Trabalhar em Conjunto para um Mundo Melhor?
Considerada por muitos como a “mãe” do modelo “Living Lab”, continua a explorar todas as potencialidades do modelo de colaboração nas diversas áreas das atividades humanas e a observar como está a ser aplicado e a surtir efeitos no mundo inteiro. O modelo “Living Lab” proporciona uma comunicação franca e aberta entre “stakeholders” de setores complexos e transdisciplinares, sempre com o objetivo de introduzir abordagens abertas e colaborativas para permitir ir mais longe no design e na inovação. O tema em palco irá assentar na forma como as empresas, as agências públicas e académicas, as comunidades, o empreendedorismo social, os designers, as redes sociais e os cidadãos no geral, poderão colaborar na resolução dos maiores e mais atuais desafios da sociedade. Seija Kulkki argumenta que a Europa tem a oportunidade única para transformar as suas fundações sociais e económicas. No entanto precisamos de aprender a nos organizarmos em torno da resolução de problemas – podendo desta abordagem nascer novos modelos e ecossistemas de inovação aberta que permitem a partilha de valores às escalas local, regional, nacional e global. Um desafio relevante é como gerir a investigação, o desenvolvimento e inovação colaborativa e estratégica em torno das alterações climáticas, do envelhecimento populacional, do bem-estar, da eficiência energética, da pobreza, da modernização do trânsito e de outros serviços e infraestruturas, garantindo sempre a segurança das nossas sociedades.
Strategy for Promoting Sustainable Cities in IndiaJIT KUMAR GUPTA
Paper is an attempt to look at the options to make cities more livable, sustainable, productive, effective, efficient and inclusive in the face of rapid, massive,unplanned and haphazard urbanisation.
Strategy for Promoting Sustainable Cities in IndiaJIT KUMAR GUPTA
Paper is an attempt to look at the options to make cities more livable, sustainable, productive, effective, efficient and inclusive in the face of rapid, massive,unplanned and haphazard urbanisation.
The Political Meaning of Informal Urbanisation: exploring the meaning of posi...Roberto Rocco
Lecture prepared for the course INTERNATIONAL URBANISATION AND HOUSING ISSUES
(Course # 34:970:655) at Rutgers University, Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, March 30, 2015/ Updated for the Salzburg Congress on Urban Planning and Development, Addis Ababa, May 2016
Strategy and Options for Planning Inclusive CitiesJIT KUMAR GUPTA
Presentation looks at the context of inclusive cities, its relevance in the Indian context, problems faced by Indian cities and what are the options to make cities inclusive, and sustainable
Paper tries to look at the planning, growth and development of cities and the manner in which they can be made sustainable in the context of 17 SDG. It tries to define agenda for their planning and governance while considering the new urbanism.
Options for making affordable housing for all a reality in urban India (1)JIT KUMAR GUPTA
Presentation tries to briefly dwelling on affordable housing in the context of India- Explaining the role and importance of housing in urban spaces , issues, challenges and roadblock faced and options available for making housing for all a distinct reality
AUTONOMA - Orestes Kolokouris & Sofia Nikolaidou - Transition Movements in Gr...Autonoma Conference
Transition movements in cities are broadly emerging worldwide as new forms of alternative citizen-driven practices and socio-political participation addressing the raising awareness of environmental, economic, social, planning and food issues. Resistance initiatives for food and space justice discuss the growing concerns about the achievement of long-term security and resilience of food system especially in crisis contexts, about who has access and power to land or who is marginalized or excluded and how can community-based initiatives build self-reliant systems founded on ecological principles.
In Greece, the collapse of the consumption and construction-led growth after the period of economic euphoria and rapid GDP growth in the early 2000's and the consequent financial crisis that unfolded in mid-2008, have radically changed Greek society, politics and the economy. While the current depression and the dramatic humanitarian crisis have shifted politicians’ attention away from the climate and ecology, “transition and recovery movements” work hard to keep the environment on the agenda. In a time when traditional green movements and civil society actors are receding due to depression and uncertainty, alternative social movements related to urban agriculture or guerilla gardening initiatives, access to open/public space, solidarity economy, de-growth or real democracy, progress due to the crisis. In particular, initiatives that deal with issues such as urban poverty, food delocalization and environmental constraints favor the emergence of localised consumer-producer networks and spontaneous civic or pubic initiatives aiming at reintegrating agriculture into the city. In this article we focus on the development of new forms of social movements and solidarity initiatives that we consider to be part of the green ideals and could help the Greek society to get out of depression. We describe those social movements as “transition and recovery movements” for they address social and spatial injustices through new forms of space appropriation and decision-making which can redefine livelihoods in today’s Greek cities, create political space for civil society and build an enabling environment for new forms of democratic practice.
Strategies for Promoting Urban SustainabilityJIT KUMAR GUPTA
Paper is an attempt to define agenda for planning sustainable cities using different options of planning, transportation, green buildings, ruralisation etc
New Urban Challenges in Times of Financial CapitalismRoberto Rocco
This is a lecture originally prepared for the LANDac conference in Utrecht 2016. This is an adapted version for the ALUMNI DAY of the chair of Human Geography - International Development Studies at the University of Utrecht,
Luc Soete spoke on the old and new Manifestos, globalisation, population, innovation and research at the Manifesto Roundtable in the Hague, 24 November 2009.
The Roundtable was hosted by the 3TU.Centre for Ethics and Technology - www.ethicsandtechnology.eu
Luc Soete is professor of international economic relations at Maastricht University and director of UNU-MERIT.
To find out more about the Roundtables, visit www.anewmanifesto.org
Preparing and Empowering Cities in the face of Pandemics- Covid 19.JIT KUMAR GUPTA
Paper makes an attempt to understand the context and impact of Covid 19 on the urban settlements, people and communities in terms of operation, economy, mobility, healthcare etc. and tries to define the issue which needs to be addressed and options which need to be exercised in order to enable and empower cities to counter to the negative effect of all natural and manmade disasters to make them better places to live and work.
Planning Smart cities- Concepts and Practices.docxJIT KUMAR GUPTA
Planning remains universal for making cities growth rational and logical. In the absence of planned development, cities cannot be made to grow in an orderly manner. Planners have been making cities different and distinct using different agenda for planning and development of cities. Currently planners are making cities safe, resilient, sustainable and livable. Many nations are vouching to make cities smart. Smart city is not a new concept .It has been followed globally to improve the quality of living and promote operational efficiency and productivity of the cities. It is an attempt to make cities more livable, sustainable and for creating a brand image to attract investment and make them a tourist destination. Globally , smart cities are characterized by high degree of environmental consciousness; using information technology to promote energy/ resources efficiency; creation of knowledge infrastructure; promoting sustainable economic development and high quality of life; ensuring wise management of natural resources through participatory action. According to Forbe, the structure of smart cities will have to be built on eight pillars involving: ‘smart governance, smart energy, smart buildings, smart mobility, smart infrastructure, smart technology, smart healthcare and smart citizens. Based on detailed studies and in depth analysis made of the most successful case studies globally, as how to transform cities into great places to live and make a city great, Mckinsey’s suggests three pronged strategies involving, achieving smart growth, do more with less and win support for change. Considering the entire gamut of urban settlements , a city can be made Smart only if it is planned smart, developed smart, operated smart, financed smart and governed smartly .
The Myth of Participation, or how participation will deliver the Right to the...Roberto Rocco
Despiste the provocative title, this lecture delivers an account of how the idea of Active Citizenship has evolved in history and how this idea is related to the Right to the City. True citizen participation has the potential to deliver the right to the city. In this lecture, I explore a very old line of thought that goes from Aristotle and Plato, to Rousseau, Hannah Arendt, Henri Lefebvre and David Harvey, all of whom affirm the power of active or engaged citizenship in shaping the city while simultaneously shaping us.
Bernard Lietaer - a tőke típusai: természeti, épített, technológiai, társadalmi, történelmi-és-kulturális, intézményi, vállalkozói, pénzügyi, kihasználatlan termelékenység tőkéje.
Ten types of capital: natural, built, technological, social, historic-and-cultural, human, institutional, entrepreneurial, financial, potential exchange capital.
Ma a világban mindent pénzzel mérünk. Csak a pénz-ügyi tőkét ismerjük el. Valójában azonban számos másfajta tőke létezik, amik a kizáró gondolkodás miatt pusztulnak. Emiatt van szükség kiegészítő pénzemekre, mert a sztenderd pénz csak a pénztőkére való igazán. És a tudatosság féken tartására.
