The document discusses open data in public transport in Belgium. It notes that De Lijn, the public transport operator, aims to embrace digital entrepreneurship and enable innovation by providing real-time mobility information. Currently, De Lijn's open data is outdated and not easily accessible. However, by summer 2017 De Lijn plans to launch a new open data platform providing static and real-time API data through developer and publisher portals. The full implementation of real-time open data is targeted by end of 2017, although there may be some legal and technical hurdles to overcome first.
SNCB has changed its approach to open data and is now making more of its transportation data available for free use under contracts. Currently, scheduled timetable data is available in GTFS format since 2015, with over 270 contract requests received and 24 signed. Real-time GTFS data will be available from March 2017. SNCB is also exploring making other types of transportation data openly available and promoting apps and services created using its open data.
Word Summit Award Innovation Pitch Open Spending Austria - Offenerhaushalt.atBernhard Krabina
The document summarizes a solution called "Offenerhaushalt.at", which provides Austrian municipalities easy access to upload and visualize open spending data in standardized reports and graphs with only two clicks. It began as individual projects but has grown to include over 900 municipalities, covering over 70% of Austria's population and 13,000 datasets. The goal is to empower municipalities and provide citizens transparent access to local spending information that was previously only available through difficult-to-access 300-page PDF documents or in print at town halls.
This document outlines plans for the City of Glasgow to release open data and create a new open data website at OPEN.glasgow.gov.uk. It discusses four themes for open data including empowering citizens with data, making city infrastructure data available, linking asset data, and demonstrating data collection. The goals are to make more city data freely available and linkable in order to engage citizens and community organizations to find innovative solutions for the city using open data.
This document discusses automating spatial data sharing between data producers and end users in Wallonia, Belgium. It describes using FME to create an integrated workflow that simplifies data sharing. The workflow validates and transforms data from multiple producers into various formats, then distributes updated data on demand to end users based on their specifications. This automated process saves time by eliminating repetitive manual data distribution tasks.
WebGIS-based approach for Street Addressing in Kosovo - Braun & HoseggenTony Braun
Enabling distributed expert input together with centralised data management using a WebGIS-based approach in the implementation of a National Address Register Information System in Kosovo
This document discusses ideas for a real time open data services pilot project between Riga City Council and other partners. The project would integrate cloud applications, promote paperless technology, and exchange data horizontally among multiple municipalities. It would focus on urban development and social services. The document also describes Riga's existing open data platform and analytical tools and proposes partnerships between the municipality, state, and private sector to develop innovative and sustainable cloud solutions.
The document discusses open data in public transport in Belgium. It notes that De Lijn, the public transport operator, aims to embrace digital entrepreneurship and enable innovation by providing real-time mobility information. Currently, De Lijn's open data is outdated and not easily accessible. However, by summer 2017 De Lijn plans to launch a new open data platform providing static and real-time API data through developer and publisher portals. The full implementation of real-time open data is targeted by end of 2017, although there may be some legal and technical hurdles to overcome first.
SNCB has changed its approach to open data and is now making more of its transportation data available for free use under contracts. Currently, scheduled timetable data is available in GTFS format since 2015, with over 270 contract requests received and 24 signed. Real-time GTFS data will be available from March 2017. SNCB is also exploring making other types of transportation data openly available and promoting apps and services created using its open data.
Word Summit Award Innovation Pitch Open Spending Austria - Offenerhaushalt.atBernhard Krabina
The document summarizes a solution called "Offenerhaushalt.at", which provides Austrian municipalities easy access to upload and visualize open spending data in standardized reports and graphs with only two clicks. It began as individual projects but has grown to include over 900 municipalities, covering over 70% of Austria's population and 13,000 datasets. The goal is to empower municipalities and provide citizens transparent access to local spending information that was previously only available through difficult-to-access 300-page PDF documents or in print at town halls.
This document outlines plans for the City of Glasgow to release open data and create a new open data website at OPEN.glasgow.gov.uk. It discusses four themes for open data including empowering citizens with data, making city infrastructure data available, linking asset data, and demonstrating data collection. The goals are to make more city data freely available and linkable in order to engage citizens and community organizations to find innovative solutions for the city using open data.
This document discusses automating spatial data sharing between data producers and end users in Wallonia, Belgium. It describes using FME to create an integrated workflow that simplifies data sharing. The workflow validates and transforms data from multiple producers into various formats, then distributes updated data on demand to end users based on their specifications. This automated process saves time by eliminating repetitive manual data distribution tasks.
WebGIS-based approach for Street Addressing in Kosovo - Braun & HoseggenTony Braun
Enabling distributed expert input together with centralised data management using a WebGIS-based approach in the implementation of a National Address Register Information System in Kosovo
This document discusses ideas for a real time open data services pilot project between Riga City Council and other partners. The project would integrate cloud applications, promote paperless technology, and exchange data horizontally among multiple municipalities. It would focus on urban development and social services. The document also describes Riga's existing open data platform and analytical tools and proposes partnerships between the municipality, state, and private sector to develop innovative and sustainable cloud solutions.
ECPPM 2018 (Copenhagen) congress:
"Collaborative platform based on standard services for the semi-automated generation of the 3D city model on the cloud"
The Vienna History Wiki – a large Semantic MediaWikiBernhard Krabina
This document discusses the Vienna History Wiki, a large semantic MediaWiki containing information digitized from a historical encyclopedia of Vienna. Key points include:
- The wiki was created by digitizing a 6-volume printed encyclopedia about Vienna's history and contains structured data about people, places, and events.
- Semantic MediaWiki allows storing facts within the wiki and exporting data as open data in RDF/JSON format.
- Features include forms for data entry, templates for visualizing data, and queries for finding and reusing information both within and outside the wiki.
- Governance involves an editorial team and contributions from various cultural institutions.
- Future plans include importing additional historical data and improving performance of large
Jaana Makela "The way to a spatially enabled Smart City" in Kartdagarna 2018Jaana Mäkelä
The document summarizes the challenges the city of Helsinki faced in managing spatial data across departments in 2010, including duplicate datasets and lack of skills and understanding of spatial data's benefits. It then outlines Helsinki's 2011-2014 development program to address these issues by establishing common spatial data policies, infrastructure, and increasing staff competencies. The program was successful, leading Helsinki to open its spatial data and build applications, achieving goals like easier data access and use across the city and by citizens. Helsinki has since become a leader in open data and smart city initiatives.
