Slides of my talk in the Community track of the ApacheCon @Home 2020 conference. The video will be available on the "TheApacheFoundation" channel on YouTube, https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLDJ_V9KUOdOFSbDvPfGBxw
Who needs meetings? Asynchronous Decision Making to the rescueBertrand Delacretaz
Based on my "Success at Apache: Asynchronous Decision Making" blog post ( https://blogs.apache.org/foundation/entry/success-at-apache-asynchronous-decision ) combined with a previous presentation on how meetings are expensive and often inefficient ( https://www.slideshare.net/bdelacretaz/i-will-not-attend-your-meeting-im-an-open-source-person )
Building an Open Source iOS app: lessons learnedWojciech Koszek
Building an Open Source iOS app: lessons learned
Dec 12, 2016, Hacker Dojo (Santa Clara), 6pm
In this talk I'm going to talk about lessons learned from building Sensorama (http://www.sensorama.org), an Open Source sensor platform for data science. The main theme of the talk will be Open Source: what is great about it, what is bad and how you must become a part of the Open Source community to really move quickly and benefit from it. For this project, I did both the code and the design, so you'll have a chance to see how solo-developer deals with time/feature constraints, which tools I've used and what my approach towards development in this mode is. In other words: I'll tell you what I did to stay sane. If the iOS development were a walk in a dark city park, this talk may turn out to be your flashlight. If you like it, star it at GitHub: https://github.com/wkoszek/sensorama-ios
Agenda
https://www.meetup.com/svmobiledev/events/235836893/
Materials
https://github.com/wkoszek/talks/tree/master/svmobiledev2016
Some links from the slides
Fake it till you make it presentation https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2014/223
Designing for Future Hardware https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2015/801/
References
WWW: http://www.sensorama.org
GitHub (code): https://github.com/wkoszek/sensorama-ios
GitHub (artwork): https://github.com/wkoszek/sensorama-artwork
Author
WWW: http://www.koszek.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/wkoszek
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wkoszek/
Email: wojciech (at) koszek.com
Who needs meetings? Asynchronous Decision Making to the rescueBertrand Delacretaz
Based on my "Success at Apache: Asynchronous Decision Making" blog post ( https://blogs.apache.org/foundation/entry/success-at-apache-asynchronous-decision ) combined with a previous presentation on how meetings are expensive and often inefficient ( https://www.slideshare.net/bdelacretaz/i-will-not-attend-your-meeting-im-an-open-source-person )
Building an Open Source iOS app: lessons learnedWojciech Koszek
Building an Open Source iOS app: lessons learned
Dec 12, 2016, Hacker Dojo (Santa Clara), 6pm
In this talk I'm going to talk about lessons learned from building Sensorama (http://www.sensorama.org), an Open Source sensor platform for data science. The main theme of the talk will be Open Source: what is great about it, what is bad and how you must become a part of the Open Source community to really move quickly and benefit from it. For this project, I did both the code and the design, so you'll have a chance to see how solo-developer deals with time/feature constraints, which tools I've used and what my approach towards development in this mode is. In other words: I'll tell you what I did to stay sane. If the iOS development were a walk in a dark city park, this talk may turn out to be your flashlight. If you like it, star it at GitHub: https://github.com/wkoszek/sensorama-ios
Agenda
https://www.meetup.com/svmobiledev/events/235836893/
Materials
https://github.com/wkoszek/talks/tree/master/svmobiledev2016
Some links from the slides
Fake it till you make it presentation https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2014/223
Designing for Future Hardware https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2015/801/
References
WWW: http://www.sensorama.org
GitHub (code): https://github.com/wkoszek/sensorama-ios
GitHub (artwork): https://github.com/wkoszek/sensorama-artwork
Author
WWW: http://www.koszek.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/wkoszek
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wkoszek/
Email: wojciech (at) koszek.com
Making it Work Offline: Current & Future Offline APIs for Web AppsNatasha Rooney
We go through the current APIs for creating offline capable web apps such as LocalStorage, App Cache and a bit of IndexedDB. We also take a look at the work going behind the new solution "ServiceWorker" and how it may change the game.
Demo to support the presentation is here: https://github.com/nrooney/offlineanime
DevDay 2018: Ulrich Deiters - Offline First - kein Netz, kein Fehler, zufried...DevDay Dresden
"High Speed Internet, permanently online, permanently connected, LTE überall, na klar geht alles nur online - der Rest ist Error Handling. Done."
