Howard Ratner gave a presentation on living online in the digital age. He discussed how computing has evolved from centralized mainframes to personal computers to ubiquitous mobile devices. People now have constant connectivity and access information from any device. Ratner argued publishers should break up ("particleize") their content, semantically tag it, and build connections between articles and other datasets to allow for new ways of searching and interacting with knowledge on publisher-neutral platforms. This will help keep content useful as technology and user behaviors continue to change rapidly.
Some believe that we are transitioning from the Information Age to the Hybrid Age in a technological revolution distinguished by ubiquitous computing, intelligent machines, social technologies, integrated scientific fields, and rapidly-adaptive development strategies. It is into this new age that we introduce a new kind of atlas—one that is itself ubiquitous, intelligent, social, and integrative. Web services provide easy access to the atlas content through ubiquitous computing on a wide range of devices—smart phones, tablets, laptops, and more—trillions of other devices that are connected via the Internet. The user interface seamlessly integrates the maps and supporting content. The user experience supports intelligent exploration through contextual understanding, intuitive findability, and desirable comparison. Social media links provide useful opportunities to communicate and collaborate with others.
Atlases are changing, although the paper paradigm of maps and atlases pervaded recent cartographic history. By nature that paradigm serves, as well as defines, a specific audience in terms of use and presentation. In the production process and at the printing press, the paper paradigm demands certain design and creation workflows that have drastically changed through evolutions in data, mapmaking techniques, and presentation methods. Technological transformations in mapping influence much of this change, and the resulting implications for the design, creation, and distribution of atlases are significant.
We are currently transitioning from the Information Age to the Hybrid Age in a technological revolution distinguished by ubiquitous computing, intelligent machines, social technologies, integrated scientific fields, and rapidly-adaptive development strategies. I this new age there is a new kind of atlas—one that is itself ubiquitous, intelligent, social, and integrative. Web services provide easy access to atlas content through ubiquitous computing on smart phones, tablets, phablets, laptops, and desktops—trillions of devices connected via the Internet. The user interface seamlessly integrates the multi-scale slippy maps and their supporting content. The user experience supports intelligent exploration through contextual understanding, intuitive findability, and configurable comparison. Integration with social media provides opportunities to communicate and collaborate with others. Commenting, bookmarking, and note taking provide valuable capabilities for increased personal usability. The resulting, fully-citable set of digital maps and web services brings these important historical documents to life, preserving the past and providing knowledge for current and future generations of users.
AAG 2017 Annual Meeting - Boston, MA
Keynote presentation for NoSQL Now! 2014 conference.
* Why there will be Internet of Things as commonly conceived
* The IoT as a Big Data problem
* The rise of Big Metadata
* Imagining the Internet of Light Bulbs
* Systems Thinking and Light Bulb Architecture
* The 'WItnesses' Principle
* Security and Privacy with the IoT
* A Species and its Data
First in a series of presentations given to BCM staff about interactive and direct marketing. This presentation is a general overview of Web 2.0 and what it might be like to surf the net in the imminent and distant future.
The normal interaction with computers is with keyboard and a mouse. For display a rectangular somewhat small screen is used with 2D windowing systems. The mouse was invented more the 40 years ago and has been for 20 years dominant input. Now we are seeing new types of input devices. Multi-touch adds new dimensions and new applications. Natural user interfaces or gesture interfaces where people point to drag objects. Computers are also beginning to recognize facial expressions of people, so it knows if you are smiling. Voice and natural language understanding is getting to a usable stage. All this calls all types of new applications.
Displays are getting bigger. What if any surface was a screen? If you could spray the wall with screen? Or have you phone project images to the wall.
This lectures explores some of these new types of interactions with computers and software. It makes the old mouse look old.
Some believe that we are transitioning from the Information Age to the Hybrid Age in a technological revolution distinguished by ubiquitous computing, intelligent machines, social technologies, integrated scientific fields, and rapidly-adaptive development strategies. It is into this new age that we introduce a new kind of atlas—one that is itself ubiquitous, intelligent, social, and integrative. Web services provide easy access to the atlas content through ubiquitous computing on a wide range of devices—smart phones, tablets, laptops, and more—trillions of other devices that are connected via the Internet. The user interface seamlessly integrates the maps and supporting content. The user experience supports intelligent exploration through contextual understanding, intuitive findability, and desirable comparison. Social media links provide useful opportunities to communicate and collaborate with others.
Atlases are changing, although the paper paradigm of maps and atlases pervaded recent cartographic history. By nature that paradigm serves, as well as defines, a specific audience in terms of use and presentation. In the production process and at the printing press, the paper paradigm demands certain design and creation workflows that have drastically changed through evolutions in data, mapmaking techniques, and presentation methods. Technological transformations in mapping influence much of this change, and the resulting implications for the design, creation, and distribution of atlases are significant.