This document discusses bridging the gap between geographic information systems (GIS) and building information modeling (BIM) to build a sustainable railway network using consistent digital information. It proposes collecting data once at the source and sharing it throughout the asset lifecycle. Current GIS and BIM standards like InfraGML, IFC, and LandXML are examined for integrating railway design data with 3D reality models from lidar scans. The document demonstrates a proof of concept for extracting rail information from point clouds, reading 3D LandXML designs, and comparing plans to reality. It concludes that BIM-GIS integration is relevant for infrastructure and that software like FME can help fill interoperability gaps.
This document discusses how Argent, a property development company, used GIS technology to improve asset management for their large King's Cross development project in London. The 67 acre development involved managing information for hundreds of infrastructure and construction projects. Argent implemented Esri's ArcGIS Desktop and ArcGIS Online solutions to create interactive maps of all assets and share them online. This provided all employees, consultants, and contractors with up-to-date access to asset information, improving collaboration and identification of potential clashes.
The document discusses the Senate Department for the Environment, Transport and Climate Protection's approach to integrated subsurface data management for major cities like Berlin. It notes that Berlin has successfully established a spatial data infrastructure but that subsurface management requires further development. The department seeks to automate data collection and modeling through sensor integration and semantic linking to enable more efficient groundwater monitoring, geological modeling, and geothermal exploitation approval processes. It aims to collaborate with other geological organizations and standardization bodies to advance subsurface management techniques.
This document summarizes a presentation on open government data initiatives in Zurich, Switzerland. It discusses Zurich's efforts to implement open data starting in 2012, the challenges faced, and future plans. Specifically, it notes that while Zurich established an open data portal and published over 200 datasets, real impact and use of the data has been limited. Barriers include apathy among data providers and concerns over privacy and legal issues. Moving forward, Zurich aims to expand its open data program through consolidating resources, publishing more datasets by default, upgrading technology, and increasing community engagement through events.
Alfresco User Day Benelux – Antwerp Dec 9th, 2014 - Case Study BRIC: Alfresco At The Core Of Driving Change In Local Administrations By Dematerializing Councils
- swisstopo is the Federal Office of Topography of Switzerland which is legally mandated to develop and manage the country's spatial data infrastructure.
- It maintains a popular geospatial portal, map.geo.admin.ch, which serves over 500 layers to 2 million annual visitors.
- swisstopo began a project in July 2016 to publish key geospatial datasets as linked open data using semantic web standards in order to improve discoverability and reuse of the data by non-experts.
- The first dataset being published is the Administrative Units of Switzerland, with addresses to follow in 2017, available at ld.geo.admin.ch.
Savills - Smart Data - Esri UK Annual Conference 2017Esri UK
This document describes how Savills, a commercial real estate company, improved their planning application monitoring process for a client, the UK Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO), using geographic information systems (GIS). Originally, Savills staff manually searched planning records across multiple local authorities, taking 1-2 days per week per person. Their new GIS-based system automatically scrapes planning data weekly, analyzes locations, and produces customized reports and maps. This new process identifies relevant applications, classifies them by affected property, Savills office, and DIO area. It saves Savills 800-900 working days per year while maintaining the same level of service to their client.
Open data and crowdsourcing can help improve urban planning by engaging the public. It allows citizens to describe what is in their city, highlight problems, and vote on priorities. Some examples of open data platforms for urban planning include OpenPlans for sharing city plans, Ushaidi for reporting problems, and SeeClickFix for reporting issues to local governments. When cities open their data and use crowdsourcing, it provides free hosting and backups, opportunities for international help on projects, and reusable code that is portable and adaptable to other cities.
First presented at The Esri UK Annual Conference 2013, 21st May 2013, London, UK.
Geo-Enabling Collaboration for Construction
Steven Eglinton, GeoEnable, with Lily Wydra, Argent (Property Development) Services
With a case study of the King’s Cross Central development, this presentation will discuss the implications of emergent Cloud-based GIS and interfaces that allow non-GIS professionals to create, maintain and share controlled geospatial informational and what the ramification of these technologies are for current and future GIS Professionals.
This presentation will explore how Business Process Management (BPM) should lead geospatial and wider Information Management (IM) practices and will discuss how location information is rapidly becoming part of mainstream ICT and the Web empowering the vision of a Geo-Enabled Cloud.
Argent’s GIS Manager, will demonstrate how ArcGIS Online for Organizations is being used on the King’s Cross Central development, to enable business-wide communication and collaboration, enabled by the new geospatial platform.
For more information visit: http://www.geoenable.com
D3.js is a JavaScript library for manipulating documents based on data. It allows you to generate HTML elements from data, and to create interactive elements and animations. D3 uses HTML, SVG, CSS and JavaScript. It works by joining data to existing document elements, and by adding or removing elements based on changes in the data. Key concepts include selections, data joins, scales, and transitions for animations. The document provides examples of visualizations created with D3 and links to tutorials and documentation on the D3 wiki.
The document discusses the City of Amsterdam's efforts to build an open source ecosystem for cities. It outlines how the city's Datapunt team develops open data APIs, data products, and applications to connect and share city data internally and publicly. The team uses agile development practices and contributes code to open source projects on GitHub in order to collaborate, increase transparency, and attract developers. The city aims to establish an international community of civic developers working on open source challenges and solutions for cities.
The Datapunt Amsterdam Infrastructure connects city data for internal and external users. It uses an agile development process and DevOps practices to quickly build APIs, data products, and applications. This enables the city to rapidly solve problems through a continuous delivery process of developing usable solutions in short sprints. Datapunt also aims to collaborate openly by sharing code on GitHub and helping establish standards.
The Large-scale Reference Database of Flanders as Open Data - Liesbet De WolfOpen Knowledge Belgium
The Large-scale Reference Database of Flanders (LRD) is a public-private partnership that contains geographic reference data for Flanders including 4.3 million buildings, 64,000 km of roads, and 4.7 million parcels. It is managed and updated by the Flemish government agency Informatie Vlaanderen. As of 2015, the LRD is available as open data through web services and downloadable files with conditions for use. The LRD is used in many applications by government, private companies and citizens as an authoritative source of geographic information for Flanders.