Oft ist uns gar nicht mehr bewusst, dass wir damit Nutzer enttäuschen, ihre Zeit verschwenden und die Nutzung unserer Anwendungen einschränken. Leider ist Offline-Fähigkeit nachträglich oft ähnlich schlecht nachrüstbar wie die Unterstützung von Mobile Devices. Daher möchten ich Euch zeigen, wie man mit Offline First von Anfang an "offline denken" kann, vergleichbar mit Mobile First.
Ich werde Euch kurz in die Motivation für Offline-Funktionen, Nutzerwartungen, UX-Ansätze sowie Herausforderungen und Ansätze für die Anwendungsarchitektur und -sicherheit einführen und aufzeigen wie wir CAP und Eventual Consistency auf diese Problemstellung anwenden können.
Anhang von konkreten Kundenprojekten für Native Mobile Apps schauen wir uns Nutzen und Lösungen für effektives Offline-Arbeiten an.
Wir werfen einen Blick darauf, welche Technologien für Progressive Web Apps zur Verfügung stehen und wie Digital Business Platforms wie Salesforce oder die SAP Cloud Platform die Offlinefähigkeit unterstützen. Kann man wirklich schon „Offline as a Service“ dazukaufen?
Also: "Kein Netz" ist nicht zwingend ein Fehler.
Flink Forward Berlin 2018: Isabel Drost-Fromm - "The Apache Way! … ?"Flink Forward
To quote http://www.apache.org/foundation - “The mission of the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) is to provide software for the public good. We do this by providing services and support for many like-minded software project communities of individuals who choose to join the ASF.” The ASF provides a home to several hundred OSS projects. Likely, if you are developing software on a daily basis you did run into one of those projects at some point in time. If you have been digging a bit deeper, you may have encountered the phrase “The Apache Way” - often used in relation to how projects at the ASF should work. Depending on who you ask, very likely you will get different answers as to what actual meaning of “The Apache Way” is. This talk tries to give a glimpse behind the scenes - with a strong focus on what the implications of best practices advertised at the ASF are for downstream users of it’s projects. It's all about pulling you in to become active and contribute yourself.
When Will Drupal Die? Keynote talk from Bay Area Drupal Camp 2014chrisshattuck
This talk was given at BADCamp (Bay Area Drupal Camp) 2014 as an impromptu keynote. In it I talk about the technology that might put Drupal at risk, including Node.js, Angular.js, GitHub and more. I also talk about Drupal's strengths and how we can prepare for the future.
The answer is no, but it will help! There's not much commentary on those slides actually, you had to be there. The actual model is at https://community.apache.org/apache-way/apache-project-maturity-model.html
Open Source is just about the source code—isn’t it?DataWorks Summit
The code base of the open source technology you want to build your business on is rock solid. Releases are rolling out early and often. The test suite is comprehensive and running regularly. Code is well performing without any glitches. Everything is in place that defines a successful open source project—or isn't it?
This talk tries to highlight some of the key business questions when dealing with open source. In addition to coding skills, topics like people management, naming, trademark enforcement, licensing, patents, PR, and more become topics that even the most tech-centric open source products have to deal with. The way these topics are dealt with defines how stable the technology you are looking at today will be in years to come. The Apache Software Foundation has a ton of wisdom in running open source projects targeting long term success.
After years of using open source projects, running my own projects, founding meetups and conferences, watching others thrive or fail, I believe that coding skills alone aren't sufficient to turn a "private playground code base" into an open source project that others can rely on.
Inspired by 140 characters of truth published here, the talk will focus on what topics that are usually not taught as part of programming courses will cross your way when dealing with open source—either as a user or as a contributor:
• People: Is the project willing and able to attract more contributors? Is it able to survive if the leader loses interest or time to continue contributing? How does the project deal with requests coming from the user base? How easy is it for users to get their issues fixed?
• Trademarks: Why should you care about trademarks from the beginning? How do you deal with others infringing on your trademarks?
• Copyright: Why should you care exactly which license you choose?
• PR: While writing release notes is common practice and composing changelogs is pretty easy, the resulting documents are hard to grok for editors and won't get you on the front page of any magazine. Nor will they help you get visibility on common social media systems that might be key in informing your users about recent releases.