Building Carbon neutral Cities Through Green RoofJIT KUMAR GUPTA
building are known to be largest consumers of enrgy, resources, water and generators of waste. They consume largest energy and responsible for climate change and global warming. Within buildings roof area remains the arae which is most unused, abused and misused space, which can be effectively leveraged to minimise the adverse impact of buildings on resources, energy, climate change etc. It can cool the buildings, bring down the energy use, make cities free from disasters and do large number of positivity to buildinga, climate, environment . Green roofs remains an area, potential of which remains largely unexplored. It needs to studied, analysed with policy options evolved to make it a distict reality in the buildings
urbanization , definition and causes, effects of urbanization on rural areas
impact of growing urbanization on urban life, health , housing and transportation ,
different types of migration and its impact on urban form
A New Urban Agenda in Times of Financial CapitalismRoberto Rocco
Keynote presentation by Roberto Rocco at the LANDAC Conference (Land Governance for Equitable and Sustainable Development), Muntgebouw, Utrecht, June 30 2016.
The 2016 LANDac Annual International Land Conference ‘Land governance in the context of urbanisation and climate change: Linking the rural and the urban’ will take place on Thursday 30 June and Friday 1 July in Utrecht, the Netherlands (Muntgebouw). The conference builds on the success of the 2015 International Conference in which LANDac brought together stakeholders from around the world, from a variety of backgrounds. The 2016 conference focuses on topics related to rural-urban land governance and climate change. For more information, visit http://www.landgovernance.org
The Political Meaning of Informal Urbanisation: exploring the meaning of posi...Roberto Rocco
Lecture prepared for the course INTERNATIONAL URBANISATION AND HOUSING ISSUES
(Course # 34:970:655) at Rutgers University, Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, March 30, 2015/ Updated for the Salzburg Congress on Urban Planning and Development, Addis Ababa, May 2016
Strategy and Options for Planning Inclusive CitiesJIT KUMAR GUPTA
Presentation looks at the context of inclusive cities, its relevance in the Indian context, problems faced by Indian cities and what are the options to make cities inclusive, and sustainable
Paper tries to look at the planning, growth and development of cities and the manner in which they can be made sustainable in the context of 17 SDG. It tries to define agenda for their planning and governance while considering the new urbanism.
Options for making affordable housing for all a reality in urban India (1)JIT KUMAR GUPTA
Presentation tries to briefly dwelling on affordable housing in the context of India- Explaining the role and importance of housing in urban spaces , issues, challenges and roadblock faced and options available for making housing for all a distinct reality
AUTONOMA - Orestes Kolokouris & Sofia Nikolaidou - Transition Movements in Gr...Autonoma Conference
Transition movements in cities are broadly emerging worldwide as new forms of alternative citizen-driven practices and socio-political participation addressing the raising awareness of environmental, economic, social, planning and food issues. Resistance initiatives for food and space justice discuss the growing concerns about the achievement of long-term security and resilience of food system especially in crisis contexts, about who has access and power to land or who is marginalized or excluded and how can community-based initiatives build self-reliant systems founded on ecological principles.
In Greece, the collapse of the consumption and construction-led growth after the period of economic euphoria and rapid GDP growth in the early 2000's and the consequent financial crisis that unfolded in mid-2008, have radically changed Greek society, politics and the economy. While the current depression and the dramatic humanitarian crisis have shifted politicians’ attention away from the climate and ecology, “transition and recovery movements” work hard to keep the environment on the agenda. In a time when traditional green movements and civil society actors are receding due to depression and uncertainty, alternative social movements related to urban agriculture or guerilla gardening initiatives, access to open/public space, solidarity economy, de-growth or real democracy, progress due to the crisis. In particular, initiatives that deal with issues such as urban poverty, food delocalization and environmental constraints favor the emergence of localised consumer-producer networks and spontaneous civic or pubic initiatives aiming at reintegrating agriculture into the city. In this article we focus on the development of new forms of social movements and solidarity initiatives that we consider to be part of the green ideals and could help the Greek society to get out of depression. We describe those social movements as “transition and recovery movements” for they address social and spatial injustices through new forms of space appropriation and decision-making which can redefine livelihoods in today’s Greek cities, create political space for civil society and build an enabling environment for new forms of democratic practice.
Strategies for Promoting Urban SustainabilityJIT KUMAR GUPTA
Paper is an attempt to define agenda for planning sustainable cities using different options of planning, transportation, green buildings, ruralisation etc
New Urban Challenges in Times of Financial CapitalismRoberto Rocco
This is a lecture originally prepared for the LANDac conference in Utrecht 2016. This is an adapted version for the ALUMNI DAY of the chair of Human Geography - International Development Studies at the University of Utrecht,
Luc Soete spoke on the old and new Manifestos, globalisation, population, innovation and research at the Manifesto Roundtable in the Hague, 24 November 2009.
The Roundtable was hosted by the 3TU.Centre for Ethics and Technology - www.ethicsandtechnology.eu
Luc Soete is professor of international economic relations at Maastricht University and director of UNU-MERIT.
To find out more about the Roundtables, visit www.anewmanifesto.org
Preparing and Empowering Cities in the face of Pandemics- Covid 19.JIT KUMAR GUPTA
Paper makes an attempt to understand the context and impact of Covid 19 on the urban settlements, people and communities in terms of operation, economy, mobility, healthcare etc. and tries to define the issue which needs to be addressed and options which need to be exercised in order to enable and empower cities to counter to the negative effect of all natural and manmade disasters to make them better places to live and work.
Planning Smart cities- Concepts and Practices.docxJIT KUMAR GUPTA
Planning remains universal for making cities growth rational and logical. In the absence of planned development, cities cannot be made to grow in an orderly manner. Planners have been making cities different and distinct using different agenda for planning and development of cities. Currently planners are making cities safe, resilient, sustainable and livable. Many nations are vouching to make cities smart. Smart city is not a new concept .It has been followed globally to improve the quality of living and promote operational efficiency and productivity of the cities. It is an attempt to make cities more livable, sustainable and for creating a brand image to attract investment and make them a tourist destination. Globally , smart cities are characterized by high degree of environmental consciousness; using information technology to promote energy/ resources efficiency; creation of knowledge infrastructure; promoting sustainable economic development and high quality of life; ensuring wise management of natural resources through participatory action. According to Forbe, the structure of smart cities will have to be built on eight pillars involving: ‘smart governance, smart energy, smart buildings, smart mobility, smart infrastructure, smart technology, smart healthcare and smart citizens. Based on detailed studies and in depth analysis made of the most successful case studies globally, as how to transform cities into great places to live and make a city great, Mckinsey’s suggests three pronged strategies involving, achieving smart growth, do more with less and win support for change. Considering the entire gamut of urban settlements , a city can be made Smart only if it is planned smart, developed smart, operated smart, financed smart and governed smartly .
The Myth of Participation, or how participation will deliver the Right to the...Roberto Rocco
Despiste the provocative title, this lecture delivers an account of how the idea of Active Citizenship has evolved in history and how this idea is related to the Right to the City. True citizen participation has the potential to deliver the right to the city. In this lecture, I explore a very old line of thought that goes from Aristotle and Plato, to Rousseau, Hannah Arendt, Henri Lefebvre and David Harvey, all of whom affirm the power of active or engaged citizenship in shaping the city while simultaneously shaping us.
Bernard Lietaer - a tőke típusai: természeti, épített, technológiai, társadalmi, történelmi-és-kulturális, intézményi, vállalkozói, pénzügyi, kihasználatlan termelékenység tőkéje.
Ten types of capital: natural, built, technological, social, historic-and-cultural, human, institutional, entrepreneurial, financial, potential exchange capital.
Ma a világban mindent pénzzel mérünk. Csak a pénz-ügyi tőkét ismerjük el. Valójában azonban számos másfajta tőke létezik, amik a kizáró gondolkodás miatt pusztulnak. Emiatt van szükség kiegészítő pénzemekre, mert a sztenderd pénz csak a pénztőkére való igazán. És a tudatosság féken tartására.
Building Carbon neutral Cities Through Green RoofJIT KUMAR GUPTA
building are known to be largest consumers of enrgy, resources, water and generators of waste. They consume largest energy and responsible for climate change and global warming. Within buildings roof area remains the arae which is most unused, abused and misused space, which can be effectively leveraged to minimise the adverse impact of buildings on resources, energy, climate change etc. It can cool the buildings, bring down the energy use, make cities free from disasters and do large number of positivity to buildinga, climate, environment . Green roofs remains an area, potential of which remains largely unexplored. It needs to studied, analysed with policy options evolved to make it a distict reality in the buildings
urbanization , definition and causes, effects of urbanization on rural areas
impact of growing urbanization on urban life, health , housing and transportation ,
different types of migration and its impact on urban form
A New Urban Agenda in Times of Financial CapitalismRoberto Rocco
Keynote presentation by Roberto Rocco at the LANDAC Conference (Land Governance for Equitable and Sustainable Development), Muntgebouw, Utrecht, June 30 2016.
