Ideas and approaches to help build your organization's AI strategy.
Deep Dive: AI-Powered Marketing to Get More Leads and Customers with HyperGro...
Lightning Talks at IOGDC 2012
1. 2012 INTERNATIONAL
OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA
CONFERENCE
Best of the Lightning Talks
Tariq Khokhar and Jeanne Holm
@tkb and @JeanneHolm
Organized by the World Bank and Data.gov
2. Key Ideas
• 6-7 July featured a virtual IOGDC
• 29 papers in two days
• Topics ranged from
– Understanding open data and open government
– Internationalization
– Standards and interoperability
– Visualizing data
– Innovating through challenges
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
3. UNDERSTANDING OPEN DATA AND
OPEN GOVERNMENT
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
4. Open Government Data:
Not Only for the Happy Few?
• Katleen Janssen
– Need to balance the tsunami of
data and with contextual
information
– Data is the tool, but not the goal
– While open data is good, only a
minority of people can really use it
– Keep in mind developing nations
and digital divides
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
5. Open Data in Russia
• Ivan Begtin
– Hot topic in Russia
– Working towards best practices,
ideas, and tools
– One challenge: Russian
procurement data changing Latin
to Cyrillic letters, making it difficult
to search and hard for the public to
read
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
6. Being Open About Data—An Analysis
of the British Open Data Policies
• Antti Halonen
– UK decision to publish all spending
data more than £25,000
– Demands of capturing and
publishing spending data can
punish local commitment to
making it transparent
– Politics of open data
– http://finnish-
institutue.org.uk/images/stories/p
df2012/being%20open%20about%
20data.pdf
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
7. Role of Data in Transparency and
Accountability—Recovery.gov
• Gaurav Paul
– Recovery.gov shows insight to how
recovery money is used
– Government needs to be
accountable for effective
communication with the public
– Phones are still a useful means of
communication
– Provide strong geospatial analysis
to track money
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
8. CENDI: Breaking Down Silos in
Scientific and Technical Information
• Bonnie Carroll
– CENDI
– Interagency group manages
cooperation
– Science.gov as a big silo buster
– Complex scientific and technical
information landscape needs to be
better harvested for open data
– Records, archives, and data
interaction
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
9. Moving Towards a More
Open Culture
• Giovanni Carnaroli
– Develop an open data
infrastructure by selecting high-
value data and then releasing it
– The shift is from “ownership” of
data to “access” to data
– Need for transparency,
participation, and collaboration by
agencies
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
10. Crowdsource Congress:
Making Facts More Influential
• Lorelei Kelly
– Transparency data show
information, but lacks
accountability
– Congress needs to be modernized
– Comparing how legislative bodies
are working with experts and
expertise
– http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
=6Bb7zSsfNXo
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
12. Open Data at the World
Bank
• Tariq Khokhar
• World Bank Open Data Initiative:
– Access to development data,
finances, maps, projects,
performance assessments,
operations, etc.
– World Bank methods and thought
processes made transparent.
– It’s not what you do, it’s how you do
it
• Open Access Policy
• Data where the people are
• Sites build on public data
– data.worldbank.org
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
13. Kenya Open Data Initiative
• Cam Caldwell
– Goals of KODI (Kenya Open
Data Initiative)
– Modernize the way Kenya
uses and shares information
– Make data easy to find,
explore, use, and visualize
– Organizations engage with
audiences
– Empower developers
– Work on single platform to
present information
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
14. Development Assistance—Managing
for Development Results
• Arshak Hovanesian
– People can report and visualize aid
to specific regions
– Monitor donor performance
against aid effectiveness indicators
– Indonesia, Rwanda, and Sri Lanka
are all benefitting from the insights
gained
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
15. INTEROPERABILITY AND
STANDARDS
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
16. Advanced Technologies for
Open Government Data
• Jim Hendler
– Data mashups let us create linked
data
– Comparing US and China GDP
example shows how multiple
datasets create better data
– Metadata gathers more
information (Kenya water map)
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
17. Unlocking Organizational
Data
• Jim Harbour
– Need to turn locked data into
intelligence to drive innovation
– Metadata = Roadmap
– Data Access API = Vehicle
– Data Products = Destinations
– Manufacturing in Michigan
compared with manufacturing in
California
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
18. Key Elements for Open
Government Accountability and
Interoperability
• Carlos Jimenez
– Open metadata is strategic
– Spain’s open data activities want to
be a guide with good open
practices at every point
– Use agreed upon taxonomies,
vocabularies, and open metadata
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
19. An Instant Open Data API
• Chris Metcalf
– Open data is messy
– Developers receive very raw form
of data
– APIs are more developer friendly
– Data augmentation simple with
SODA
– Easy to make maps with data (auto
geospatial implementation)
– Easily searchable
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