While being excellent at all topics isn't vital from the start, answers to governance questions decide what a project looks like a few years from its start. This talk will start with a brief overview of the history of The Apache Software Foundation, diving into what the ominous thing called "The Apache Way" means, why the slogan "community over code" is not just a slogan, and why every user of the foundation's projects is invited and treated as a potential future developer of the software they use. We will look at some of the criteria every software engineer should be aware of who has to make a decision on which open source project to use.
Speaker
Isabel Drost-Fromm, Open Source Strategist, Europace AG
Shared Neurons - the Secret Sauce of Open Source communities?Bertrand Delacretaz
Slides of my talk at ApacheCon EU 2019in Berlin, Germany: Shared Neurons - the Secret Sauce of Open Source communities? See also the video recording at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pWG-F3vW24w
Open Source communities sometimes speak of Shared Neurons when great ideas come together as if sparked by a giant collective brain. Can we take inspiration from them and foster such neuron sharing in our teams? We will describe the tools and techniques used by successful Open Source projects to "put their brains together", by communicating openly and often, exposing concrete ideas early in prototype code, collaborating asynchronously and deliberately slowing things down to take advantage of unexpected Eureka moments.
Based on years of experiences in multiple Open Source projects, this talk will help you better understand what makes our communities so powerful and how to transpose this in your own teams.
Open source comes in many forms -- not just code. This slide deck covers some paradigms where one might not expect to see much open source, and hopefully inspire new projects and contributions. Included is a personal checklist I use to determine if a project is something I want to use and contribute to.
Work shop - an introduction to the docker ecosystemJoão Pedro Harbs
I ministered a Docker workshop at FliSoL (Latin American Free Software Festival), 2019 edition, hosted by the Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology of the State of São Paulo (IFSP-BRT) on 27/04/2019, where I gave an introduction. what Docker / Container is, how it came about, some of its uses, and a walkthrough from installation to uploading your first application running in a container.
Reimagining web development in your browser.pdfAbati Adewale
Web development is a fast changing ecosystem with new technologies and libraries being created on the go. To stay on top of everything, we have to make it as easy and accessible as possible to experiment and use these technologies with little to no setup. In this talk, we'd be exploring the world of Browser-based IDEs and how they are changing the ecosystem - improving collaboration, streamlined experiences and preconfigured development environments.
Automatic and Interpretable Machine Learning in R with H2O and LIMEJo-fai Chow
This is a hands-on tutorial for R beginners. I will demonstrate the use of two R packages, h2o & LIME, for automatic and interpretable machine learning. Participants will be able to follow and build regression and classification models quickly with H2O’s AutoML. They will then be able to explain the model outcomes with a framework called Local Interpretable Model-Agnostic Explanations (LIME).
Slides of my talk at Very Tech Trip 2023, Paris, on what the Web Platform is and how I think it makes JavaScript Web Frameworks obsolete in many cases.
Surviving large online communities with conciseness and clarity Bertrand Delacretaz
Slides of my FOSS Backstage 2022 (remote) talk, https://pretalx.com/foss-backstage-2022/talk/9S3PJE/ - how conciseness & clarity help communicate efficiently in large online communities.
Making it Work Offline: Current & Future Offline APIs for Web AppsNatasha Rooney
We go through the current APIs for creating offline capable web apps such as LocalStorage, App Cache and a bit of IndexedDB. We also take a look at the work going behind the new solution "ServiceWorker" and how it may change the game.
Demo to support the presentation is here: https://github.com/nrooney/offlineanime
DevDay 2018: Ulrich Deiters - Offline First - kein Netz, kein Fehler, zufried...DevDay Dresden
"High Speed Internet, permanently online, permanently connected, LTE überall, na klar geht alles nur online - der Rest ist Error Handling. Done."
Oft ist uns gar nicht mehr bewusst, dass wir damit Nutzer enttäuschen, ihre Zeit verschwenden und die Nutzung unserer Anwendungen einschränken. Leider ist Offline-Fähigkeit nachträglich oft ähnlich schlecht nachrüstbar wie die Unterstützung von Mobile Devices. Daher möchten ich Euch zeigen, wie man mit Offline First von Anfang an "offline denken" kann, vergleichbar mit Mobile First.
Ich werde Euch kurz in die Motivation für Offline-Funktionen, Nutzerwartungen, UX-Ansätze sowie Herausforderungen und Ansätze für die Anwendungsarchitektur und -sicherheit einführen und aufzeigen wie wir CAP und Eventual Consistency auf diese Problemstellung anwenden können.