The 2016 LANDac Annual International Land Conference ‘Land governance in the context of urbanisation and climate change: Linking the rural and the urban’ will take place on Thursday 30 June and Friday 1 July in Utrecht, the Netherlands (Muntgebouw). The conference builds on the success of the 2015 International Conference in which LANDac brought together stakeholders from around the world, from a variety of backgrounds. The 2016 conference focuses on topics related to rural-urban land governance and climate change. For more information, visit http://www.landgovernance.org
Presentationen visar hur du tar fram kompetensprofiler som speglar vad olika roller gör i arbetet och som är detaljerad nog att kunna användas för målstyrd utbildning.
Nancy Barret "Aprendizaje creativo para ciudades creativas: liberar/desbloque...Ciudades Creativas
Ponencia de Nancy Barret el jueves 26 de noviembre en las II Jornadas Ciudades Creativas en Barcelona.Aprendizaje creativo para ciudades creativas: liberar/desbloquear los activos del entorno urbano. El caso “Creative Partnerships”
Ανάπτυξη συνεργασιών μέσα από Ευρωπαϊκά προγράμματα : η εμπειρία της ΒέροιαςLevadia Library
Ασπασία Τασιοπούλου & Αντώνης Γκαλίτσιος (Δημόσια Κεντρική Βιβλιοθήκη Βέροιας): "Ανάπτυξη συνεργασιών μέσα από Ευρωπαϊκά προγράμματα : η εμπειρία της Βέροιας"
Στο πλαίσιο της υλοποίησης του έργου "Συλλογικός Κατάλογος Δημοσίων Βιβλιοθηκών" πραγματοποιήθηκε η ημερίδα με θέμα:
¨Συνεργασίες λαϊκών βιβλιοθηκών
Εργαλεία, πρότυπα και συλλογικοί κατάλογοι"
Λιβαδειά, Συνεδριακό Κέντρο Κρύας - 24 Νοεμβρίου 2006
The Changing Shape of Global Development Finance – Impacts and implication for aid, development, the South and the Bretton Woods Institutions. The South Bank: a Brazilian Perspective (Fabrina Furtado - Brazil Network on Multilateral Financial Institutions and Jubilee South Americas)
Οργάνωση και λειτουργία της Δημοτικής Βιβλιοθήκης Πάρου μέσα από συνεργασίες ...Levadia Library
Αλέγκρε Εσκαλονή (Υπεύθυνη Δημοτικής Βιβλιοθήκης Πάρου): "Οργάνωση και λειτουργία της Δημοτικής Βιβλιοθήκης Πάρου μέσα από συνεργασίες και εργαλεία"
Στο πλαίσιο της υλοποίησης του έργου "Συλλογικός Κατάλογος Δημοσίων Βιβλιοθηκών" πραγματοποιήθηκε η ημερίδα με θέμα:
¨Συνεργασίες λαϊκών βιβλιοθηκών
Εργαλεία, πρότυπα και συλλογικοί κατάλογοι"
Λιβαδειά, Συνεδριακό Κέντρο Κρύας - 24 Νοεμβρίου 2006
O enfoque deste Workshop está na demonstração das oportunidades de intervenção que resultam da actual conjuntura no âmbito da CERTIFICAÇÃO ENERGÉTICA E DA QUALIDADE DO AR EM EDIFÍCIOS, dando relevo ao CICLO DE VIDA no Planeamento Urbano e no Edificado. O Workshop é dirigido a todos os decisores que influenciam a qualidade de construção do meio edificado.
Information Society is a term for a society in which the creation, distribution, and manipulation of information has become the most significant economic and cultural activity.
Culture of Digital Era as an Emerging Culture in Society due to Technologyjournal ijrtem
Abstract: Humans always live in communities. The social life started as family or clans and the modern day large cities are formed in time. At each period of human communities, science and technology had affected the life and changed the society significantly. The change due to science and technology is accepted voluntarily or the society is sometimes forced to change through the technological developments. The communities have never been static. The science and technology changed the religious, ethical values of the society sometimes considerably. Even though these changes are mostly insignificant, the accumulated culture has resulted in the modern day civilization. The change and transformation continues dynamically and will never stop. In this work, some major modern cultures emerged due to digital technologyare studied. Keywords Change. Civilization.Community.Development. Ethics. Scienc
The post-industrial society was born after the 1970s. There was a type of society that was no longer based on agricultural production, nor on industry, but on the production of information, services, symbols (semiotics) and aesthetics. The post-industrial society comes from a set of situations brought about by the advent of industry, such as increasing the average life of the population, technological development, the diffusion of schooling and the diffusion of the media. Post-industrial society differs greatly from industrial society, and this is clearly seen in the service sector, which today accounts for about 60% of the total labor force, rather than industry and agriculture combined, since intellectual work is very more frequent than manual work and creativity, more important than the simple execution of tasks.
O Papel Do Setor Informal No Sistema Urbano
Professora na Universidade de Berkley, fundadora e presidente da Organização sem fins lucrativos Mega-Cities Project, centrou a sua atividade profissional, durante mais de 20 anos nas favelas do Rio de Janeiro e, mais tarde, em aglomerados informais do mundo inteiro. Desenvolve trabalho e tem o objetivo de tornar mais humanizados, funcionais e salubres estes mesmos contextos que absorvem uma grande componente da migração de populações rurais para megacidades, sem lhes retirar identidade. Através de modelos de aprendizagem experimental e coletivos, visa ainda reduzir o espaço temporal entre o desenvolvimento de uma boa prática e a sua respetiva implementação.
Abstract da Conferência:
O Mega-Cities Project identificou e transferiu um conjunto de inovações urbanas que se encontram em processo de replicação e adaptação, criando as condições para influenciar políticas públicas. Transmitir este testemunho e conhecimentos para a próxima geração de responsáveis pelo planeamento urbano de cidades, assim conquistando a dedicação destes para a criação de cidades mais sustentáveis, salubres e acolhedoras. A nova etapa, denominada Mega-Cities/Mega-Change or MC2, poderá contar com o envolvimento de Lisboa. Abrange também o trabalho desenvolvido no âmbito do livro “FAVELA” nas perspetivas da investigação, da prática e políticas públicas a favor de uma sustentabilidade urbana inclusiva.
Dr. Perlman will discuss the Urban Innovations that The Mega-Cities Project has identified and transferred and what has been learned about innovation replication/adaptation and the conditions for scaling-up into public policy. Her current focus is the transition to the next generation of urban planners, practitioners, and policy-makers---seeking to involve them in the commitment to greener, healthier and more livable cities,. This new phase is called: Mega-Cities/Mega-Change or MC2 (pure “energy”). She will describe how Lisbon might become involved in this next phase of the global endeavor. The talk will also cover the main findings of her new book, FAVELA, and discuss the implications for research, practice and public policy for inclusive urban sustainability.
O Papel Do Setor Informal No Sistema Urbano
Professora na Universidade de Berkley, fundadora e presidente da Organização sem fins lucrativos Mega-Cities Project, centrou a sua atividade profissional, durante mais de 20 anos nas favelas do Rio de Janeiro e, mais tarde, em aglomerados informais do mundo inteiro. Desenvolve trabalho e tem o objetivo de tornar mais humanizados, funcionais e salubres estes mesmos contextos que absorvem uma grande componente da migração de populações rurais para megacidades, sem lhes retirar identidade. Através de modelos de aprendizagem experimental e coletivos, visa ainda reduzir o espaço temporal entre o desenvolvimento de uma boa prática e a sua respetiva implementação.
Abstract da Conferência:
O Mega-Cities Project identificou e transferiu um conjunto de inovações urbanas que se encontram em processo de replicação e adaptação, criando as condições para influenciar políticas públicas. Transmitir este testemunho e conhecimentos para a próxima geração de responsáveis pelo planeamento urbano de cidades, assim conquistando a dedicação destes para a criação de cidades mais sustentáveis, salubres e acolhedoras. A nova etapa, denominada Mega-Cities/Mega-Change or MC2, poderá contar com o envolvimento de Lisboa. Abrange também o trabalho desenvolvido no âmbito do livro “FAVELA” nas perspetivas da investigação, da prática e políticas públicas a favor de uma sustentabilidade urbana inclusiva.