We are currently transitioning from the Information Age to the Hybrid Age in a technological revolution distinguished by ubiquitous computing, intelligent machines, social technologies, integrated scientific fields, and rapidly-adaptive development strategies. I this new age there is a new kind of atlas—one that is itself ubiquitous, intelligent, social, and integrative. Web services provide easy access to atlas content through ubiquitous computing on smart phones, tablets, phablets, laptops, and desktops—trillions of devices connected via the Internet. The user interface seamlessly integrates the multi-scale slippy maps and their supporting content. The user experience supports intelligent exploration through contextual understanding, intuitive findability, and configurable comparison. Integration with social media provides opportunities to communicate and collaborate with others. Commenting, bookmarking, and note taking provide valuable capabilities for increased personal usability. The resulting, fully-citable set of digital maps and web services brings these important historical documents to life, preserving the past and providing knowledge for current and future generations of users.
AAG 2017 Annual Meeting - Boston, MA
Keynote presentation for NoSQL Now! 2014 conference.
* Why there will be Internet of Things as commonly conceived
* The IoT as a Big Data problem
* The rise of Big Metadata
* Imagining the Internet of Light Bulbs
* Systems Thinking and Light Bulb Architecture
* The 'WItnesses' Principle
* Security and Privacy with the IoT
* A Species and its Data
First in a series of presentations given to BCM staff about interactive and direct marketing. This presentation is a general overview of Web 2.0 and what it might be like to surf the net in the imminent and distant future.
The normal interaction with computers is with keyboard and a mouse. For display a rectangular somewhat small screen is used with 2D windowing systems. The mouse was invented more the 40 years ago and has been for 20 years dominant input. Now we are seeing new types of input devices. Multi-touch adds new dimensions and new applications. Natural user interfaces or gesture interfaces where people point to drag objects. Computers are also beginning to recognize facial expressions of people, so it knows if you are smiling. Voice and natural language understanding is getting to a usable stage. All this calls all types of new applications.
Displays are getting bigger. What if any surface was a screen? If you could spray the wall with screen? Or have you phone project images to the wall.
This lectures explores some of these new types of interactions with computers and software. It makes the old mouse look old.
After the computing industry got started, a new problem quickly emerged. How do you operate this machines and how to you program them. The development of operating systems was relatively slow compared to the advances in hardware. First system were primitive but slowly got better as demand for computing power incresed. The ideas of the Graphical User Interfaces or GUI (Gooey) go back to Doug Engelbarts Demo of the Century. However, this did not have much impact on the computer industry. One company though, Xerox, a photocopy company explored these ideas with Palo Alto Park. Steve Jobs of Apple and Bill Gates of Microsoft took notice and Apple introduced first Apple Lisa and the Macintosh. In this lecture on we look so lessons for the development of software, and see how our business theories apply.
In this lecture on we look so lessons for the development of software, and see how our business theories apply.
This talk will focus on a concept first described as “the internet of things” and subsequently as the “internet of everything” and “the programmable world/internet.”
The Internet grew out of US efforts to build the ARPANET, a network of peer computers built during the cold war. The two major players were military and academia. The network was simple and required no efforts for security or social responsibility. The early Internet community was mainly highly educated and respectable scientist. In the early 1990s the World Wide Web, a hypertext system is introduced, and soon browsers start to appear, leading the commercialization of Net. New businesses emerge and a technology boom known as the dot-com era.
The network, now over 40, is being stretched. Problems such as spam, viruses, antisocial behaviour, and demands for more content are prompting reinvention of the Net and threatening its neutrality. Add to this government efforts to regulate and limit the network.
In this lecture we look at the Internet and the impact of the network. We will also look at the future of the Internet.
The Internet grew out of US efforts to build the ARPANET, a network of peer computers built during the cold war. The two major players were military and academia. The network was simple and required no efforts for security or social responsibility. The early Internet community was mainly highly educated and respectable scientist. In the early 1990s the World Wide Web, a hypertext system is introduced, and soon browsers start to appear, leading the commercialization of Net. New businesses emerge and a technology boom known as the dot-com era.
The network, now over 40, is being stretched. Problems such as spam, viruses, antisocial behaviour, and demands for more content are prompting reinvention of the Net and threatening its neutrality. Add to this government efforts to regulate and limit the network.
In this lecture we look at the Internet and the impact of the network. We will also look at the future of the Internet.