Anhang von konkreten Kundenprojekten für Native Mobile Apps schauen wir uns Nutzen und Lösungen für effektives Offline-Arbeiten an.
Wir werfen einen Blick darauf, welche Technologien für Progressive Web Apps zur Verfügung stehen und wie Digital Business Platforms wie Salesforce oder die SAP Cloud Platform die Offlinefähigkeit unterstützen. Kann man wirklich schon „Offline as a Service“ dazukaufen?
Also: "Kein Netz" ist nicht zwingend ein Fehler.
Flink Forward Berlin 2018: Isabel Drost-Fromm - "The Apache Way! … ?"Flink Forward
To quote http://www.apache.org/foundation - “The mission of the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) is to provide software for the public good. We do this by providing services and support for many like-minded software project communities of individuals who choose to join the ASF.” The ASF provides a home to several hundred OSS projects. Likely, if you are developing software on a daily basis you did run into one of those projects at some point in time. If you have been digging a bit deeper, you may have encountered the phrase “The Apache Way” - often used in relation to how projects at the ASF should work. Depending on who you ask, very likely you will get different answers as to what actual meaning of “The Apache Way” is. This talk tries to give a glimpse behind the scenes - with a strong focus on what the implications of best practices advertised at the ASF are for downstream users of it’s projects. It's all about pulling you in to become active and contribute yourself.
When Will Drupal Die? Keynote talk from Bay Area Drupal Camp 2014chrisshattuck
This talk was given at BADCamp (Bay Area Drupal Camp) 2014 as an impromptu keynote. In it I talk about the technology that might put Drupal at risk, including Node.js, Angular.js, GitHub and more. I also talk about Drupal's strengths and how we can prepare for the future.
The answer is no, but it will help! There's not much commentary on those slides actually, you had to be there. The actual model is at https://community.apache.org/apache-way/apache-project-maturity-model.html
Open Source is just about the source code—isn’t it?DataWorks Summit
The code base of the open source technology you want to build your business on is rock solid. Releases are rolling out early and often. The test suite is comprehensive and running regularly. Code is well performing without any glitches. Everything is in place that defines a successful open source project—or isn't it?
This talk tries to highlight some of the key business questions when dealing with open source. In addition to coding skills, topics like people management, naming, trademark enforcement, licensing, patents, PR, and more become topics that even the most tech-centric open source products have to deal with. The way these topics are dealt with defines how stable the technology you are looking at today will be in years to come. The Apache Software Foundation has a ton of wisdom in running open source projects targeting long term success.
After years of using open source projects, running my own projects, founding meetups and conferences, watching others thrive or fail, I believe that coding skills alone aren't sufficient to turn a "private playground code base" into an open source project that others can rely on.
Inspired by 140 characters of truth published here, the talk will focus on what topics that are usually not taught as part of programming courses will cross your way when dealing with open source—either as a user or as a contributor:
• People: Is the project willing and able to attract more contributors? Is it able to survive if the leader loses interest or time to continue contributing? How does the project deal with requests coming from the user base? How easy is it for users to get their issues fixed?
• Trademarks: Why should you care about trademarks from the beginning? How do you deal with others infringing on your trademarks?
• Copyright: Why should you care exactly which license you choose?
• PR: While writing release notes is common practice and composing changelogs is pretty easy, the resulting documents are hard to grok for editors and won't get you on the front page of any magazine. Nor will they help you get visibility on common social media systems that might be key in informing your users about recent releases.
While being excellent at all topics isn't vital from the start, answers to governance questions decide what a project looks like a few years from its start. This talk will start with a brief overview of the history of The Apache Software Foundation, diving into what the ominous thing called "The Apache Way" means, why the slogan "community over code" is not just a slogan, and why every user of the foundation's projects is invited and treated as a potential future developer of the software they use. We will look at some of the criteria every software engineer should be aware of who has to make a decision on which open source project to use.
Speaker
Isabel Drost-Fromm, Open Source Strategist, Europace AG
Shared Neurons - the Secret Sauce of Open Source communities?Bertrand Delacretaz
Slides of my talk at ApacheCon EU 2019in Berlin, Germany: Shared Neurons - the Secret Sauce of Open Source communities? See also the video recording at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pWG-F3vW24w
Open Source communities sometimes speak of Shared Neurons when great ideas come together as if sparked by a giant collective brain. Can we take inspiration from them and foster such neuron sharing in our teams? We will describe the tools and techniques used by successful Open Source projects to "put their brains together", by communicating openly and often, exposing concrete ideas early in prototype code, collaborating asynchronously and deliberately slowing things down to take advantage of unexpected Eureka moments.