Dr. Perlman will discuss the Urban Innovations that The Mega-Cities Project has identified and transferred and what has been learned about innovation replication/adaptation and the conditions for scaling-up into public policy. Her current focus is the transition to the next generation of urban planners, practitioners, and policy-makers---seeking to involve them in the commitment to greener, healthier and more livable cities,. This new phase is called: Mega-Cities/Mega-Change or MC2 (pure “energy”). She will describe how Lisbon might become involved in this next phase of the global endeavor. The talk will also cover the main findings of her new book, FAVELA, and discuss the implications for research, practice and public policy for inclusive urban sustainability.
Lia Vasconcelos e Helena Farrall - Workshop 2013: Laboratório de Resiliência ...Construção Sustentável
Helena Farrall e Lia Vasconcelos participarão no Congresso sobre Cidades Resilientes que se irá realizar entre os dias 31 de Maio e 3 de Junho em Bona, trazendo as conclusões e desafios resultantes das apresentações e discussão deste evento promovido pelo ICLEI.
O enfoque deste Workshop está na demonstração das oportunidades de intervenção no meio edificado, no ambiente e na sociedade, assentando em conhecimentos, redes de contactos, recursos endógenos renováveis e inovação disponíveis.
Helena Farrall e Lia Vasconcelos participarão no Congresso sobre Cidades Resilientes que se irá realizar entre os dias 31 de Maio e 3 de Junho em Bona, trazendo as conclusões e desafios resultantes das apresentações e discussão deste evento promovido pelo ICLEI.
O enfoque deste Workshop está na demonstração das oportunidades de intervenção no meio edificado, no ambiente e na sociedade, assentando em conhecimentos, redes de contactos, recursos endógenos renováveis e inovação disponíveis.
ENCONTRO LIVING LAB sobre o Tema: Reabilitação Sustentável e Eficiência como Motores da Internacionalização das Empresas
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRUCTION LIVING LAB é uma organização transversalmente representativa do sector da construção, integrando gradualmente todos os atores, desde as Instituições Europeias ao Utilizador Final, com o objectivo de tornar a construção sustentável a prática comum. Constitui-se como estrutura que facilita a cooperação entre os atores relevantes deste sector, com o objectivo de promover a eficácia das soluções construtivas e a inovação, nomeadamente na área da reabilitação do edificado.
O TEMA:
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRCTION LIVING LAB (membro da Rede Europeia de Living Labs) apresenta os resultados dos seus Grupos de Trabalho transdisciplinares, dedicados à definição de soluções construtivas robustas para a reabilitação de coberturas, fachadas, sistemas e revestimentos interiores, com o objectivo de alargar boas práticas, melhorar salubridade e conforto e incrementar a robustez do edificado existente. Dada a atual conjuntura, torna-se importante comunicar quais os critérios para a internacionalização das boas práticas identificadas, no sentido de virem acrescentar valor noutros locais do planeta.
ENCONTRO LIVING LAB sobre o Tema: Reabilitação Sustentável e Eficiência como Motores da Internacionalização das Empresas
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRUCTION LIVING LAB é uma organização transversalmente representativa do sector da construção, integrando gradualmente todos os atores, desde as Instituições Europeias ao Utilizador Final, com o objectivo de tornar a construção sustentável a prática comum. Constitui-se como estrutura que facilita a cooperação entre os atores relevantes deste sector, com o objectivo de promover a eficácia das soluções construtivas e a inovação, nomeadamente na área da reabilitação do edificado.
O TEMA:
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRCTION LIVING LAB (membro da Rede Europeia de Living Labs) apresenta os resultados dos seus Grupos de Trabalho transdisciplinares, dedicados à definição de soluções construtivas robustas para a reabilitação de coberturas, fachadas, sistemas e revestimentos interiores, com o objectivo de alargar boas práticas, melhorar salubridade e conforto e incrementar a robustez do edificado existente. Dada a atual conjuntura, torna-se importante comunicar quais os critérios para a internacionalização das boas práticas identificadas, no sentido de virem acrescentar valor noutros locais do planeta.
ENCONTRO LIVING LAB sobre o Tema: Reabilitação Sustentável e Eficiência como Motores da Internacionalização das Empresas
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRUCTION LIVING LAB é uma organização transversalmente representativa do sector da construção, integrando gradualmente todos os atores, desde as Instituições Europeias ao Utilizador Final, com o objectivo de tornar a construção sustentável a prática comum. Constitui-se como estrutura que facilita a cooperação entre os atores relevantes deste sector, com o objectivo de promover a eficácia das soluções construtivas e a inovação, nomeadamente na área da reabilitação do edificado.
O TEMA:
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRCTION LIVING LAB (membro da Rede Europeia de Living Labs) apresenta os resultados dos seus Grupos de Trabalho transdisciplinares, dedicados à definição de soluções construtivas robustas para a reabilitação de coberturas, fachadas, sistemas e revestimentos interiores, com o objectivo de alargar boas práticas, melhorar salubridade e conforto e incrementar a robustez do edificado existente. Dada a atual conjuntura, torna-se importante comunicar quais os critérios para a internacionalização das boas práticas identificadas, no sentido de virem acrescentar valor noutros locais do planeta.
ENCONTRO LIVING LAB sobre o Tema: Reabilitação Sustentável e Eficiência como Motores da Internacionalização das Empresas
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRUCTION LIVING LAB é uma organização transversalmente representativa do sector da construção, integrando gradualmente todos os atores, desde as Instituições Europeias ao Utilizador Final, com o objectivo de tornar a construção sustentável a prática comum. Constitui-se como estrutura que facilita a cooperação entre os atores relevantes deste sector, com o objectivo de promover a eficácia das soluções construtivas e a inovação, nomeadamente na área da reabilitação do edificado.
O TEMA:
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRCTION LIVING LAB (membro da Rede Europeia de Living Labs) apresenta os resultados dos seus Grupos de Trabalho transdisciplinares, dedicados à definição de soluções construtivas robustas para a reabilitação de coberturas, fachadas, sistemas e revestimentos interiores, com o objectivo de alargar boas práticas, melhorar salubridade e conforto e incrementar a robustez do edificado existente. Dada a atual conjuntura, torna-se importante comunicar quais os critérios para a internacionalização das boas práticas identificadas, no sentido de virem acrescentar valor noutros locais do planeta.
ENCONTRO LIVING LAB sobre o Tema: Reabilitação Sustentável e Eficiência como Motores da Internacionalização das Empresas
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRUCTION LIVING LAB é uma organização transversalmente representativa do sector da construção, integrando gradualmente todos os atores, desde as Instituições Europeias ao Utilizador Final, com o objectivo de tornar a construção sustentável a prática comum. Constitui-se como estrutura que facilita a cooperação entre os atores relevantes deste sector, com o objectivo de promover a eficácia das soluções construtivas e a inovação, nomeadamente na área da reabilitação do edificado.
O TEMA:
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRCTION LIVING LAB (membro da Rede Europeia de Living Labs) apresenta os resultados dos seus Grupos de Trabalho transdisciplinares, dedicados à definição de soluções construtivas robustas para a reabilitação de coberturas, fachadas, sistemas e revestimentos interiores, com o objectivo de alargar boas práticas, melhorar salubridade e conforto e incrementar a robustez do edificado existente. Dada a atual conjuntura, torna-se importante comunicar quais os critérios para a internacionalização das boas práticas identificadas, no sentido de virem acrescentar valor noutros locais do planeta.
SmartPlaces – Urban Connected Diamonds
This lecture will address the new scale of cities have brought to the knowledge society. The challenges brought by sustainability, cohesion and competitiveness can’t be addressed at the traditional scale of municipalities nor at the scale of Metropolitan areas. Internationally, new territorial structures are emerging and becoming the new “motors” of global economy. Alfonso will present such catalysts: “Urban America” with its 10 super cities, leading the United States, the “European Diagonal”, the “Mexican Diamond” and the “Malacca Straits Diagonal”.
In these new territories innovative cities are emerging, capable of defining their own futures in an intelligent dialogue with their surroundings and, above all, they are capable of making the most of their own territorial structures and opportunities new digital technologies offer.
Alfonso will also present the cases of the Creative Digital City of Guadalajara (México) and the strategies employed by Singapore and Bilbao.
SmartPlaces – Urban Connected Diamonds
This lecture will address the new scale of cities have brought to the knowledge society. The challenges brought by sustainability, cohesion and competitiveness can’t be addressed at the traditional scale of municipalities nor at the scale of Metropolitan areas. Internationally, new territorial structures are emerging and becoming the new “motors” of global economy. Alfonso will present such catalysts: “Urban America” with its 10 super cities, leading the United States, the “European Diagonal”, the “Mexican Diamond” and the “Malacca Straits Diagonal”.
