Webtracks at JISC Managing Research Data MeetingCameron Neylon
Talk given at the JISC Managing Research Data Meeting to give an update on the JISC-funded Webtracks Project involving University of Southampton and E-Science at STFC (I'm just providing a use-case for the project).
Perceval, Graal and Arthur: The Quest for Software Project DataValerio Cosentino
n the last years, tools like Git and GitHub have turned essential to support the daily activities around open source software. Such tools act also like data silos, which can be gathered to derive insightful knowledge about a project (e.g., activities, community). However, collecting this data is often a laborious task, which includes: understanding how to access the data, supporting incrementality, resume and retry mechanisms, and defining a scalable process able to cope with large projects.
This talk will show how to use Perceval, Graal and Arthur (3 tools under the Linux Foundation's CHAOSS umbrella) to collect project data. Perceval performs automatic and incremental data gathering from many tools related to open source development, Graal provides a generic approach to support source code analysis, finally Arthur allows to execute Perceval and Graal at scale, managing incrementality and possible failures.
Webtracks at JISC Managing Research Data MeetingCameron Neylon
Talk given at the JISC Managing Research Data Meeting to give an update on the JISC-funded Webtracks Project involving University of Southampton and E-Science at STFC (I'm just providing a use-case for the project).
Perceval, Graal and Arthur: The Quest for Software Project DataValerio Cosentino
n the last years, tools like Git and GitHub have turned essential to support the daily activities around open source software. Such tools act also like data silos, which can be gathered to derive insightful knowledge about a project (e.g., activities, community). However, collecting this data is often a laborious task, which includes: understanding how to access the data, supporting incrementality, resume and retry mechanisms, and defining a scalable process able to cope with large projects.
This talk will show how to use Perceval, Graal and Arthur (3 tools under the Linux Foundation's CHAOSS umbrella) to collect project data. Perceval performs automatic and incremental data gathering from many tools related to open source development, Graal provides a generic approach to support source code analysis, finally Arthur allows to execute Perceval and Graal at scale, managing incrementality and possible failures.
Slides from my talk at the Sept'09 Linked Data Meetup in London. The talk introduces the DataIncubator.org project, reviewing its aims and progress to date.
Slides from my talk at the Sept'09 Linked Data Meetup in London. The talk introduces the DataIncubator.org project, reviewing its aims and progress to date.
Technical workshop, presented by Gerald Martinez, Product Development Manager at Apex Tech, that aim and dive through interactive demonstrations of the building blocks of a Web 2.0 application. Explaining the use of the APEX RESTful API using C# and JQuery.
A talk about TCP, UDP, IP, DNS, ISP, GET, URI, URN, URL, SSL, TLS, TTFB, HTTP/2, HTML and DOM, or, in translation, a talk about the internet, how requests travel through the network and how browsers handle the response.
This has been originally presented during BrightonSEO - Summer 2021.
So this is our reaction diagram, but it is a simplified one. When you look at a reaction in detail, it is often true that there are several steps, and it would show that the EA is made up of several energy barriers and local minima. The same is true in our “reaction”. So let’s look at a more detailed diagram that show
What exactly has CC done for copyright
The global stand for sharing digital objects550 M+ objects under CC license1300+ journalsWikipedia to the White House