After the computing industry got started, a new problem quickly emerged. How do you operate this machines and how to you program them. The development of operating systems was relatively slow compared to the advances in hardware. First system were primitive but slowly got better as demand for computing power incresed. The ideas of the Graphical User Interfaces or GUI (Gooey) go back to Doug Engelbarts Demo of the Century. However, this did not have much impact on the computer industry. One company though, Xerox, a photocopy company explored these ideas with Palo Alto Park. Steve Jobs of Apple and Bill Gates of Microsoft took notice and Apple introduced first Apple Lisa and the Macintosh. In this lecture on we look so lessons for the development of software, and see how our business theories apply.
In this lecture on we look so lessons for the development of software, and see how our business theories apply.
In the second part we look at where software is going, namely Artifical Intelligence. Resent developmens in AI are causing an AI boom and new AI application are coming all the time. We look at machine learning and deep learning to get an understanding of the current trends.
The Growth of eBusiness - Lecture 1 VDIS10026 Managing Design and eBusiness ...Virtu Institute
The Growth of eBusiness is the first lecture in the Virtu Design Institute subject VDIS10026 Managing Design and eBusiness. The lecture traces the development of the Internet and eCommerce.
ZombieTech (or ICT4Z): Why Do NGOs Keep Building Lousy Tools?Jed Miller
Presented at @OpenGovHub, October 1, 2014. See: http://opengovhub.org/blog/10/2014/brains-gore-and-user-centric-design-what-we-learned-about-zombie-tech-projects
Intervention de l'Agence Wallonne des Télécommunications dans le cadre du "Congrès Mobilité" organisé par l'Union Wallonne des Entreprises le 5 juin 2013
After the computing industry got started, a new problem quickly emerged. How do you operate this machines and how to you program them. The development of operating systems was relatively slow compared to the advances in hardware. First system were primitive but slowly got better as demand for computing power incresed. The ideas of the Graphical User Interfaces or GUI (Gooey) go back to Doug Engelbarts Demo of the Century. However, this did not have much impact on the computer industry. One company though, Xerox, a photocopy company explored these ideas with Palo Alto Park. Steve Jobs of Apple and Bill Gates of Microsoft took notice and Apple introduced first Apple Lisa and the Macintosh. In this lecture on we look so lessons for the development of software, and see how our business theories apply.
In this lecture on we look so lessons for the development of software, and see how our business theories apply.
This talk will focus on a concept first described as “the internet of things” and subsequently as the “internet of everything” and “the programmable world/internet.”
The Internet grew out of US efforts to build the ARPANET, a network of peer computers built during the cold war. The two major players were military and academia. The network was simple and required no efforts for security or social responsibility. The early Internet community was mainly highly educated and respectable scientist. In the early 1990s the World Wide Web, a hypertext system is introduced, and soon browsers start to appear, leading the commercialization of Net. New businesses emerge and a technology boom known as the dot-com era.
The network, now over 40, is being stretched. Problems such as spam, viruses, antisocial behaviour, and demands for more content are prompting reinvention of the Net and threatening its neutrality. Add to this government efforts to regulate and limit the network.
In this lecture we look at the Internet and the impact of the network. We will also look at the future of the Internet.
The Internet grew out of US efforts to build the ARPANET, a network of peer computers built during the cold war. The two major players were military and academia. The network was simple and required no efforts for security or social responsibility. The early Internet community was mainly highly educated and respectable scientist. In the early 1990s the World Wide Web, a hypertext system is introduced, and soon browsers start to appear, leading the commercialization of Net. New businesses emerge and a technology boom known as the dot-com era.
The network, now over 40, is being stretched. Problems such as spam, viruses, antisocial behaviour, and demands for more content are prompting reinvention of the Net and threatening its neutrality. Add to this government efforts to regulate and limit the network.
In this lecture we look at the Internet and the impact of the network. We will also look at the future of the Internet.
After the computing industry got started, a new problem quickly emerged. How do you operate this machines and how to you program them. The development of operating systems was relatively slow compared to the advances in hardware. First system were primitive but slowly got better as demand for computing power incresed. The ideas of the Graphical User Interfaces or GUI (Gooey) go back to Doug Engelbarts Demo of the Century. However, this did not have much impact on the computer industry. One company though, Xerox, a photocopy company explored these ideas with Palo Alto Park. Steve Jobs of Apple and Bill Gates of Microsoft took notice and Apple introduced first Apple Lisa and the Macintosh. In this lecture on we look so lessons for the development of software, and see how our business theories apply.
In this lecture on we look so lessons for the development of software, and see how our business theories apply.
In the second part we look at where software is going, namely Artifical Intelligence. Resent developmens in AI are causing an AI boom and new AI application are coming all the time. We look at machine learning and deep learning to get an understanding of the current trends.
The Growth of eBusiness - Lecture 1 VDIS10026 Managing Design and eBusiness ...Virtu Institute
The Growth of eBusiness is the first lecture in the Virtu Design Institute subject VDIS10026 Managing Design and eBusiness. The lecture traces the development of the Internet and eCommerce.