In these new territories innovative cities are emerging, capable of defining their own futures in an intelligent dialogue with their surroundings and, above all, they are capable of making the most of their own territorial structures and opportunities new digital technologies offer.
Alfonso will also present the cases of the Creative Digital City of Guadalajara (México) and the strategies employed by Singapore and Bilbao.
SmartPlaces – Urban Connected Diamonds
This lecture will address the new scale of cities have brought to the knowledge society. The challenges brought by sustainability, cohesion and competitiveness can’t be addressed at the traditional scale of municipalities nor at the scale of Metropolitan areas. Internationally, new territorial structures are emerging and becoming the new “motors” of global economy. Alfonso will present such catalysts: “Urban America” with its 10 super cities, leading the United States, the “European Diagonal”, the “Mexican Diamond” and the “Malacca Straits Diagonal”.
In these new territories innovative cities are emerging, capable of defining their own futures in an intelligent dialogue with their surroundings and, above all, they are capable of making the most of their own territorial structures and opportunities new digital technologies offer.
Alfonso will also present the cases of the Creative Digital City of Guadalajara (México) and the strategies employed by Singapore and Bilbao.
SmartPlaces – Urban Connected Diamonds
This lecture will address the new scale of cities have brought to the knowledge society. The challenges brought by sustainability, cohesion and competitiveness can’t be addressed at the traditional scale of municipalities nor at the scale of Metropolitan areas. Internationally, new territorial structures are emerging and becoming the new “motors” of global economy. Alfonso will present such catalysts: “Urban America” with its 10 super cities, leading the United States, the “European Diagonal”, the “Mexican Diamond” and the “Malacca Straits Diagonal”.
In these new territories innovative cities are emerging, capable of defining their own futures in an intelligent dialogue with their surroundings and, above all, they are capable of making the most of their own territorial structures and opportunities new digital technologies offer.
Alfonso will also present the cases of the Creative Digital City of Guadalajara (México) and the strategies employed by Singapore and Bilbao.
SmartPlaces – Urban Connected Diamonds
This lecture will address the new scale of cities have brought to the knowledge society. The challenges brought by sustainability, cohesion and competitiveness can’t be addressed at the traditional scale of municipalities nor at the scale of Metropolitan areas. Internationally, new territorial structures are emerging and becoming the new “motors” of global economy. Alfonso will present such catalysts: “Urban America” with its 10 super cities, leading the United States, the “European Diagonal”, the “Mexican Diamond” and the “Malacca Straits Diagonal”.
In these new territories innovative cities are emerging, capable of defining their own futures in an intelligent dialogue with their surroundings and, above all, they are capable of making the most of their own territorial structures and opportunities new digital technologies offer.
Alfonso will also present the cases of the Creative Digital City of Guadalajara (México) and the strategies employed by Singapore and Bilbao.
ENCONTRO LIVING LAB sobre o Tema: Reabilitação Sustentável e Eficiência como Motores da Internacionalização das Empresas
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRUCTION LIVING LAB é uma organização transversalmente representativa do sector da construção, integrando gradualmente todos os atores, desde as Instituições Europeias ao Utilizador Final, com o objectivo de tornar a construção sustentável a prática comum. Constitui-se como estrutura que facilita a cooperação entre os atores relevantes deste sector, com o objectivo de promover a eficácia das soluções construtivas e a inovação, nomeadamente na área da reabilitação do edificado.
O TEMA:
O SUSTAINABLE CONSTRCTION LIVING LAB (membro da Rede Europeia de Living Labs) apresenta os resultados dos seus Grupos de Trabalho transdisciplinares, dedicados à definição de soluções construtivas robustas para a reabilitação de coberturas, fachadas, sistemas e revestimentos interiores, com o objectivo de alargar boas práticas, melhorar salubridade e conforto e incrementar a robustez do edificado existente. Dada a atual conjuntura, torna-se importante comunicar quais os critérios para a internacionalização das boas práticas identificadas, no sentido de virem acrescentar valor noutros locais do planeta.
Se ousarmos imaginar o que as gerações vindouras poderão pensar de nós, logo que entrarem em vigor os cenários de escassez projetados em relação ao recurso água potável, ficamos de imediato conscientes do modo pouco sustentável como gerimos atualmente este recurso: enquanto carregamos no botão de descarga da sanita e a água libertada for potável, sabemos que temos ainda muito por melhorar no ciclo de vida da água.
Não cabe apenas às instituições governamentais, nem tão pouco à Comissão Europeia, introduzir a mudança necessária de paradigma. Por este motivo, a Construção Sustentável® dinamiza a abordagem deste tema através da concepção de sistemas de água que permitem recorrer a água adequada para cada uso utilizando, sempre que possível recursos locais de água renovável (reciclada ou da chuva).
Se ousarmos imaginar o que as gerações vindouras poderão pensar de nós, logo que entrarem em vigor os cenários de escassez projetados em relação ao recurso água potável, ficamos de imediato conscientes do modo pouco sustentável como gerimos atualmente este recurso: enquanto carregamos no botão de descarga da sanita e a água libertada for potável, sabemos que temos ainda muito por melhorar no ciclo de vida da água.
Não cabe apenas às instituições governamentais, nem tão pouco à Comissão Europeia, introduzir a mudança necessária de paradigma. Por este motivo, a Construção Sustentável® dinamiza a abordagem deste tema através da concepção de sistemas de água que permitem recorrer a água adequada para cada uso utilizando, sempre que possível recursos locais de água renovável (reciclada ou da chuva).
Se ousarmos imaginar o que as gerações vindouras poderão pensar de nós, logo que entrarem em vigor os cenários de escassez projetados em relação ao recurso água potável, ficamos de imediato conscientes do modo pouco sustentável como gerimos atualmente este recurso: enquanto carregamos no botão de descarga da sanita e a água libertada for potável, sabemos que temos ainda muito por melhorar no ciclo de vida da água.
Não cabe apenas às instituições governamentais, nem tão pouco à Comissão Europeia, introduzir a mudança necessária de paradigma. Por este motivo, a Construção Sustentável® dinamiza a abordagem deste tema através da concepção de sistemas de água que permitem recorrer a água adequada para cada uso utilizando, sempre que possível recursos locais de água renovável (reciclada ou da chuva).
Se ousarmos imaginar o que as gerações vindouras poderão pensar de nós, logo que entrarem em vigor os cenários de escassez projetados em relação ao recurso água potável, ficamos de imediato conscientes do modo pouco sustentável como gerimos atualmente este recurso: enquanto carregamos no botão de descarga da sanita e a água libertada for potável, sabemos que temos ainda muito por melhorar no ciclo de vida da água.
Não cabe apenas às instituições governamentais, nem tão pouco à Comissão Europeia, introduzir a mudança necessária de paradigma. Por este motivo, a Construção Sustentável® dinamiza a abordagem deste tema através da concepção de sistemas de água que permitem recorrer a água adequada para cada uso utilizando, sempre que possível recursos locais de água renovável (reciclada ou da chuva).
Se ousarmos imaginar o que as gerações vindouras poderão pensar de nós, logo que entrarem em vigor os cenários de escassez projetados em relação ao recurso água potável, ficamos de imediato conscientes do modo pouco sustentável como gerimos atualmente este recurso: enquanto carregamos no botão de descarga da sanita e a água libertada for potável, sabemos que temos ainda muito por melhorar no ciclo de vida da água.
Não cabe apenas às instituições governamentais, nem tão pouco à Comissão Europeia, introduzir a mudança necessária de paradigma. Por este motivo, a Construção Sustentável® dinamiza a abordagem deste tema através da concepção de sistemas de água que permitem recorrer a água adequada para cada uso utilizando, sempre que possível recursos locais de água renovável (reciclada ou da chuva).
GridMate - End to end testing is a critical piece to ensure quality and avoid...ThomasParaiso2
End to end testing is a critical piece to ensure quality and avoid regressions. In this session, we share our journey building an E2E testing pipeline for GridMate components (LWC and Aura) using Cypress, JSForce, FakerJS…
Unlocking Productivity: Leveraging the Potential of Copilot in Microsoft 365, a presentation by Christoforos Vlachos, Senior Solutions Manager – Modern Workplace, Uni Systems
Goodbye Windows 11: Make Way for Nitrux Linux 3.5.0!SOFTTECHHUB
As the digital landscape continually evolves, operating systems play a critical role in shaping user experiences and productivity. The launch of Nitrux Linux 3.5.0 marks a significant milestone, offering a robust alternative to traditional systems such as Windows 11. This article delves into the essence of Nitrux Linux 3.5.0, exploring its unique features, advantages, and how it stands as a compelling choice for both casual users and tech enthusiasts.