Open Government Data in the City of ViennaThomas Jöchler
The document discusses open government data initiatives in Vienna, Austria. It provides background on Thomas Jöchler and his role in open data projects at wien.at. It outlines the motivations for launching Vienna's open data portal in 2011, including support from civil society and the local government. The portal features a data catalogue with datasets across various topics that are available in open formats and under a CC-BY license to encourage reuse. Several apps have been developed using the open data, related to public services like transportation, infrastructure, and events. The conclusion emphasizes continuing to share more content as open data and communicate benefits to engage users.
The document summarizes Barcelona's Digital City Plan for 2017-2020, which includes several government measures related to open data and digitization. The plan focuses on 5 strategic areas: data sovereignty, ethical data management, developing a city-wide data infrastructure called CityOS, using data to drive internal innovation, and sharing data through a data commons. It will be implemented according to a scheduled timeline and coordinated by a board for transversal data coordination alongside the Municipal Data Office.
Digital transformation of health insurance vikasr2508
this is a proposed solution to the challenges & changing roles of health insurance companies in the digital age.Changing expectations of digital consumer, increasing incidence of life style related NCDs & increasing cost of healthcare delivery requires new thinking. Digital tools can help health insurers stay connected & impact behaviours of consumers to improve their health & reduce costs.
#11ways Research - Does communication really make a difference?Dana Poole
Good communications practice and organizational performance are inextricably linked.
Our 2014 survey of 81 organizations, across 10 countries with approx 390,000 employees identified 11 challenges that today's communicators are facing. We saw a link between some of the 11 factors identified and organizational underperformance.
This year have updated the data in order to analyse year-on-year trends.
ECPPM 2018 (Copenhagen) congress:
"Collaborative platform based on standard services for the semi-automated generation of the 3D city model on the cloud"
The Vienna History Wiki – a large Semantic MediaWikiBernhard Krabina
This document discusses the Vienna History Wiki, a large semantic MediaWiki containing information digitized from a historical encyclopedia of Vienna. Key points include:
- The wiki was created by digitizing a 6-volume printed encyclopedia about Vienna's history and contains structured data about people, places, and events.
- Semantic MediaWiki allows storing facts within the wiki and exporting data as open data in RDF/JSON format.
- Features include forms for data entry, templates for visualizing data, and queries for finding and reusing information both within and outside the wiki.
- Governance involves an editorial team and contributions from various cultural institutions.
- Future plans include importing additional historical data and improving performance of large
Jaana Makela "The way to a spatially enabled Smart City" in Kartdagarna 2018Jaana Mäkelä
The document summarizes the challenges the city of Helsinki faced in managing spatial data across departments in 2010, including duplicate datasets and lack of skills and understanding of spatial data's benefits. It then outlines Helsinki's 2011-2014 development program to address these issues by establishing common spatial data policies, infrastructure, and increasing staff competencies. The program was successful, leading Helsinki to open its spatial data and build applications, achieving goals like easier data access and use across the city and by citizens. Helsinki has since become a leader in open data and smart city initiatives.
This document discusses bridging the gap between geographic information systems (GIS) and building information modeling (BIM) to build a sustainable railway network using consistent digital information. It proposes collecting data once at the source and sharing it throughout the asset lifecycle. Current GIS and BIM standards like InfraGML, IFC, and LandXML are examined for integrating railway design data with 3D reality models from lidar scans. The document demonstrates a proof of concept for extracting rail information from point clouds, reading 3D LandXML designs, and comparing plans to reality. It concludes that BIM-GIS integration is relevant for infrastructure and that software like FME can help fill interoperability gaps.
This document discusses how Argent, a property development company, used GIS technology to improve asset management for their large King's Cross development project in London. The 67 acre development involved managing information for hundreds of infrastructure and construction projects. Argent implemented Esri's ArcGIS Desktop and ArcGIS Online solutions to create interactive maps of all assets and share them online. This provided all employees, consultants, and contractors with up-to-date access to asset information, improving collaboration and identification of potential clashes.
The document discusses the Senate Department for the Environment, Transport and Climate Protection's approach to integrated subsurface data management for major cities like Berlin. It notes that Berlin has successfully established a spatial data infrastructure but that subsurface management requires further development. The department seeks to automate data collection and modeling through sensor integration and semantic linking to enable more efficient groundwater monitoring, geological modeling, and geothermal exploitation approval processes. It aims to collaborate with other geological organizations and standardization bodies to advance subsurface management techniques.
This document summarizes a presentation on open government data initiatives in Zurich, Switzerland. It discusses Zurich's efforts to implement open data starting in 2012, the challenges faced, and future plans. Specifically, it notes that while Zurich established an open data portal and published over 200 datasets, real impact and use of the data has been limited. Barriers include apathy among data providers and concerns over privacy and legal issues. Moving forward, Zurich aims to expand its open data program through consolidating resources, publishing more datasets by default, upgrading technology, and increasing community engagement through events.
Alfresco User Day Benelux – Antwerp Dec 9th, 2014 - Case Study BRIC: Alfresco At The Core Of Driving Change In Local Administrations By Dematerializing Councils
- swisstopo is the Federal Office of Topography of Switzerland which is legally mandated to develop and manage the country's spatial data infrastructure.
- It maintains a popular geospatial portal, map.geo.admin.ch, which serves over 500 layers to 2 million annual visitors.
- swisstopo began a project in July 2016 to publish key geospatial datasets as linked open data using semantic web standards in order to improve discoverability and reuse of the data by non-experts.
- The first dataset being published is the Administrative Units of Switzerland, with addresses to follow in 2017, available at ld.geo.admin.ch.
Savills - Smart Data - Esri UK Annual Conference 2017Esri UK
This document describes how Savills, a commercial real estate company, improved their planning application monitoring process for a client, the UK Defence Infrastructure Organisation (DIO), using geographic information systems (GIS). Originally, Savills staff manually searched planning records across multiple local authorities, taking 1-2 days per week per person. Their new GIS-based system automatically scrapes planning data weekly, analyzes locations, and produces customized reports and maps. This new process identifies relevant applications, classifies them by affected property, Savills office, and DIO area. It saves Savills 800-900 working days per year while maintaining the same level of service to their client.