ZombieTech (or ICT4Z): Why Do NGOs Keep Building Lousy Tools?Jed Miller
Presented at @OpenGovHub, October 1, 2014. See: http://opengovhub.org/blog/10/2014/brains-gore-and-user-centric-design-what-we-learned-about-zombie-tech-projects
Intervention de l'Agence Wallonne des Télécommunications dans le cadre du "Congrès Mobilité" organisé par l'Union Wallonne des Entreprises le 5 juin 2013
Le BYOD tout le monde en parle mais ceux qui ont débuté des études se rendent compte de la complexité du sujet qui va bien au-delà de la sphère IT. Et lors de cette session, au-delà des différentes solutions techniques que nous vous présenterons, nous aborderons les points qui, bien que non IT, doivent aujourd’hui impérativement être considérés dans un tel projet. De manière pratique comment le mettre en place ? Sous quelle forme ? Quels sont les impacts sur la gestion de parc ou encore le support ? Quelles sont les contraintes RH ou juridiques ? Nous vous éclairerons sur ces points au regard des différentes études que nous avons déjà pu mener. De plus, nous vous invitons à venir à cette session avec votre propre device tester comment il peut être simple de vous donner accès à un système d’information d’entreprise !
Preparing for Mobile Device Management & Bring your Own DeviceWaterstons Ltd
Smart phones and tablets are invading the business environment at top speed, with “bring your own device” (BYOD) providing a number of benefits for organisations across all sectors. With the right implementation, and ongoing secure support, performance through technology can be achieved in areas such as employee satisfaction, cost reduction, team work and collaboration and productivity.
Charlie Hales and Nigel Robson cover the important considerations a business should make before implementing an MDM/BYOD strategy, and will consider the ongoing implications of allowing corporate data to be accessed on personal devices ensuring the maximum benefit to businesses, customers and the end users.
Aymeric Weinbach - IoT et Azure - Global Azure Bootcamp 2016 ParisAZUG FR
Internet of Things - le monde des objets connectés est véritablement présent dans Azure. Focus sur les services spécialisés Azure IoT, mais surtout de la pratique geek avec des objets connectés live.
MANAGE DEVICES AND APPS FROM THE CLOUD
With the proliferation of mobile devices in the workplace, employees can, and do, work from just about anywhere. To stay productive, this mobile workforce demands consistent access to corporate resources and data from any location on any device. This trend has introduced significant challenges for IT administrators who want to enable enterprise mobility while ensuring that corporate resources are protected from unauthorized access.
Leveraging Microsoft Intune, you can deliver application and device management completely from the cloud, or on-premises through integration with System Center 2012 Configuration Manager, all via a single management console.
Microsoft has also incorporated manageability and data protection directly into the Intune-managed Office mobile apps to help maximize productivity while providing the flexibility to extend these same management capabilities to your existing line-of-business apps through the Intune App Wrapping Tool.
Intune is included as part of Microsoft’s Enterprise Mobility Suite, the most cost-effective way to leverage Microsoft’s enterprise mobility cloud services for all of your employees.
Le BYOD, les perspectives pour l’entrepriseClément Michel
Le Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) c'est LE phénomène qui touche tout le monde depuis quelques années. Les entreprises qui avaient un système de sécurité s’apparentant au modèle d'un "Château Fort" (protection totale vis-à-vis de l'extérieur) se retrouvent obligées de fonctionner selon un modèle "d'aéroport" où les flux entrent et sortent un peu partout. Si cette analogie vous a fait sourire vous risquez vite de revenir à la dure réalité : les smartphones et leurs confrères sont partout et il nous est impossible de ne plus nous en préoccuper...
Enterprise Mobile Device Management (MDM)SPEC INDIA
SPEC INDIA’s Mobile Device Management a feature rich solution for Enterprise MDM needs. With many features and functionalities it is so helpful in many industries. Here we introduce you to some of the top features of our Enterprise Mobile Device Management Software. Get a Free POC of our MDM visit: http://www.spec-india.com/business-solutions/mobile-device-management.html
Mobile technology in libraries is a must for the future. See what university libraries, public libraries and school libraries are doing to market their services using mobile technologies.
Tech Careers 101 - Empowering Your Tech JourneySFSupport247
No matter if you're a student, career switcher, professional aiming for an upgrade, or an aspiring entrepreneur, this course opens the door to a fulfilling future in technology. Embrace this chance to transform your aspirations into achievements in the digital age. Let's make your tech career dreams a reality together!
A Lecture given during a Learning Lunch at A Hundred Years. Overviewing the changing web and how the Internet of Things is impacting the use of the internet and how designers thing about it.