How to Get CNIC Information System with Paksim Ga.pptxdanishmna97
Pakdata Cf is a groundbreaking system designed to streamline and facilitate access to CNIC information. This innovative platform leverages advanced technology to provide users with efficient and secure access to their CNIC details.
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdfMalak Abu Hammad
Discover how MongoDB Atlas and vector search technology can revolutionize your application's search capabilities. This comprehensive presentation covers:
* What is Vector Search?
* Importance and benefits of vector search
* Practical use cases across various industries
* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
Perfect for developers, AI enthusiasts, and tech leaders. Learn how to leverage MongoDB Atlas to deliver highly relevant, context-aware search results, transforming your data retrieval process. Stay ahead in tech innovation and maximize the potential of your applications.
#MongoDB #VectorSearch #AI #SemanticSearch #TechInnovation #DataScience #LLM #MachineLearning #SearchTechnology
Climate Impact of Software Testing at Nordic Testing DaysKari Kakkonen
My slides at Nordic Testing Days 6.6.2024
Climate impact / sustainability of software testing discussed on the talk. ICT and testing must carry their part of global responsibility to help with the climat warming. We can minimize the carbon footprint but we can also have a carbon handprint, a positive impact on the climate. Quality characteristics can be added with sustainability, and then measured continuously. Test environments can be used less, and in smaller scale and on demand. Test techniques can be used in optimizing or minimizing number of tests. Test automation can be used to speed up testing.
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
Epistemic Interaction - tuning interfaces to provide information for AI supportAlan Dix
Paper presented at SYNERGY workshop at AVI 2024, Genoa, Italy. 3rd June 2024
https://alandix.com/academic/papers/synergy2024-epistemic/
As machine learning integrates deeper into human-computer interactions, the concept of epistemic interaction emerges, aiming to refine these interactions to enhance system adaptability. This approach encourages minor, intentional adjustments in user behaviour to enrich the data available for system learning. This paper introduces epistemic interaction within the context of human-system communication, illustrating how deliberate interaction design can improve system understanding and adaptation. Through concrete examples, we demonstrate the potential of epistemic interaction to significantly advance human-computer interaction by leveraging intuitive human communication strategies to inform system design and functionality, offering a novel pathway for enriching user-system engagements.
Removing Uninteresting Bytes in Software FuzzingAftab Hussain
Imagine a world where software fuzzing, the process of mutating bytes in test seeds to uncover hidden and erroneous program behaviors, becomes faster and more effective. A lot depends on the initial seeds, which can significantly dictate the trajectory of a fuzzing campaign, particularly in terms of how long it takes to uncover interesting behaviour in your code. We introduce DIAR, a technique designed to speedup fuzzing campaigns by pinpointing and eliminating those uninteresting bytes in the seeds. Picture this: instead of wasting valuable resources on meaningless mutations in large, bloated seeds, DIAR removes the unnecessary bytes, streamlining the entire process.
In this work, we equipped AFL, a popular fuzzer, with DIAR and examined two critical Linux libraries -- Libxml's xmllint, a tool for parsing xml documents, and Binutil's readelf, an essential debugging and security analysis command-line tool used to display detailed information about ELF (Executable and Linkable Format). Our preliminary results show that AFL+DIAR does not only discover new paths more quickly but also achieves higher coverage overall. This work thus showcases how starting with lean and optimized seeds can lead to faster, more comprehensive fuzzing campaigns -- and DIAR helps you find such seeds.
- These are slides of the talk given at IEEE International Conference on Software Testing Verification and Validation Workshop, ICSTW 2022.
In his public lecture, Christian Timmerer provides insights into the fascinating history of video streaming, starting from its humble beginnings before YouTube to the groundbreaking technologies that now dominate platforms like Netflix and ORF ON. Timmerer also presents provocative contributions of his own that have significantly influenced the industry. He concludes by looking at future challenges and invites the audience to join in a discussion.
Alt. GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using ...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
Encryption in Microsoft 365 - ExpertsLive Netherlands 2024Albert Hoitingh
In this session I delve into the encryption technology used in Microsoft 365 and Microsoft Purview. Including the concepts of Customer Key and Double Key Encryption.
Observability Concepts EVERY Developer Should Know -- DeveloperWeek Europe.pdfPaige Cruz
Monitoring and observability aren’t traditionally found in software curriculums and many of us cobble this knowledge together from whatever vendor or ecosystem we were first introduced to and whatever is a part of your current company’s observability stack.
While the dev and ops silo continues to crumble….many organizations still relegate monitoring & observability as the purview of ops, infra and SRE teams. This is a mistake - achieving a highly observable system requires collaboration up and down the stack.
I, a former op, would like to extend an invitation to all application developers to join the observability party will share these foundational concepts to build on:
20240605 QFM017 Machine Intelligence Reading List May 2024
Seija Kulkki - Human Habitat 2013
1. Making Together a Better
Society and World?
Dr. Seija Kulkki
Professor
Department of Management and International
Business
Aalto University School of Business
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
3. Era Transformations?
• (1) ”New World” discoveries by Christopher Columbus
(1451-1506) and Vasco Da Gama (1460 –1524).
• (2)Jules Verne (1828-1905): ”I feel that the era of
humanism is over. It is being conquered by the era of
technology. I feel that literature, poetry, music and the
arts will lose their important status as means to give
meaning to life. Human beings may subordinate their
lives to technology. This will change the premises of life
fundamentally”.
• (3) In 1900s: Industrial era: industrial work, industrial
technologies and industrial efficiency
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
4. Our transformation era?
• Since 1990s, the globalization: global financial
markets and industry with global competition, volumes of
scale and cost and scale efficiency
• Question: How to take care of the competitiveness
of local economies, firms and nation states?
• What about the lack of work; the issue of growth and
job creation?
• There is the well-justified argument about:
• A1: The End of Work: The Decline of the Global
Labor Force and the Dawn of the Post-Market Era
(1995), Jeremy Rifkin
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
5. What is the transformation we are living in?
• A 2. Jeremy Rifkin (2011): The Third Industrial Revolution: How
Lateral Power Is Transforming Energy, the Economy, and the World
• The Internet has been a very powerful communication tool in the
last 20 years.
• Now we see the new convergence of ICT and energy
technologies.
• There is also a great transition to distributed renewable energy
sources.
• Interesting is the way how these technologies together may
scale up.
• We have grown up in the 20th century with centralized electricity
and communication that scale vertically.
• With the Internet, by contrast, as a distributed and collaborative
means of communication, we may scale laterally.
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
6. Rifkin on Third Industrial Revolution (2011)
• As the new industrial revolution is based on convergence of ICT and
energy technologies;
• We may ‘go away from’ the ‘elite’ energies—coal, oil, gas, tar sands—that
are only found in a few places and require significant military and
geopolitical investments and massive finance capital, and that have to
scale top down because they are so expensive.
• The ‘old’ energies are clearly sun-setting.
• We enter the long endgame of this paradigm of energy supply and
consumption.
• Distributed energies, by contrast, are found everywhere in the world:
the sun, the wind, the geothermal heat under the ground, biomass—
garbage, agricultural and forest waste—small hydro, ocean tides and
waves.
• However, the convergence of Internet with distributed forms of energy
has to be managed collaboratively while it scales laterally!
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
7. Carlota Perez (2002) argument:
• The technological revolutions are ‘products’ of the industrial, infrastructural and
capital market characteristics of the time.
• The technological revolutions are driving forces for major social, institutional
and economic changes and consequently frame the life of human beings.
• The globalization is seen as mass production and mass consumption carried on
by ICT.
• The ICT has turned to shape not only an industrial infrastructure but also the
human, social, cultural, institutional and economic (infra)structures of life
globally.
• The Jules Verne argument that the life and human beings are subordinated to
technology!
• A 3: However, the role and nature of technology is changing: ICT, energy,
bio, medicine, etc; are not only for products, or industrial and business-to-
business use– they are today widely embedded in human, social and
institutional life:
• Should we better understand the new nature of ’infrastructural’,
’institutional’, or social technologies for everyday life, work, managing,
housing…; i.e.technologies of life.
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
8. A.4: The rise of civil society is a major force of
economic, social and political renewal?
• (1) Power of people and social networks (Benkler, The Wealth of
Networks - How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom,
Yochai Benkler, 2006; OECD, 2007, 2008)
• (2) Global Civil Society: An Overview by Lester M. Salamon, S.