Open data and crowdsourcing can help improve urban planning by engaging the public. It allows citizens to describe what is in their city, highlight problems, and vote on priorities. Some examples of open data platforms for urban planning include OpenPlans for sharing city plans, Ushaidi for reporting problems, and SeeClickFix for reporting issues to local governments. When cities open their data and use crowdsourcing, it provides free hosting and backups, opportunities for international help on projects, and reusable code that is portable and adaptable to other cities.
First presented at The Esri UK Annual Conference 2013, 21st May 2013, London, UK.
Geo-Enabling Collaboration for Construction
Steven Eglinton, GeoEnable, with Lily Wydra, Argent (Property Development) Services
With a case study of the King’s Cross Central development, this presentation will discuss the implications of emergent Cloud-based GIS and interfaces that allow non-GIS professionals to create, maintain and share controlled geospatial informational and what the ramification of these technologies are for current and future GIS Professionals.
This presentation will explore how Business Process Management (BPM) should lead geospatial and wider Information Management (IM) practices and will discuss how location information is rapidly becoming part of mainstream ICT and the Web empowering the vision of a Geo-Enabled Cloud.
Argent’s GIS Manager, will demonstrate how ArcGIS Online for Organizations is being used on the King’s Cross Central development, to enable business-wide communication and collaboration, enabled by the new geospatial platform.
For more information visit: http://www.geoenable.com
D3.js is a JavaScript library for manipulating documents based on data. It allows you to generate HTML elements from data, and to create interactive elements and animations. D3 uses HTML, SVG, CSS and JavaScript. It works by joining data to existing document elements, and by adding or removing elements based on changes in the data. Key concepts include selections, data joins, scales, and transitions for animations. The document provides examples of visualizations created with D3 and links to tutorials and documentation on the D3 wiki.
The document discusses the City of Amsterdam's efforts to build an open source ecosystem for cities. It outlines how the city's Datapunt team develops open data APIs, data products, and applications to connect and share city data internally and publicly. The team uses agile development practices and contributes code to open source projects on GitHub in order to collaborate, increase transparency, and attract developers. The city aims to establish an international community of civic developers working on open source challenges and solutions for cities.
The Datapunt Amsterdam Infrastructure connects city data for internal and external users. It uses an agile development process and DevOps practices to quickly build APIs, data products, and applications. This enables the city to rapidly solve problems through a continuous delivery process of developing usable solutions in short sprints. Datapunt also aims to collaborate openly by sharing code on GitHub and helping establish standards.
The Large-scale Reference Database of Flanders as Open Data - Liesbet De WolfOpen Knowledge Belgium
The Large-scale Reference Database of Flanders (LRD) is a public-private partnership that contains geographic reference data for Flanders including 4.3 million buildings, 64,000 km of roads, and 4.7 million parcels. It is managed and updated by the Flemish government agency Informatie Vlaanderen. As of 2015, the LRD is available as open data through web services and downloadable files with conditions for use. The LRD is used in many applications by government, private companies and citizens as an authoritative source of geographic information for Flanders.
Open Government Data in the City of ViennaThomas Jöchler
The document discusses open government data initiatives in Vienna, Austria. It provides background on Thomas Jöchler and his role in open data projects at wien.at. It outlines the motivations for launching Vienna's open data portal in 2011, including support from civil society and the local government. The portal features a data catalogue with datasets across various topics that are available in open formats and under a CC-BY license to encourage reuse. Several apps have been developed using the open data, related to public services like transportation, infrastructure, and events. The conclusion emphasizes continuing to share more content as open data and communicate benefits to engage users.
The document summarizes Barcelona's Digital City Plan for 2017-2020, which includes several government measures related to open data and digitization. The plan focuses on 5 strategic areas: data sovereignty, ethical data management, developing a city-wide data infrastructure called CityOS, using data to drive internal innovation, and sharing data through a data commons. It will be implemented according to a scheduled timeline and coordinated by a board for transversal data coordination alongside the Municipal Data Office.
Digital transformation of health insurance vikasr2508
this is a proposed solution to the challenges & changing roles of health insurance companies in the digital age.Changing expectations of digital consumer, increasing incidence of life style related NCDs & increasing cost of healthcare delivery requires new thinking. Digital tools can help health insurers stay connected & impact behaviours of consumers to improve their health & reduce costs.
#11ways Research - Does communication really make a difference?Dana Poole
Good communications practice and organizational performance are inextricably linked.
Our 2014 survey of 81 organizations, across 10 countries with approx 390,000 employees identified 11 challenges that today's communicators are facing. We saw a link between some of the 11 factors identified and organizational underperformance.
This year have updated the data in order to analyse year-on-year trends.
The document provides guidance on writing effective bug reports to help ensure bugs get fixed. Key points include:
1) Bug reports should be reproducible, specific, and assign a unique identifier.
2) Clearly specify steps to reproduce the bug, expected results, and actual results.
3) Use a standardized template to maintain consistency and provide necessary details about the bug.
The document discusses the role of patient empowerment in healthcare-associated infection (HHC) prevention. It provides a history of patient empowerment models dating back to 1982 when patients were first encouraged to ask healthcare workers to wash their hands. An empowerment model called Partners in Your Care was developed in 1997 where patients were trained to ask healthcare workers "Did you wash/sanitize your hands?". Studies from 1997-2006 showed this model increased hand hygiene compliance by 34-100% in various healthcare settings. The document argues that while patient empowerment is feasible, some evidence suggests it may be necessary to improve hand hygiene. It concludes that the focus should be on building programs that utilize patients' existing willingness to play an active role
The document contains various short phrases, words, and lists with bullet points about different topics including locations, tasks, groups, classes, and slide titles but does not provide an overall cohesive message or story in a single paragraph of text. It appears to be notes or an outline covering multiple unrelated subjects.