Slides of my 30min. talk at the First Science Week organized by Colegio Internacional Santo Tomas de Aquino (CISTA). The talk targeted secondary school students and took place on 01.03.2012.
사물인터넷의 역사 (The history of the Internet of Things)Hakyong Kim
이 자료는 사물인터넷과 웨어러블 디바이스 (웨어러블 컴퓨터)에 대한 간단한 역사를 정리하고 있습니다. 앞으로도 사물인터넷과 관련된 다양한 주제들을 정리해서 공유할테니 많은 관심 부탁드립니다.
The slide presents the brief history of the Internet of thins (IoT) and the wearable devices. Followed other slides on diverse topics of the Internet of Things sooner or later.
History of Internet
History Of Internet On The World
The Internet : The History Of The Internet
Internet Report
The History Of The Internet
History Of The Internet Essay example
The Discovery Of The Internet
History of Internet Essay examples
History of the Internet Essay examples
The History Of The Internet Essay
The Internet and Technology Essay
The History and Development of the Internet
The Birth Of The Internet
The History Of Social Media
The Birth Of The Internet
History Of The Internet Essay
The Internet : The Origin Of The Internet
The Origin and Evolution of the Internet and the www.Anvith KS
What is the Internet? (Origin, Important Milestones, Then and Now of Internet )
What is the WWW? (Origin , Differentiate Internet and Web, Important Milestones, Evolution of the Web: 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, Then and Now of the Web )
Convergence (Emergence of the smartphone, iPhone and then Android, Moving from the Web to the Smartphone (Android), Android Origin , Android Evolution, Android, Current Status)
CHORUS Update given by David Crotty at STM Frankfurt on October 13, 2015
Slide 1Title
Thank you, Brian and YS, for your welcome and for hosting CHORUS' third annual reception at the STM fall meeting. We’ve brought everyone here tonight for two reasons, to celebrate how far CHORUS has come in such a short time, and to thank all of you for your support and the help you’ve supplied. I particularly want to single out Ed Pentz and the folks at CrossRef for all they’ve done as well as thank the members of CHORUS’ interim board who are here tonight. Quite a few of you are here with us: John Tagler of AAP/PSP, Fran Zappulla of IEEE, Andrew Tein of Wiley, Scott Delman of ACM, Alicia Wise of Elsevier, and Thane Kerner of Silverchair.
Slide 2 Agencies
Over the last year and a few months, we’ve signed CHORUS agreements with the Department of Energy, The Smithsonian Institute and the National Institute for Standards and Technology. We are in active discussions with the National Science Foundation, the US Geological Survey, the US Department of Agriculture and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association. We expect to have several major agreements to announce in the very near future. This strong level of uptake by major funding agencies is exactly what we were aiming for, and given this chance, we expect CHORUS to prove its tremendous value.
Slide 3 Members
Membership growth from publishers and other parts of our industry has also been strong. We have a mix of large and small publishers, commercial and NFP publishers, a range of international publishers, Fully OA and Subscription-based publishers, and publishers offering both Green and Gold OA. We currently have 37 member organizations, including some of the largest publishing houses, which means we are already covering the majority of the literature.
Slide 4 Pyramid
As a reminder, CHORUS is so cost-effective because it’s built on already existing infrastructure and metadata services. We’ve seen great interest in collaboration from all aspects of the scholarly communication community and we’re actively working with many organizations, with services like ORCID and CrossRef and with library groups as well.
What’s been really interesting to me has been to see CHORUS change in some ways from being a direct response to the US federal funding agency policies into a tool with the potential to play a central role for publishers in compliance with the increasing regulation we’re seeing across the board on our publications. Publishers, funders, institutions, libraries and researchers are facing an oncoming compliance nightmare. A recent study showed there are already more than 660 open or public access policies for research papers. The more we can standardize those policies, the more we can automate compliance and the more we can funnel compliance through one cen
See http://www.chorusaccess.org/ for latest information on CHORUS.
Howard Ratner presents the Clearinghouse for the Open Research of the Unites States at the SSP Conference on May 29, 2014. Detailing its emphasis on Identification, Access, Preservation, Discovery, and Compliance of articles reporting on federally funded research.
CHORUS Presentation at PSP Annual Conference February 6, 2014hratner
Howard Ratner presents the Clearinghouse for the Open Research of the Unites States at the PSP Conference. Detailing its emphasis on Identification, Access, Preservation, Discovery, and Compliance of articles reporting on federally funded research
ORCID Update - AAP PSP Annual Meeting February 2011hratner
Update on the ORCID initiative for the AAP/PSP Meeting of Publishers in Washington, DC. Demonstrates how ORCID is valuable to publishers as well as other members of the scholarly communication community.