Wojciech Sokolowski, and Regina List, : Johns Hopkins Center for Civil
Society Studies, Baltimore, Maryland, USA (2003).
• From the Global Civil Society: Dimensions of the Nonprofit Sector, covers
the civil society sector in each of the thirty-five countries in greater depth.
December 2003.
• Also EU, OECD studies on
– Power of people and social networks
– Role of modern information and communication technologies as an
enabler, social media and Future Internet
– Open, transparent and participative society development
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
9. New dynamic and powerful role of the civil
society?
• ‘Global Civil Society’ study (Salamon et al), introduces
the worldwide civil society sector, that gray area
between the market and the state that combines
cultural centers, healthcare providers, universities,
environmental groups, human rights organizations,
soccer clubs, soup kitchens, and much more.
• The civil sector seems to serve contradictory aims: the
desire of participants to act independently in order to
make better their own lives, and to improve the greater
community;
• To solve together shared problems is often the only
way to improve individual’s life situations.
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 2013
10. Global Civil Society: An Overview
Salamon; et. al (2003):
• A civil-sector organization is an entity that is private, not-for-profit in orientation, self-
governing, and voluntary in nature (employees of civil-sector organizations may be
paid, of course, but participation or membership must not be mandatory).
• The civil society efforts are to be found in developing, developed, and transitional
countries.
• The worldwide civil sector amounts to a $1.3 trillion industry that employs
nearly 40 million people; if it were a country, it would have the seventh-largest
GDP in the world.
• There are different arrangements of how civil-sector organizations are funded, how
extensively they rely on professional staffs as opposed to volunteers, and how NGOs
in a given region are split between those that provide services and those that
perform purely expressive functions.
• The civil sector organizations belong to a variety of sociopolitical clusters, regional
groupings, and developmental levels, and thereby illustrates how much civil society
organizations differ even as they pursue the common goal of getting more people
involved in their communities.
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
11. A5: Europe on Global Innovation Map?
• Innovation emergency: Europe in general is lacking in
R&D (2% of GDP) in comparison to the US (2,8% of
GDP) and Japan (3,4%). China will invest 2,5% of GDP
(Innovation Mission 2020 of China)
• US: corporate driven RDI and scientific excellence
• China: RDI for transfer from sustained growth to
sustainable growth; science and technology driven
• Europe Horizon 2020: In addition to (1) science and
technology and (2) corporate driven RDI, EU is aiming at
(3) solving major societal challenges of our time.
• How do we organize ourselves for solving societal
challenges?
Human Habitat Seija kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
12. Horizon 2020
EU H2020 is a flagship initiative and financial instrument for
implementing European Innovation Union for Europe’s global
competitiveness.
The proposed H2020 budget was €80bn for years 2014-
2020. Now it is under spending cuts and discussed in
European Parliament.
Three pillars:
(1) Excellence in science and technology (€25bn) for
becoming a world-class science performer by 2020.
(2) Globally competitive corporate RDI (€18bn) for
bringing new innovations quickly to marketplace.
(3) Solving societal challenges (€32bn) that concern
citizens in Europe and globally.
Human Habitat, Seija Kulkki
Lisbpn, March 4, 2013
13. Societal Challenges are such as:
Wellbeing, demographic change and health,
Food security, sustainable agriculture,
Marine and marinetime research,
Bio-economy and new sources of energy,
Secure, clean and efficient energy,
Smart, green and integrated transprortation,
Smart and green cities
Inclusive and secure societies,
Climate change, and climate action,
Resource efficiency and new raw materials.
A 6: Does this offer means for transforming the underlying social
and economic dynamism in Europe? Including the reform of
public services?
14. A6: Values of Transformative Innovation?:
• Should we discuss underlying values and principles that we apply
when solving societal challenges through RDI (research,
development and innovation); for renewal of our social and
economic foundations?
• Should we discuss human-centricity and creative collaboration
of firms, cities, regions and public agencies that engage citizens
and people, for designing a better societies and world?
• Open and participative design?
– Not only pragmatic forms of public-private partnerships but also
principles of engaing people and applying participative, all-
inclusive methodologies for open society development?
– Living Laboratories as means and methodology for
participative RDI in open innovation ecosystems
• Should we even discuss new firm-society collaboration for
shared value creation and better societies?
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
15. ”Participative Societal Design” for Better
Societies, Economies and the Future?
• What are our values and principles of urban, rural, and
regional and national social and economic development; role
of new technology, service and business development?
• How do we discuss and co-create shared values?
• How do we perceive and challenge the underlying usage,
efficiency, productivity and scalability assumptions when
creating new markets and industries?
• Values of participative society, open society, and wider
responsibilities with individual and collective entrepreneurial
spirit?
• Wider impact of social and economic dynamism; what is the
good society for the future?
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
16. Shared Value Creation?
The shared value creation involves creating economic value in a way that
also creates value for society by addressing its needs and challenges (1).
Today, there is a cliff between economic and social development due to
the presumed trade-offs between economic efficiency and social progress
(1).
Conclusion: We should discuss what are the efficient ways and
means for collaboration of firms, academia, public agencies, cities
and people in order to bridge over the economic and social cliffs
through shared value creation.
• 1. Michael Porter (with Kramer), Harvard Business Review HBR, January-February
2011)
European Design Seija Kulkki
Innovation Summit
September 18, 2012
17. A. 7: Shared Value Creation through
Collaborative Open RDI?
R&D for innovation (RDI) is not only about technologies or
products but also about business models (Chesbrough,
2003), service designs and systems and even wider social
or systemic ecosystem-based renewal and change (EC,
Open Innovation, 2013, forthcoming, DG:
Communications, Networks, Contents and Technology ).
Open and inclusive innovation, ”democratizing” of
innovation: co-creation with people: involving or engaging
demand-side, markets, customers; i.e people
(Democratizing the Innovation, von Hippel 2005)
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon; March 4, 2013
18. A.8: Shared Value Creation has an impact on
strategy, structure and processes of RDI?
• Von Hippel (2010): Consumer Innovations:
Traditional division of labor between innovators and
customers is breaking down; about 70% of innovations
comes from markets and customers.
(A survey with 1200 interviewees )
• However, how does the shared value creation
through open collaboration transform the
strategy, structure and processes of RDI?
• How to make this happen?
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
19. ENoLL Values
Trust and
transparency
Openness,
Human-
enabling
centricity
networking
Co-creation Bottom-up,
and enriching
collaboration communication
12/09/2012
20. What kind of problems do we solve through
open R&D for innovation (RDI)?
Product or Service
Business Model
Innovations Innovations
User experience-based Economic and social
RDI for better usability validation with users,
social networks and
user communities for
scalability of production,
marketing and delivery
around ”usage”
”Ecosystem”
Innovations
Wider human-centric ”systemic
Innovations”, new market or
usage creation, even industry
creation, solving major
societal challenges of our time
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2012
21. Human-centered design
• May be about usability and user experience, human-
computer interaction, augmented cognition, engineering
psychology, cognitive ergonomics etc.
• New technologies (basic research!) that make a difference:
– the forever health monitor, where smart phone can monitor vital
signs in real-time and thereby allerting you to the first signs of
trouble (medicine)
– A computer chip that ’thinks’ like brain, where neural computers will
excel at all tasks that regular machines struggle with (computing)
– A wallet inside a person’s skin; you just wave your hand to charge
it, meaning that no cell-phone payment systems are needed any
more,
– Nano-sized germ killers against superbugs (medicine)
– Crops that don’t need replanting and can stabilize soil and increase
yields (agriculture), etc.
Scientific American (December 2011)
22. User-experience-based product, service
and business development….
– (1) Idea collection and generation
– (2) Opportunity Assessment
– (3) Concept Creation
– (4) Product and Services Development
– (5) Implementation (for value creation)
• Create, capture, evaluate, innovate!
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
23. Economic and social validation of new
business and service models!
• Crowdsourcing with potential users in order to learn to know about
customer needs and solutions around mobility in a way that the
service offering can be scaled up.
• Crowdsourcing is the practice of obtaining needed services, ideas,
or content by soliciting contributions from a large group of people,
and especially from an online community, rather than from
traditional employees or suppliers.
• Often used to subdivide tedious work or to fund-raise startup
companies and charities, this process can occur both online and
offline.[1]
• The general concept is to combine the efforts of crowds of
volunteers or part-time workers, where each one could contribute a
small portion, which adds into a relatively large or significant result.
Crowdsourcing is different from an ordinary outsourcing since it is
a task or problem that is outsourced to an undefined public rather
than to a specific, named group.