20. Publishing and Using Linked Open
Government Data with LODSPeaKr
• Alvaro Graves
• LODSPeaKr (Linked Open Data
Simple Publishing Kit)
– Tool to create webapps based on
linked data
– Users can define what and how
data is displayed
– Small learning curve
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
21. Computational Models for
Open Data
• Roy Hyunjin Han
– Need for computational science in
the public sector
– Not enough to publish results of
the model, model itself needs to
be accessible and available
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
23. Visual Analytics Framework
• Yair G. Rajwan
– Data quality and data decay
can be visualized with a
framework
– Workflow is a key
– Workflow context
– Exploration
– Modeling
– Statistical reporting
– Forecasting predictions
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
24. How Working With Geospatial
Data Can Be a Joy and Not a Pain
• Javier de la Torre
– Current tools make it difficult to
synchronize work and handle large
amounts of data
– Geospatial data and CartODB can
be used to help make sense
– Solution: open data in reusable
ways and provide in raw data
formats
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
25. Making the Federal Budget Easy
to Understand: Visual Budget
• Eric Hochhalter
– Visualizations to help understand
data
– Data tells stories
– Great visuals can change the world
(Florence Nightingale’s
visualizations of infection)
– We will always connect large
numbers to personal experience
– http://www.visualbudget.org
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
26. PUTTING THE DATA TO WORK
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
27. Tracking Corruption with Open
Data Initiatives and Technology
• Ashwin Jayaram
– Corruption can be battled by
systems that
– Track funds and …
– Provide citizen engagement and
feedback systems
– Still making connections amongst
data and outcomes
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
28. GHDx—Improving Discoverability and
Accessibility of Health-Related Data
• Bill Heisel
– Platform for data owners to share
their data with the public
– Specialized data catalogue
simplified data finding
– http://www.healthmetricsandeval
uation.org/ghdx
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
29. Weather Underground
• John Celenza
– Severe weather warnings allow
people to react appropriately to
threats
– Internationalization: MeteoAlarm
(EUMetNet)
– Need shared models and standards
– http://www.wunderground.com/
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
30. Holder de ord: Introducing
Monetary Democracy to Norway
• Daniel Rees
– Connecting voting data and
democracy
The war in Afghanistan
– Use case: War in Afghanistan
– Making sense of intricacies in Property tax
the parliamentary system
Wage regulations
– How to weight significance of
topics
– Collaborative efforts with array
of other international
governments
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
31. Legislative Transparency: A Round
Up of Efforts and Results to Date
• Karen Suhaka and Josh Tauber
– Need for Transparency
– Citizen replacing journalist to
become information mediator
– Open Government Business
Models
– Contribute your own open
government business model
at:/bit.ly/OGBizModel
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
32. Driving Innovation Through
Open Data
• Jeanne Holm
– 450,000 datasets from 172
agencies
– 13 communities like energy and
safety bring experts from the
public, academia, industry, and
government
– Drive innovation through
challenges and new data
– Advanced technologies make data
more accessible and discoverable
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
33. RISE OF THE CHALLENGES
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
34. USAID Food Security
Challenge
• Kat Townsend
– Develop apps to increase food
security
– “The best way for people to have
impact if for people to learn from
their peers”
– “Crowdsourcing the questions and
crowdsourcing the solutions”
– Three Ideation Jams leading to a
Code-a-thon and a Data Palooza
• http://idea.usaid.gov/g8
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
35. Department of Commerce App
Challenge
• Brand Niemann
– Information Platform is the critical
infrastructure component for
building a Learning Organization
– Most critical human component
for accelerating the learning
process and making use of the
Information Platform is take the
shape of a new role: The Data
Scientist
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
36. Managing The Citizen Experience
In An Open Government
• Sid Burgess
– Understand the avenues of citizen
engagement and exploit them
– Engage rather than just build
– Focus on your data purpose
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
37. Changing Science—New Data
for Understanding the Human
Condition
• Barbara Entwisle
– OECD Expert Group on Data and
Research Infrastructure for the
Social Sciences
– Understand research potential
– Discover and access data
– Ethical issues arise from new forms
of data
– Data linkage and integration
– Improve incentives for
internationalization
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
38. Challenge.Gov—
Investing in Innovation
• Tammi Marcoullier
– Stimulate private sector
investment
– Improve skills of the participants
– Free to all Fed agencies
– Full end-to-end platform
– More than 100 challenges
– Millions of dollars
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL
39. Summary
• The virtual conference kickstarted the online
conversations
• The Open Data Tutorial yesterday got people
thinking
• We welcome you to an amazing week ahead
• Participate, share, and be inspired!
2012 INTERNATIONAL OPEN GOVERNMENT DATA CONFERENCE—OPEN GOV DATA TUTORIAL