Announcements- Wednesday, March 29, 2017Ken Stayner
There will be a short band meeting today at the start of lunch in the music room. The After Hours Math Support Program will take place on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 2:30-4:00pm from March 28th to May 9th. Students interested in participating should see their math teacher for a registration form. Grade 9 students interested in the Dodgeball Tournament on May 2nd should sign up on the bulletin board outside the Phys.Ed office by March 31st. The Town of Wasaga Beach is accepting nominations for their Outstanding Youth Award until March 31st.
Comunicación "Mediando en las turbulentas aguas del mundo digital: APPTK.es, un aliado para explorar nuevas lecturas para niños y jóvenes" presentada en el I Congreso Iberoamericano de Memorias del agua: lecturas, ecología y educación. Sevilla 23 y 24 de marzo de 2017
Giurisprudenza tributaria vicentina di merito (settembre - dicembre 2016)University of Ferrara
Presentazione utilizzata durante l'incontro tenuto presso l'Ordine dei dottori commercialisti e degli esperti contabili di Vicenza in data 30 marzo 2017
Draft Roadmap to Improve Primary Education & Health in DelhiRachit Seth
Draft Roadmap to Improve Primary Education & Health in Delhi, presented by Shri Salman Khurshid, Shri Shashi Tharoor & Shri Ajay Maken for Delhi MCD Elections 2017
Bibdoc 2016 - Maitriser la lecture : de la maternelle à l'université. Enjeux ...Bibdoc 37
Pour maîtriser réellement la lecture numérique, les élèves doivent d’abord être de bons lecteurs. L’émergence des pratiques de lecture numérique à l’école ne sauraient donc se substituer à l’apprentissage des bases de la lecture traditionnelle. Aussi, les élèves doivent apprendre à maîtriser les nouvelles formes d’édition et d’organisation de l’information numérique : comprendre l’organisation du texte ou du site, naviguer au moyen des liens et accéder à la page où à la rubrique souhaitée ; évaluer la qualité et la crédibilité de l’information, mettre en relation plusieurs textes traitant du même sujet selon des perspectives différentes.
Si les difficultés de compréhension d'un texte sont normales à 11 ans, aujourd'hui de nombreux adultes sont démunis face aux besoins de formation à la lecture fonctionnelle. Quelles stratégies d'apprentissage mettre en place, et pour quel résultat attendu ?
Jean-François Rouet, Université de Poitiers, Directeur de recherches au CNRS, membre de l’équipe « capacités langagières et Interactions finalisées ».
Building a Spring Boot Application - Ask the Audience! (from JavaLand 2017)🎤 Hanno Embregts 🎸
Spring Boot makes it easy to create stand-alone Spring-based application that you can 'just run'. It uses a 'convention over configuration' approach to get you up and running in no-time, while offering all Spring features that you have grown fond of in the past years. In this session this is demonstrated by live-coding a Spring Boot application that will just work.
But audience beware, this is not your standard live-coding session'. Attendees will have a vital say in the session's content by defining the applications requ irements. Should it be an app to track your kitchen cupboard contents or do you want a simple task planner? It's up to you! Should it use MongoDB or Couchbase? You decide! Do you want an AngularJS front-end with a RESTful backend or do you prefer a classic web app with Thymeleaf templates? It's your call! Seriously.
During the session you get to make these decisions by participating in an online vote. And you will discover that Spring Boot is up to the task no matter what choices you make.
So what are you waiting for? Bring your own device, help shape the application that we're building and learn lots about Spring Boot in the process.
This session is intended for Java software engineers with an interest in Spring Boot. Some Spring experience could come in handy, but is not strictly necessary. After this session, you will know enough to start your own Spring Boot project.
O documento discute princípios e boas práticas para arquitetura de software e desenvolvimento, incluindo: (1) serviços orientados a arquitetura, (2) 12 fatores para aplicações em nuvem, (3) uso de padrões PSR e (4) importância de métricas, testes e automação.
The document discusses 10 emerging technologies for 2016 as identified by the World Economic Forum's Meta-Council on Emerging Technologies. The technologies are: 1) Nanosensors and the Internet of Nanothings, 2) Next Generation Batteries, 3) The Blockchain, 4) Two-Dimensional Materials, 5) Autonomous Vehicles, 6) Organs-on-chips, 7) Perovskite Solar Cells, 8) Open AI Ecosystem, 9) Optogenetics, and 10) Systems Metabolic Engineering. For each technology, the document provides a brief overview of the technology and its potential impacts and applications.
Презентация министра Правительства Москвы, руководителя Департамента информационных технологий города Москвы Артема Ермолаева на заседании Мосгордумы 29 марта 2017 г.
Webinar on 17 of May 2022.
Experiences from the IRIS Lighthouse Cities.
Urban Data Platforms are at the core of the digital transformation and the basis for data-driven solutions addressing the challenges of today’s cities and communities. An Urban Data Platform exploits modern digital technologies to bring together and integrate data flows within and across city systems and make data (re)sources accessible to participants in the cities’ ecosystem. The easy sharing of city data between city services, organizations, companies, and citizens provides many positive outcomes for society:
• can help streamline urban mobility systems
• deliver improved health and well-being outcomes
• reduce energy consumption and support the use of local low-carbon energy
• connecting city assets to enable more joined-up multi-purpose services and infrastructures
DTwin offers affordable open data services for cities that handles all technical requirements of EU open data directives, including collecting required data sets, checking data quality, creating visualizations, APIs, and forecasting models for economic and demographic trends, with their service costing less than hiring dedicated IT staff. Their solution involves cities uploading data to pre-filled Excel forms, after which DTwin hosts the open data platform and generates forecasts using models from renowned experts, and they offer discounted pilot projects to demonstrate their services.
Overview presentation of the CPaaS.io project given at the first year review meeting in Tokyo on October 5, 2017.
Disclaimer:
This document has been produced in the context of the CPaaS.io project which is jointly funded by the European Commission (grant agreement n° 723076) and NICT from Japan (management number 18302). All information provided in this document is provided "as is" and no guarantee or warranty is given that the information is fit for any particular purpose. The user thereof uses the information at its sole risk and liability. For the avoidance of all doubts, the European Commission and NICT have no liability in respect of this document, which is merely representing the view of the project consortium. This document is subject to change without notice.