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
24. Value Creation and Business Models
• (1) Wide Idea Collection in Interaction with Potential Users
• (2) Wide Economic and Social Validation around Value Propositions
• (3) Wide Commitment through Users´ Learning and Co-Creation;
Market Creation
• (4) Understanding the Sources of Scalability through Pre-Market
Experimentation and Piloting
– experimentative RDI with users for behavioral changes and functionalities
and for changes in market dynamism; new demand and market creation
• (5) Experimentation for Implementation for Value Creation
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
25. Transformative innovation for solving
societal challenges?
• Dialogue for shared value creation in collaboration may evolve
around inquiry such as:
• What are the new production, delivery and consumptions patterns
for sustainable development?
• How do we design cities for green growth?
• How do we design welfare systems that are efficient not only as
service production systems, but also from the viewpoint of
’customers’ or, rather, human beings?
• How do we improve traffic and transportation systems to become
environmentally sustainable, intelligent and user-friendly?
• How do we develop distributed co-production systems of energy?
• How do we change energy consumption behaviour of people?
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
26. Process for solving societal challenges?
• (1) Mission, vision and strategy creation with a wide collection of
ideas about future issues and scenarios, including experimentation and
piloting around a set of potential hypotheses and pre-concepts for
solution,
• (2) Experimentation around selected sets of hypotheses and
properties of pre-concepts as service or business models, or
specifications for architectural or ecosystem designs.
• This includes economic and social validation of new concepts with
firms, public agencies, and people; this is a wide, interactive dialogue
with future ‘markets’ of emerging innovations. This broadens the
understanding about the sources of the economic, social and
environmental sustainability of value propositions.
• (3) We may commit partners, developer communities and people to the
co-creation of features of usage and sources of economic and
social scalability. This pre-market prototyping, experimentation and
piloting is designed to capture the new market dynamism and customer
behavior and the personalized and generic functionalities of future
usages, amongst other things.
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
27. Process for solving societal challenges?
• (4) Wide-scale experimentation and piloting that
brings about understanding of how to implement
new solutions: how to produce and to deliver.
• (5) We may even experiment for new forms of
entrepreneurial activities – and firms!
• We argue that there is an opportunity to create
foundational elements of new value creation ‘formula’ for
firms – non-profit or profit based – to emerge.
• All the steps involve – in different ways and
combinations – own people, customers, collaborative
firms, experts and others.
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
28. Open Innovation Ecosystems for Shared
Value Creation
• Open ecosystems for research and innovation
incorporate all the relevant players in ”a nutshell”.
• They include partners of both ”supply and demand side”;
it is like a ”prototype” of new business or service system
or even of a new emerging industry or industry under
reformation.
• They can be consciously constructed: Ecosystem joint
ventures, consortiums and companies! They seems to
have a Life Cycle of their Own!
European Design Seija Kulkki
Innovation Summit
September 18, 2012
29. A. 9: Nature of Transformative Challenge?
• (1) Transformation from ”industrial logic” to ”services logic” or
even to shared value creation/ecosystem logic: issue of
productivity, efficiency and scalability?
– The role of users in developing new sources of and mechanism for productivity, scalability and value
creation
• (2) Transformation from vertical approach to a more horizontal
approach?
– The demand and market dynamism may determine the collaborative structure for value creation?
– A rich collection of user cases, user communities, social webs and networks may be needed.
• (3) The opportunity to learn from users about the
functionalities of service business models and service
systems
– What are the functionalities and how to design an internationally competitive value constellation that brings
about personalization, safety, security and interoperability, etc.
• (4) Critical role of social and economic activities and services
and businesses where we act in RDI for tackling even wider
societal challenges such as Green Growth, Wellbeing,
Environment and Energy Efficiency, eDemocracy
– The demand-driven and human-centric as well as user driven
RDI may include private and public services, and people and
social networks!
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
30. A 10: Nature of Leadership Challenge!
• Distributed leadership where wisdom is embedded in every
individual and collective practice and action (Nonaka and Takeuchi,
2011).
• Competence of grasping the essence of a problem and knowing
how to draw conclusions from random observations and acting on
them immediately.
• ’Hands-on’ leadership in touch with the reality.
• This implies that we consciously act based on aesthetic and ethical
values such as goodness, beauty and truth;
• They are applied, tested and recreated with other people in every
action.
• Nonaka, Ikujiro and Takeuchi, Hirotaka (2011): The Wise Leader: How CEOs can learn practical
wisdom to help them do what is right for their companies - and society. HBR, May 2011
European Design Seija kulkki
Innovation Challenge
September 18, 2012
31. Assumptions about our challenges of
globalized world:
• A1: The end ’traditional’ industrial work! How to create
new jobs? What kind of jobs and where?
• A2: Ongoing ’New Industrial Revolution’ based on
convergence of technologies and horizontalization of
market and industry structures. How to create new firms
and industries and/or renew the structures of our industries?
• A3: The nature and role of technology is changing: from
industrial technology towards the technology of life.
• A4: The rise of civil sector to become the ’third major
player’ along the private and public sertors? Democratization
of Innovation?
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
32. Assumptions:
• A.5: We should understand our unique position in
global innovation competition: We could be for
human-centric open societies capable of solving
societal challenges and transforming of our social and
economic foundation?
• A6: However, we should learn to organize ourselves
around value-based social and economic
transformation!
• A.7: How do we organize ourselves for firm-society
collaboration?
• A.8: What would be the process for value-based social
and economic transformation through solving major
societal challenges?
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
33. Assumptions:
• A.9: What is the very nature of
our economic transformative
challenge?
• A.10: What is the leadership
challenge?
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
34. Cases to discuss:
• Industrial and/or regional renewal-driven RDI-
collaboration in ecosystems that are concsciously
in place for solving contemporary wicked problems
(local, European, global) such as:
• Renewal of the socio-economic structure of a city for growth and
wellbeing (Aqueda City North from Lisbon, Portugal)
• SAVE ENERGY for improving energy efficiency through changing
consumption patterns of energy usage in cities (public buildings in
Helsinki, Lisbon, Manchester, Leiden, Luleå)
• Opening the Public Data for New Social and Economic Activities to
Emerge (Helsinki)
• Creating housing areas that activate citizens for new economic
activities and Life Management (Arabianranta in Helsinki)
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
35. More cases:
• Creating and reforming an industry (building up the car
industry in Portugal, close to Lisbon)
• Reforming the fishery-industry in Spain (EU: IP:
Collaboration@Rural)
• Creating new ”AgroMarket” based on on-line real-time
auction principle in Hungary with 3000 farmers, ICT-
firms, academia and public agencies
(Collaboration@Rural)
• New forms of Social Banking, granting loans for
businesses and other investments that do incorporate
not only economic but also social value creation
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
36. Corporate cases:
• A global glass company (AGC) wanted to rethink its
technology base and the role in marketplace?
– What is the glass for? What can it be made of? How do we
make this happen?
– Includes wide use of specialists!
– Includes wide social validation!
• IBM wanted to redirect its service offering for the future
in order to participate in solving global problems
– IBM Jazz Jam: for wide dialogues with customers, experts and
own personel
– Results into strategic initiatives around Wellbeing, Socio-
Economic Development, Smart City and Smart Planet (Global
Outlook)
Human Habitat Seija kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
37. Corporate cases:
• SAP develops in South Africa and in other emerging
markets ICT- and wireless service infrastructures - even
user-centric service architectures - for small businesses
and start-ups
• Cisco has a specific concept for developing information
and communication infrasrtuctures for cities (technology
as an enabler for reforming future cities)
• Etc.
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
38. Sources:
• Kulkki Seija (2011): Europe on Global Innovation Map: Human-centric RDI
for solving major societal challenges of our time, Public Service Review:
European Science & Technology: issue 13
• Kulkki, Seija (2012): Human-centric RDI: A post-industrial paradigm for
solving major societal challenges, Public Service Review: European
Science & Technology: issue 15
• Kulkki Seija (2012): Getting Competitive, Pan European Networks: Science
and Technology, 02; www.paneuropeannetworks.com
• Kulkki, Seija (2012): Towards a European socioeconomic model: Firm-
society collaboration for shared value creation, Public Service Review:
Europe: issue 24
• Kulkki Seija (2013, March, forthcoming): Collaborative innovation
ecosystems for solving societal challenges in Open Innovation 2013, EC
DG: Communications, Networks, Contents and Technology
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013
39. Thank you!
• Dr. Seija Kulkki
• Professor
• Department of Management and International Business
• Aalto University School of Business
Human Habitat Seija Kulkki
Lisbon, March 4, 2013