Based on years of experiences in multiple Open Source projects, this talk will help you better understand what makes our communities so powerful and how to transpose this in your own teams.
Open source comes in many forms -- not just code. This slide deck covers some paradigms where one might not expect to see much open source, and hopefully inspire new projects and contributions. Included is a personal checklist I use to determine if a project is something I want to use and contribute to.
Work shop - an introduction to the docker ecosystemJoão Pedro Harbs
I ministered a Docker workshop at FliSoL (Latin American Free Software Festival), 2019 edition, hosted by the Federal Institute of Education, Science and Technology of the State of São Paulo (IFSP-BRT) on 27/04/2019, where I gave an introduction. what Docker / Container is, how it came about, some of its uses, and a walkthrough from installation to uploading your first application running in a container.
Reimagining web development in your browser.pdfAbati Adewale
Web development is a fast changing ecosystem with new technologies and libraries being created on the go. To stay on top of everything, we have to make it as easy and accessible as possible to experiment and use these technologies with little to no setup. In this talk, we'd be exploring the world of Browser-based IDEs and how they are changing the ecosystem - improving collaboration, streamlined experiences and preconfigured development environments.
Automatic and Interpretable Machine Learning in R with H2O and LIMEJo-fai Chow
This is a hands-on tutorial for R beginners. I will demonstrate the use of two R packages, h2o & LIME, for automatic and interpretable machine learning. Participants will be able to follow and build regression and classification models quickly with H2O’s AutoML. They will then be able to explain the model outcomes with a framework called Local Interpretable Model-Agnostic Explanations (LIME).
Slides of my talk at Very Tech Trip 2023, Paris, on what the Web Platform is and how I think it makes JavaScript Web Frameworks obsolete in many cases.
Surviving large online communities with conciseness and clarity Bertrand Delacretaz
Slides of my FOSS Backstage 2022 (remote) talk, https://pretalx.com/foss-backstage-2022/talk/9S3PJE/ - how conciseness & clarity help communicate efficiently in large online communities.
Repoinit: a mini-language for content repository initializationBertrand Delacretaz
Slides of my adaptTo2021 talk on the Apache Sling Repoinit module, https://adapt.to/2021/en/schedule/repoinit-a-mini-language-for-content-repository-initialization.html
The Moving House Model, adhocracy and remote collaborationBertrand Delacretaz
Slides of my February 2021 talk at FOSS Backstage, https://foss-backstage.de
Moving house with the help of a group of friends is an interesting exercise in collective improvisation and coordination. Everybody can help with most of the jobs at hand, so the challenge is to keep people busy in a meaningful way, to make the best use of the physical and intellectual resources available, while keeping people happy and engaged.
Sounds familiar? The Moving House model does apply to other types of group projects, including software development. Adhocracy, Asynchronous Collaboration and a can-do attitude, as practiced in Open Source communities, are key elements that enable groups that have no formal structure to collaborate efficiently and smoothly - like when helping friends moving house.
GraphQL in Apache Sling - but isn't it the opposite of REST?Bertrand Delacretaz
Slides of my talk at ApacheCon @Home 2020 - code at https://github.com/apache/sling-org-apache-sling-graphql-core/ (look for the "sample website") - video recording at https://youtu.be/KTMObGt0YKU
Ma présentation à https://www.blendwebmix.com/ 2019
Video: https://youtu.be/eE7YhQpPdcM?t=4560
Dans un monde qui se numérise toujours plus, les logiciels libres sont partout: dans votre téléphone, votre ascenseur, votre voiture, votre banque, etc… plus que jamais, l’Open Source est au coeur de notre monde numérique.
Au-delà de ces contributions très concrètes au bien-être de nos sociétés, les communautés Open Source ont aussi inventé et mis en pratique des techniques de collaboration innovantes, distribuées, asynchrones. Souvent sans chef clairement identifié, ni planification précise, ces groupes de travail informels produisent des logiciels de grande qualité, qui pour certains ont créé des marchés ou révolutionnés les pratiques numériques. Le succès de ces groupes est étonnant quand on le compare aux nombreux projets informatiques ratés dans des groupes beaucoup plus structurés, entreprises ou organismes d’Etat par exemple.