The C3PO project aims to develop an open data-driven marketplace and ICT collaborative platform to facilitate collective urban development by integrating data from various sources, enabling dynamic simulation, coordination between stakeholders, and visualization tools to empower citizens and guide urban planning. By opening its data assets and APIs, the C3PO platform seeks to create new opportunities for ICT companies to develop applications that can improve the urban planning process and help address challenges faced by growing cities.
This document discusses open data initiatives in several major European cities. It provides examples of open data projects in Hamburg, Trier, Boston, Berlin and Helsinki that focus on transparency, citizen participation, and economic development. The document outlines common strategies employed, including having a clear focus area, standards for data quality and formats, and tools for collaboration. Key barriers mentioned include inter-organizational challenges and resistance to change. The conclusion states that open data is a key part of creating smart cities.
This document discusses open data initiatives in Gdańsk, Poland. It notes that open data has significant economic benefits, estimating a 0.4-4.1% increase in GDP. Gdańsk has an open data policy and shares various city datasets like expenditures, prices, and information requests. The city develops open source web applications using this data to engage residents and show the potential of open data. It also partners with civil society to collaboratively work on projects through an open platform.
This document discusses open data initiatives in Gdansk, Poland. It notes that open data has significant economic benefits, estimating a 0.4-4.1% increase to GDP from various studies. Gdansk has an open data policy and shares datasets to be reusable, credible, complete, and machine-readable. Examples of open data provided by Gdansk include city expenditure lists updated daily, a machine-readable city price list, and access to records of public information requests. The city develops open web applications using this data and shares the source code openly. It also supports an external civic engagement platform to connect officials and residents called CivilHub.org.
This document discusses open data initiatives in Gdansk, Poland. It notes that open data has significant economic benefits, with studies showing impacts of 0.4-4.1% of GDP. Gdansk has an open data policy and shares datasets to increase transparency, boost innovation, and engage residents. Examples of open data projects in Gdansk include a daily published city expenditure list, a machine-readable city price list, and web applications around issues like planting trees and waste collection. Gdansk aims to encourage open data use, share source codes, and facilitate collaborative work through a citizen engagement platform.
Big consolidated open data platform, [ui!]GrowSmarter
This document summarizes the results of the GrowSmarter project, which aimed to integrate infrastructure data from multiple European cities into consolidated open data platforms. The key points are:
1) An open urban data platform called "UrbanPULSE" was created to integrate 13 different data sources from infrastructure measures in Stockholm, Cologne, and Barcelona.
2) Lessons learned included the importance of gaining acceptance from data providers, developing use cases, establishing legal frameworks, and defining data quality before connecting sources.
3) The conclusions were that cities need standardized and flexible platforms, political support, and to handle data ethically and securely to ensure successful urban data sharing.
CITY DATA EXCHANGE – A MARKETPLACE FOR PUBLIC AND PRIVATE DATA - PETER BJØRN ...Big Data Week
Peter joined Hitachi Consulting in August 2015 as the leader of the City data Exchange in Copenhagen. Peter is no stranger to the initiative as he was leading the tender process from the client side where he was the Smart City Manager at the triple helix organisation CLEAN.
He is a well know smart city expert and has presented at several large international events including the Barcelona Smart City Expo, Smart to Future Cities in London and at the EU-China Smart City collaboration event in Beijing where he represented the City of Copenhagen. Peter also have more than 10 years of international consultant experience from the EU Commission, EU Parliament, OECD, Nordic Innovation Center and Danish government institutions. His expertise is in regional innovation systems, sector competitiveness studies and smart cities.
The document summarizes initiatives by Amsterdam Smart City to create a more livable city through smart technologies and open data. It discusses projects like:
1) A startup in residence program that provides training and support to startups working on smart city solutions, helping them pilot projects and access potential customers in the city administration.
2) Sharing traffic and other data openly through partnerships with companies like Google and TomTom to improve traffic flow and parking.
3) A "City Alerts" system to exchange emergency information between first responders to provide all relevant details during incidents.
4) A "Rainproof Amsterdam" project testing a smart roof that recycles rainwater, provides urban cooling, and supports urban
1. The GIS-Arena project developed a geographic information platform to gather maps, photos, real estate data, and addresses for use by municipalities and businesses. Political support helped small groups access important geographic data.
2. The platform provides a base for further applications and gives users flexibility. The project also developed an operating model for maintaining the platform.
3. The project aims to make geographic information accessible on a regional scale through a centralized database and interface. It brings together data from various sources and allows integration with other systems. Applications have already been created for public services, and the platform is appreciated.
This document discusses open data and public consultation initiatives in Gdańsk, Poland. It provides details on Gdańsk's open data policy, including datasets on city expenditures, prices, and responses to public information requests. It also describes efforts to encourage open data use, like applications to find tree planting locations and waste collection schedules. The document outlines a public consultation process for Gdańsk's 2030 development strategy involving residents, experts, and officials. It highlights platforms like CivilHub.org to connect officials and residents and participatory budgeting for citizens to propose and vote on city projects.
Forum Virium Helsinki is a non-profit organization that aims to create new digital services through cooperation between companies, public organizations, and citizens. Its mission is to develop internationally competitive services that meet real user needs. It focuses on areas like smart cities, wellbeing, new media, and sustainability. Forum Virium Helsinki is part of the City of Helsinki group and works to make the Helsinki metropolitan area a leader in digital services in Europe by supporting partnerships and growth among its members.
LiMux: El proyecto que ha ayudado a Munich a ahorrar 11 millones de euros. Pe...LibreCon
LiMux es el proyecto detrás de la migración a sistemas abiertos que ha permitido a Munich un ahorro de más de 13 millones de Euros. Este proyecto ha llevado las tecnologías abiertas a 11.000 terminales. Explicación de cómo ha sido el proceso por el cual una solución que costó apenas 350.000 dólares permite ahorrar millones a la Administración. Certificada para uso de la industria por el TÜV IT (ISO 9241), Servicio Técnico, Alemania.
Autor: Peter Hofmann – Lider Del Proyecto LiMux.