Essentials of Automations: Optimizing FME Workflows with ParametersSafe Software
Are you looking to streamline your workflows and boost your projects’ efficiency? Do you find yourself searching for ways to add flexibility and control over your FME workflows? If so, you’re in the right place.
Join us for an insightful dive into the world of FME parameters, a critical element in optimizing workflow efficiency. This webinar marks the beginning of our three-part “Essentials of Automation” series. This first webinar is designed to equip you with the knowledge and skills to utilize parameters effectively: enhancing the flexibility, maintainability, and user control of your FME projects.
Here’s what you’ll gain:
- Essentials of FME Parameters: Understand the pivotal role of parameters, including Reader/Writer, Transformer, User, and FME Flow categories. Discover how they are the key to unlocking automation and optimization within your workflows.
- Practical Applications in FME Form: Delve into key user parameter types including choice, connections, and file URLs. Allow users to control how a workflow runs, making your workflows more reusable. Learn to import values and deliver the best user experience for your workflows while enhancing accuracy.
- Optimization Strategies in FME Flow: Explore the creation and strategic deployment of parameters in FME Flow, including the use of deployment and geometry parameters, to maximize workflow efficiency.
- Pro Tips for Success: Gain insights on parameterizing connections and leveraging new features like Conditional Visibility for clarity and simplicity.
We’ll wrap up with a glimpse into future webinars, followed by a Q&A session to address your specific questions surrounding this topic.
Don’t miss this opportunity to elevate your FME expertise and drive your projects to new heights of efficiency.
Let's dive deeper into the world of ODC! Ricardo Alves (OutSystems) will join us to tell all about the new Data Fabric. After that, Sezen de Bruijn (OutSystems) will get into the details on how to best design a sturdy architecture within ODC.
JMeter webinar - integration with InfluxDB and GrafanaRTTS
Watch this recorded webinar about real-time monitoring of application performance. See how to integrate Apache JMeter, the open-source leader in performance testing, with InfluxDB, the open-source time-series database, and Grafana, the open-source analytics and visualization application.
In this webinar, we will review the benefits of leveraging InfluxDB and Grafana when executing load tests and demonstrate how these tools are used to visualize performance metrics.
Length: 30 minutes
Session Overview
-------------------------------------------
During this webinar, we will cover the following topics while demonstrating the integrations of JMeter, InfluxDB and Grafana:
- What out-of-the-box solutions are available for real-time monitoring JMeter tests?
- What are the benefits of integrating InfluxDB and Grafana into the load testing stack?
- Which features are provided by Grafana?
- Demonstration of InfluxDB and Grafana using a practice web application
To view the webinar recording, go to:
https://www.rttsweb.com/jmeter-integration-webinar
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 4DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 4. In this session, we will cover Test Manager overview along with SAP heatmap.
The UiPath Test Manager overview with SAP heatmap webinar offers a concise yet comprehensive exploration of the role of a Test Manager within SAP environments, coupled with the utilization of heatmaps for effective testing strategies.
Participants will gain insights into the responsibilities, challenges, and best practices associated with test management in SAP projects. Additionally, the webinar delves into the significance of heatmaps as a visual aid for identifying testing priorities, areas of risk, and resource allocation within SAP landscapes. Through this session, attendees can expect to enhance their understanding of test management principles while learning practical approaches to optimize testing processes in SAP environments using heatmap visualization techniques
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into SAP testing best practices
2. Heatmap utilization for testing
3. Optimization of testing processes
4. Demo
Topics covered:
Execution from the test manager
Orchestrator execution result
Defect reporting
SAP heatmap example with demo
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered QualityInflectra
In this insightful webinar, Inflectra explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming software development and testing. Discover how AI-powered tools are revolutionizing every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from design and prototyping to testing, deployment, and monitoring.
Learn about:
• The Future of Testing: How AI is shifting testing towards verification, analysis, and higher-level skills, while reducing repetitive tasks.
• Test Automation: How AI-powered test case generation, optimization, and self-healing tests are making testing more efficient and effective.
• Visual Testing: Explore the emerging capabilities of AI in visual testing and how it's set to revolutionize UI verification.
• Inflectra's AI Solutions: See demonstrations of Inflectra's cutting-edge AI tools like the ChatGPT plugin and Azure Open AI platform, designed to streamline your testing process.
Whether you're a developer, tester, or QA professional, this webinar will give you valuable insights into how AI is shaping the future of software delivery.
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
Dev Dives: Train smarter, not harder – active learning and UiPath LLMs for do...UiPathCommunity
💥 Speed, accuracy, and scaling – discover the superpowers of GenAI in action with UiPath Document Understanding and Communications Mining™:
See how to accelerate model training and optimize model performance with active learning
Learn about the latest enhancements to out-of-the-box document processing – with little to no training required
Get an exclusive demo of the new family of UiPath LLMs – GenAI models specialized for processing different types of documents and messages
This is a hands-on session specifically designed for automation developers and AI enthusiasts seeking to enhance their knowledge in leveraging the latest intelligent document processing capabilities offered by UiPath.