L’Open Source change le monde…vraiment? Tout en gardant les choses en perspective, nous présenterons plusieurs exemples concrets où cela se vérifie, par la création d’outils partagés, la découverte de talents, la diffusion des connaissances et la création de logiciels d’infrastructure qui sont devenus des standards de l’industrie.
Slides of my "Sling and Serverless, Best Friends Forever?" presentation at adaptTo() 2019, Berlin. A video recording will be available later at https://adapt.to/2019/en/schedule/sling-and-serverless-best-friends-forever.html
They don't understand me! Tales from the multi-cultural trenchesBertrand Delacretaz
Slides from my FOSS Backstage 2018 talk on the difficulties of collaborating in multicultural environments.
A video recording should be available soon.
https://foss-backstage.de/session/they-dont-understand-me-tales-multi-cultural-trenches
Prise de Décisions Asynchrone, Devoxx France 2018 (avec vidéo)Bertrand Delacretaz
Vidéo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xkC4zjtAyRc - c'est la version française de ma présentation sur la Prise de Décisions Asynchrone, enregistrée à Devoxx France 2018.
Slides of my "Asynchronous Decision Making - why and how?" talk at the http://fossbackstage.de/ micro-summit, November 2017
I also gave this talk at FOSDEM 2018, a video recording (with somewhat poor audio unfortunately) is available at https://fosdem.org/2018/schedule/event/community_decision_making_why_how/
There's also a video recording of the French speaking version at devoxx.fr 2018, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xkC4zjtAyRc
See also my opensource.com article on the same topic at https://opensource.com/article/17/12/asynchronous-decision-making and a slightly older blog post at https://blogs.apache.org/foundation/entry/success-at-apache-asynchronous-decision
Slides of my talk at the September 2017 adaptTo() conference, Berlin. https://adapt.to/2017/en/schedule/get-the-cattle-out--let-s-build-a-large-scale-sling-rendering-pr.html
Video of that talk at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bH9envZXik
Slides of my ApacheCon 2014 talk on simplicity. Creating simple software is hard work, we shouldn't give up until what we are building is simple enough.
Slides of our talk at adaptTo 2016, Chetan Mehrotra and myself (https://adapt.to/2016/en/schedule/let_s-run-the-whole-web-on-apache-sling-and-oak-.html).
The code is at https://github.com/bdelacretaz/sling-adaptto-2016 and uses Docker to build a dynamic cluster of Apache Sling instances.
Italy Agriculture Equipment Market Outlook to 2027harveenkaur52
Agriculture and Animal Care
Ken Research has an expertise in Agriculture and Animal Care sector and offer vast collection of information related to all major aspects such as Agriculture equipment, Crop Protection, Seed, Agriculture Chemical, Fertilizers, Protected Cultivators, Palm Oil, Hybrid Seed, Animal Feed additives and many more.
Our continuous study and findings in agriculture sector provide better insights to companies dealing with related product and services, government and agriculture associations, researchers and students to well understand the present and expected scenario.
Our Animal care category provides solutions on Animal Healthcare and related products and services, including, animal feed additives, vaccination
APNIC Foundation, presented by Ellisha Heppner at the PNG DNS Forum 2024APNIC
Ellisha Heppner, Grant Management Lead, presented an update on APNIC Foundation to the PNG DNS Forum held from 6 to 10 May, 2024 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
2.Cellular Networks_The final stage of connectivity is achieved by segmenting...JeyaPerumal1
A cellular network, frequently referred to as a mobile network, is a type of communication system that enables wireless communication between mobile devices. The final stage of connectivity is achieved by segmenting the comprehensive service area into several compact zones, each called a cell.
Understanding User Behavior with Google Analytics.pdfSEO Article Boost
Unlocking the full potential of Google Analytics is crucial for understanding and optimizing your website’s performance. This guide dives deep into the essential aspects of Google Analytics, from analyzing traffic sources to understanding user demographics and tracking user engagement.
Traffic Sources Analysis:
Discover where your website traffic originates. By examining the Acquisition section, you can identify whether visitors come from organic search, paid campaigns, direct visits, social media, or referral links. This knowledge helps in refining marketing strategies and optimizing resource allocation.