FVH Open Up The city: 6 Smart Spaces V Final Pekka Koponenforumvirium
http://events.forumvirium.fi/openupthecity/
Forum Virium Helsinki
Fourth Annual Seminar of Forum Virium Helsinki, Thursday 11th March 2010.
The seminar theme was Open up the City - Open data, design, interfaces and innovation
Speakers Presentations
We are providing these presentations as a courtesy to seminar visitors. Please contact the speakers themselves for permissions to use the material.
Similar to Open Spending Austria -.Offenerhaushalt.at at the SharingReuse-Conference 2017 (20)
Semantic MediaWiki als LinkedData Plattform. Folien für die Barcam-Session am 2. Kommunalen Barcamp von Bertelsmann Stiftung und Deutsches Institut für Urbanistik
This document discusses knowledge wikis and Semantic MediaWiki (SMW). SMW adds structured data and semantic web capabilities to MediaWiki wikis. It allows defining classes, properties, and relationships to build a knowledge graph. Properties can link to external vocabularies and identifiers. SMW supports querying the graph through its internal query language or by exporting data to a SPARQL endpoint. Use cases mentioned include history, knowledge management, and research wikis. The presenter is an expert in knowledge management and SMW who consults on its implementation and best practices.
Das OGD Cockpit ist eine auf Open-Source-Software basierende Fachanwendung zur Verwaltung von internen Datenkatalogen für Open-Data-Initiativen.
Einleitung beim ersten kommunalen Barcamp in Bochum. Organisiert von Bertelsmann Stiftung und DIFU.
Semantic MediaWiki for Community Driven Data SpacesBernhard Krabina
This document discusses using Semantic MediaWiki (SMW) to create a knowledge base for the CAF-Network.eu project. SMW allows adding structured data and semantic annotations to wiki pages. It outlines how SMW can be used to create pages about the Common Assessment Framework (CAF), link them to external vocabularies, and query the data in various formats. Reusing existing public sector vocabularies from the EU is recommended to align the project with linked open data standards.
This document summarizes the results of a 2021 survey about the usage of Semantic MediaWiki (SMW). The survey received 128 responses and asked users about the versions of SMW they use, popular features, related extensions, and the future of SMW. It presents the results of questions about SMW extensions and categorizes them into "Stars", "Question Marks", and "Poor Dogs" based on their growth and maintenance. It encourages users to get involved in the SMW community through participation on GitHub, mailing lists, social media, and the MW Stakeholders' Group to help improve, document, and spread awareness of SMW and its extensions.
Knowledge Graph Conference 2021
Semantic MediaWiki (SMW), which was introduced as early as in 2006, has since gone on to establish a vital community and is currently one of the few semantic wiki solutions still in existence. SMW is an extension of MediaWiki, the software used for Wikipedia and many other projects, resulting in a largely sustainable codebase and ecosystem. There are many reasons why SMW should not be overlooked by the knowledge graph community:
SMW is capable of directly connecting to several triple stores (Blazegraph, Virtuoso, Jena), which is why it can be considered an interface for entering data into knowledge graphs.
SMW can use its internal relational database (or ElasticSearch), enabling users to build simple knowledge graphs without in-depth knowledge about triple stores.
SMW has the built-in capability of exporting to RDF including building complete RDF data dumps that can be imported into existing knowledge graphs.
SMW has the capability to reuse existing ontologies by importing vocabularies and providing unique identifiers.
The explicit semantic content of Semantic MediaWiki is formally interpreted in the OWL DL ontology language and is made available in XML/RDF format.
A simple internal query language is available to query the internal knowledge graph from within SMW, without the requirement of having a SPARQL endpoint. However, extensions for implementing SPARQL in SMW are available as well.
SMW has the capability to enable data curation for experienced users responsible for the ontology as well as simple form-based input for regular users that can easily populate the KG with data.
There are several approaches to visualizing data in SMW, thus making the knowledge graph visible and interactive.
Implementing custom ontologies in SMW is quite easy, everything is built-in wiki pages (e.g. definition of properties and datatypes, forms and templates).
SMW has low barriers to implementation as it is a clean extension to MediaWiki, which is PHP software running on regular web hosts.
In the talk, I will give an overview of the mentioned aspects and highlight some main differences to Wikibase – which is an alternative approach for managing structured data in MediaWiki – as well as the current limitations of SMW.
Mehr offene Daten in Kommunen - Smart Country 2021Bernhard Krabina
Anfang März veröffentlichen wir den bundesweiten Musterdatenkatalog für Open Data in Kommunen.
Im Rahmen unserer Online-Veranstaltung „Mehr Open Data in Kommunen“ stellen wir Ihnen den Musterdatenkatalog vor. Bisher umfasste er alle Kommunen in Nordrhein-Westfalen, die offene Daten veröffentlichen. Die weiter entwickelte Version umfasst jetzt Kommunen aus ganz Deutschland.
This document discusses how to use Semantic MediaWiki (SMW) to publish open linked data. SMW can annotate data with metadata and export it using semantic web standards. The document provides examples of how to link SMW data to external identifiers like Wikidata, use external vocabularies via import declarations, and reconcile SMW data with Wikidata to enable data sharing across platforms. Future developments may improve integration with Wikidata through properties mapping and data pushing capabilities.
Knowledge Management in Austrian Government institutionsBernhard Krabina
The document discusses the history and current state of knowledge management in Austrian government institutions. It notes that a 2010 study found that 70% of federal ministries mentioned knowledge management to some extent. Since then, Austria developed a federal knowledge management strategy in 2012 and a guideline and toolbox in 2017 to help retain knowledge as nearly half of government employees retire by 2028. Currently, Austria is developing an open-source knowledge management portal called wissensmanagement.gv.at to connect knowledge management practitioners across the government.
This document provides a history of Semantic MediaWiki (SMW) and Wikidata, including:
- SMW was created in 2006 as a MediaWiki extension to add structured data to wiki pages. It is now used on over 1500 sites.
- Wikidata launched in 2012 as a structured database to provide common facts across Wikimedia projects.
- SMW allows adding both unstructured text and structured data to wiki pages through features like online forms, queries, and semantic web standards.
- An example FINA wiki uses several SMW extensions to integrate structured data from Wikidata into person pages and visualizations.