Speakers:
👨🏫 Andras Palfi, Senior Product Manager, UiPath
👩🏫 Lenka Dulovicova, Product Program Manager, UiPath
LF Energy Webinar: Electrical Grid Modelling and Simulation Through PowSyBl -...DanBrown980551
Do you want to learn how to model and simulate an electrical network from scratch in under an hour?
Then welcome to this PowSyBl workshop, hosted by Rte, the French Transmission System Operator (TSO)!
During the webinar, you will discover the PowSyBl ecosystem as well as handle and study an electrical network through an interactive Python notebook.
PowSyBl is an open source project hosted by LF Energy, which offers a comprehensive set of features for electrical grid modelling and simulation. Among other advanced features, PowSyBl provides:
- A fully editable and extendable library for grid component modelling;
- Visualization tools to display your network;
- Grid simulation tools, such as power flows, security analyses (with or without remedial actions) and sensitivity analyses;
The framework is mostly written in Java, with a Python binding so that Python developers can access PowSyBl functionalities as well.
What you will learn during the webinar:
- For beginners: discover PowSyBl's functionalities through a quick general presentation and the notebook, without needing any expert coding skills;
- For advanced developers: master the skills to efficiently apply PowSyBl functionalities to your real-world scenarios.
Connector Corner: Automate dynamic content and events by pushing a buttonDianaGray10
Here is something new! In our next Connector Corner webinar, we will demonstrate how you can use a single workflow to:
Create a campaign using Mailchimp with merge tags/fields
Send an interactive Slack channel message (using buttons)
Have the message received by managers and peers along with a test email for review
But there’s more:
In a second workflow supporting the same use case, you’ll see:
Your campaign sent to target colleagues for approval
If the “Approve” button is clicked, a Jira/Zendesk ticket is created for the marketing design team
But—if the “Reject” button is pushed, colleagues will be alerted via Slack message
Join us to learn more about this new, human-in-the-loop capability, brought to you by Integration Service connectors.
And...
Speakers:
Akshay Agnihotri, Product Manager
Charlie Greenberg, Host
The Art of the Pitch: WordPress Relationships and SalesLaura Byrne
Clients don’t know what they don’t know. What web solutions are right for them? How does WordPress come into the picture? How do you make sure you understand scope and timeline? What do you do if sometime changes?
All these questions and more will be explored as we talk about matching clients’ needs with what your agency offers without pulling teeth or pulling your hair out. Practical tips, and strategies for successful relationship building that leads to closing the deal.
"Impact of front-end architecture on development cost", Viktor TurskyiFwdays
I have heard many times that architecture is not important for the front-end. Also, many times I have seen how developers implement features on the front-end just following the standard rules for a framework and think that this is enough to successfully launch the project, and then the project fails. How to prevent this and what approach to choose? I have launched dozens of complex projects and during the talk we will analyze which approaches have worked for me and which have not.
Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey 2024 by 91mobiles.pdf91mobiles
91mobiles recently conducted a Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey in which we asked over 3,000 respondents about the TV they own, aspects they look at on a new TV, and their TV buying preferences.
State of ICS and IoT Cyber Threat Landscape Report 2024 previewPrayukth K V
The IoT and OT threat landscape report has been prepared by the Threat Research Team at Sectrio using data from Sectrio, cyber threat intelligence farming facilities spread across over 85 cities around the world. In addition, Sectrio also runs AI-based advanced threat and payload engagement facilities that serve as sinks to attract and engage sophisticated threat actors, and newer malware including new variants and latent threats that are at an earlier stage of development.
The latest edition of the OT/ICS and IoT security Threat Landscape Report 2024 also covers:
State of global ICS asset and network exposure
Sectoral targets and attacks as well as the cost of ransom
Global APT activity, AI usage, actor and tactic profiles, and implications
Rise in volumes of AI-powered cyberattacks
Major cyber events in 2024
Malware and malicious payload trends
Cyberattack types and targets
Vulnerability exploit attempts on CVEs
Attacks on counties – USA
Expansion of bot farms – how, where, and why
In-depth analysis of the cyber threat landscape across North America, South America, Europe, APAC, and the Middle East
Why are attacks on smart factories rising?
Cyber risk predictions
Axis of attacks – Europe
Systemic attacks in the Middle East
Download the full report from here:
https://sectrio.com/resources/ot-threat-landscape-reports/sectrio-releases-ot-ics-and-iot-security-threat-landscape-report-2024/
Accelerate your Kubernetes clusters with Varnish CachingThijs Feryn
A presentation about the usage and availability of Varnish on Kubernetes. This talk explores the capabilities of Varnish caching and shows how to use the Varnish Helm chart to deploy it to Kubernetes.