User Demographics Insights:
Gain a comprehensive view of your audience by exploring demographic data in the Audience section. Understand age, gender, and interests to tailor your marketing strategies effectively. Leverage this information to create personalized content and improve user engagement and conversion rates.
Tracking User Engagement:
Learn how to measure user interaction with your site through key metrics like bounce rate, average session duration, and pages per session. Enhance user experience by analyzing engagement metrics and implementing strategies to keep visitors engaged.
Conversion Rate Optimization:
Understand the importance of conversion rates and how to track them using Google Analytics. Set up Goals, analyze conversion funnels, segment your audience, and employ A/B testing to optimize your website for higher conversions. Utilize ecommerce tracking and multi-channel funnels for a detailed view of your sales performance and marketing channel contributions.
Custom Reports and Dashboards:
Create custom reports and dashboards to visualize and interpret data relevant to your business goals. Use advanced filters, segments, and visualization options to gain deeper insights. Incorporate custom dimensions and metrics for tailored data analysis. Integrate external data sources to enrich your analytics and make well-informed decisions.
This guide is designed to help you harness the power of Google Analytics for making data-driven decisions that enhance website performance and achieve your digital marketing objectives. Whether you are looking to improve SEO, refine your social media strategy, or boost conversion rates, understanding and utilizing Google Analytics is essential for your success.
1. Illustrations: Adobe Stock, unless otherwise mentioned :: slides revision 2020-09-28
Lyon, Novembre 2019
Open Source Changes The World. Really?
Bertrand Delacrétaz - Principal Scientist, Adobe Research Switzerland, Bâle
Member and current Director, Apache Software Foundation :: @bdelacretaz :: grep.codeconsult.ch
2. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
Open Source?
4. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
1998 2000 2003 2007 2008 20112004 20102009
A career powered by Open Source. Really?
5. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
EVERYWHERE
Open Source
is
6. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
EVERYWHERE ?
7. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
Sources:
https://www.heidi.news/articles/how-google-wants-to-reinvent-cloud-computing-and-renew-itself-in-the-process
https://www.theregister.co.uk/2001/06/02/ballmer_linux_is_a_cancer/
https://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/discuss/2019-October/005173.html
https://twitter.com/jerenkrantz/status/1171053570835255296
2019
2001
8. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
"Hippie GPL
Rubbish" (*)
is over...
Open Source is
in the engine!
(*) As if it ever existed..."Hippie GPL rubbish" - see previous page
9. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
DIFFERENCE
Open Source Communities
make the
10. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
A neutral space
where independent projects
can prosper and create
Open Source Software
for the Public Good.
Using the commercial-friendly Apache 2.0 License
photos: http://archive.apachecon.com/c/
www.apache.org
US 501(c)(3) charitable organization
14. In a Maker's Schedule,
a half-hour meeting can ruin
your whole afternoon!
Credit: Paul Graham, blog post: https://s.apache.org/ms
15. W
hat's the
topic?..
Sorry I'm not prepared…
Bob forgot…
Forgot to invite Bob!
We'll decide
next time, ok?
Who's in charge, anyway?
What's the goal?
I didn't get it…
Are you on mute?
failed
meetings?
16. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
shared&async
broadcastchannel
désorganisé,
bruyant?
sharedcase
managementtool
structuré,
chronologique
AsynchronousDecisionMakingFOSS Backstage 2017
blog post: http://s.apache.org/async-decisions
17. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
~300projects
~nomeetings
Remote,
asynchronous
collaboration
https://www.apache.org/foundation/governance/orgchart
20. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
BUSINESS
How about
?
21. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
Linux: between 35 et 96% of public servers
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usage_share_of_operating_systems
Web Servers: Apache + nginx = 51%
https://news.netcraft.com/archives/2019/04/22/april-2019-web-server-survey.html
Apache Hadoop: a growing $1'700 million market
https://www.reuters.com/brandfeatures/venture-capital/article?id=87535
22. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
Talent discovery and hiring...
https://summerofcode.withgoogle.com/
https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/graphs/contributors
23. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
TO CONCLUDE
24. Open Source Changes The World :: Bertrand Delacrétaz, Adobe :: @bdelacretaz :: ApacheCon @Home 2020
Open Source is
EVERYWHERE
Communities make the
DIFFERENCE
And that's also good for
BUSINESS
Open Source
Changes the World!