- Opportunities are discussed to further link SMW and Wikidata data through mappings, reconciliation
FINA Wiki brings together evidence primarily about numismatic correspondence that was exchanged before 1800 and is part of the project "Fontes Inediti Numismaticae Antiquae (FINA)"
Presentation at Semantic MediaWiki conference 2019 in Paris
Rethinking public sector data ecosystems - Open Government Data, Semantic Med...Bernhard Krabina
In the session the question will be discussed how data from the public sector is generated and made publicly available. Very often, cumbersome processes are in place until finally data (e. g. from official statistics) reach Wikipeda. Often this is done through publication in Open Government Data portals and voluntary efforts to add official data as source in Wikidata.
In the talk, a redesign of the ecosystem of how public sector data is generated, distributed and made available will be presented, facilitating Semantic MediaWiki as data tool. The relation to Wikidata/Wikibase, Open Governmen Data portals and official statistics will be discussed.
Aktives Datenschutzmanagement mit Datencockpit.atBernhard Krabina
Das Datencockpit ist eine Open-Source-Lösung für die Erfüllung der Dokumentationspflichten, die sich aus der DSGVO ergeben.
Vortrag bei der Jahrestagung betrieblicher Datenschutz der ARGE Daten 2018.
The Power of Community Newsletters: A Case Study from Wolverton and Greenleys...Scribe
YOU WILL DISCOVER:
The engaging history and evolution of Wolverton and Greenleys Town Council's newsletter
Strategies for producing a successful community newsletter and generating income through advertising
The decision-making process behind moving newsletter design from in-house to outsourcing and its impacts
Dive into the success story of Wolverton and Greenleys Town Council's newsletter in this insightful webinar. Hear from Mandy Shipp and Jemma English about the newsletter's journey from its inception to becoming a vital part of their community's communication, including its history, production process, and revenue generation through advertising. Discover the reasons behind outsourcing its design and the benefits this brought. Ideal for anyone involved in community engagement or interested in starting their own newsletter.
Causes Supporting Charity for Elderly PeopleSERUDS INDIA
Around 52% of the elder populations in India are living in poverty and poor health problems. In this technological world, they became very backward without having any knowledge about technology. So they’re dependent on working hard for their daily earnings, they’re physically very weak. Thus charity organizations are made to help and raise them and also to give them hope to live.
Donate Us:
https://serudsindia.org/supporting-charity-for-elderly-people-india/
#oldagehome, #donateforeldersinkurnool, #donateforelders, #donationforelders, #donateforoldpeople, #donationforoldpeople, #sponsorforelders, #sponsorforoldpeople, #donationforcharity, #charity, #seruds, #kurnool, #donateforoldagehome, #oldagehomedonation
How To Cultivate Community Affinity Throughout The Generosity JourneyAggregage
This session will dive into how to create rich generosity experiences that foster long-lasting relationships. You’ll walk away with actionable insights to redefine how you engage with your supporters — emphasizing trust, engagement, and community!
Presentation by Rebecca Sachs and Joshua Varcie, analysts in CBO’s Health Analysis Division, at the 13th Annual Conference of the American Society of Health Economists.
FT author
Amanda Chu
US Energy Reporter
PREMIUM
June 20 2024
Good morning and welcome back to Energy Source, coming to you from New York, where the city swelters in its first heatwave of the season.
Nearly 80 million people were under alerts in the US north-east and midwest yesterday as temperatures in some municipalities reached record highs in a test to the country’s rickety power grid.
In other news, the Financial Times has a new Big Read this morning on Russia’s grip on nuclear power. Despite sanctions on its economy, the Kremlin continues to be an unrivalled exporter of nuclear power plants, building more than half of all reactors under construction globally. Read how Moscow is using these projects to wield global influence.
Today’s Energy Source dives into the latest Statistical Review of World Energy, the industry’s annual stocktake of global energy consumption. The report was published for more than 70 years by BP before it was passed over to the Energy Institute last year. The oil major remains a contributor.
Data Drill looks at a new analysis from the World Bank showing gas flaring is at a four-year high.
Thanks for reading,
Amanda
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New report offers sobering view of the energy transition
Every year the Statistical Review of World Energy offers a behemoth of data on the state of the global energy market. This year’s findings highlight the world’s insatiable demand for energy and the need to speed up the pace of decarbonisation.
Here are our four main takeaways from this year’s report:
Fossil fuel consumption — and emissions — are at record highs
Countries burnt record amounts of oil and coal last year, sending global fossil fuel consumption and emissions to all-time highs, the Energy Institute reported. Oil demand grew 2.6 per cent, surpassing 100mn barrels per day for the first time.
Meanwhile, the share of fossil fuels in the energy mix declined slightly by half a percentage point, but still made up more than 81 per cent of consumption.
2. [Project/Solution name or Logo]
Agenda
• Context
• State of play
• Design
• Governance
• Impact and results
• Sustainability
• Next Steps
3. Situation for Citizens
after 5 Years of Open Data
• total of 2100 municipalities in Austria
• smaller municipalities: print version in the town hall
• larger cities provide ~300 page PDF documents online
• 9 municipalities on Open Data portal data.gv.at = 0.4 %
• 5 visualisations = 0.2%
• international examples: mostly individual projects
4. Solution
• data from ALL municipalities
• 2001-2015
• login credentials for mayors
• 5 standard visualisations
• download of data
• upload for municipal data
• iFrame versions
• free of charge
a turn-key
solution for public
sector spending:
“2-Click
Open
Government”
10. Sustainability
• hard to reach out to
smaller municipalities
• some became members
of our association
• no business model yet
• additional services with
additional budget
Infrastructure
investment on a map
Visualisation of grants
and subsidies
Online game
Internal benchmarking
tool
11. Next steps
• data.offenerhaushalt.at just launched
• data upload from municipal finance software planned
• grants and subsidies of Innsbruck, Wels and Bregenz coming up
• develop a business model:
o get more municipalities to join in additional services
o premium services for paying customers?
• 8 more provinces auf Austria…
• sell/re-use it in other countries?
12. Contact Details
Follow us on Twitter @KDZ_Austria
Contact us at offenerhaushalt@kdz.or.at
[Project/Solution name or Logo]