This presentation was delivered at K8SUG Singapore. See https://feryn.eu/presentations/accelerate-your-kubernetes-clusters-with-varnish-caching-k8sug-singapore-28-2024 for more details.
Accelerate your Kubernetes clusters with Varnish Caching
Living Online: Anytime, Anywhere, Any Device- NFAIS 2012
1. +
Living Online: Any Time,
Any Where, Any Device
Howard Ratner, Chief Technology Officer, EVP
Nature Publishing Group
Miles Conrad Lecture
NFAIS 54th Annual Conference
27 February 2012
2. +
Who am I?
technology geek
pragmatist
publisher
3. +
Who am I?
High school – 1981
College – 1985
Chelsea House Publishers – 1985-1986
Wiley – 1986-1988
Springer – 1988-2000
Nature Publishing Group – 2000 – present
4. +
Question Time
1. How many people in this
room are carrying a phone?
2. How many people in this room
are using a laptop?
3. How many people in this
room are using a tablet (iPad, etc.)
4. How many people are using a cloud
app?
5. + “I think there is a
TJ Watson world market for
about five
computers.”
Thomas J. Watson, CEO, IBM, 1914-1956
6. +
1946 ENIAC: Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer
7. +
Centralized
Computers and information centralized
Only in specific locations
Only obtainable locally
26. “What we want to do is
make a leapfrog product
Steve Jobs that is way smarter than
any mobile device has
ever been, and super-easy
to use. This is what iPhone
is. OK? So, we're going to
reinvent the phone.”
Steve Jobs, CEO, Apple, 1971-1985,1996-2011
35. “Ubiquitous computing names
the third wave in computing, just now
beginning.
First were mainframes, each shared by lots
of people.
Now we are in the personal computing era,
person and machine staring uneasily at
each other across the desktop.
Next comes ubiquitous computing, or the
age of calm technology, when technology
recedes into the background of our lives.”
-- Mark Weiser, Xerox Parc (1990s)
36. +
Ubiquitous Computing
The purpose of a computer is to
help you do something else
The best computer is a quiet, invisible
servant
The more you can do by intuition the smarter
you are; the computer should extend your
unconscious
Technology should create calm
-- Weiser’s principles (source Wikipedia)
37. +
Pervasive Computing
Decentralization
Local or mobile devices
Information is “networked”
Diversification
Specialized tasks
(e.g., Internet access on (laptop, mobile phone, games
console, Palm PDA)
Connectivity
Data exchanged between devices
Wireless connection / internet
Simplicity
Seamless, interfaces, intuitive, calm
Credit: Andy Hunt, Pervasive Computing
38. +
PC + Tech Companies are seeing it
Old OS are merging with the
New!
Hardware? Irrelevant!
39. +
Mobile Internet Revolution
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lUljrP6ILN0&feature=related
Credit: Crowdsauce.com, Uploaded April 30, 2011
41. +
Article Particles
• Break articles down into major sections (e.g.
scientific methods, data, results)
• Semantically mark-up entities and terms
• Surface concepts with annotations
• Use people, place, thing identifiers
• Build particle connections to other datasets
• APIs allow the building of bolt-on tools and
allow us to leverage community efforts
Dicing and slicing breaks apart journal silos and
allows users to search across the corpus of
knowledge.
We can offer compelling services on a
publisher-neutral destination for researchers.
45. +
Divide it up!
Mark it up!
Share and shake
it up!
46. +
References
Sean Bechhofer et al., “Research Objects: Towards Exchange and
Reuse of Digital Knowledge,” Submitted to: The Future of the Web for
Collaborative Science (FWCS 2010), April 2010, Raleigh, NC, USA.
http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/18555/
Mark Cuban, “You Don’t Live in the World You Were Born Into” (31 December
2011, Blog Maverick: The Mark Cuban Weblog)
http://blogmaverick.com/2011/12/31/you-dont-live-in-the-world-you-were-
born-into-4/
Andy Hunt, “Pervasive Computing: History and Key Topics” (University of York
course)
http://tinyurl.com/8432mk7
Anna Faherty, “The future for publishers is content creation, with a dash
of Martini” (7 December 2011, Kingston Publishing: inspiring future publishers)
http://tinyurl.com/79ymwo3
Mark Weiser, “The Computer for the 21st Century” (Scientific American, 265,
September 1991),
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/scientificamerican0991-94
47. +
Thank you!
Howard Ratner
CTO & EVP, Nature Publishing Group
h.ratner@us.nature.com
@hratner