The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is a global organization that aims to build the social and technical infrastructure to enable open sharing of data across technologies, disciplines, and countries. It is supported by the European Commission, Australian National Data Service, and US National Science Foundation. RDA brings together experts and practitioners to develop standards, develop tools, and overcome barriers to data sharing through Working Groups and Interest Groups. Upcoming outputs from RDA in 2014 include developing systems for data type registries, persistent identifier information types, metadata standards, and practical data policies. RDA currently has over 1,500 members from over 70 countries working to advance open data sharing.
OSGIS: an introduction to the research data allianceHerman Stehouwer
RDA (Research Data Alliance) was formed in 2013 to facilitate collaboration and data sharing between experts from different disciplines and organizations. It aims to overcome barriers to easy access, sharing, and interoperability of data. RDA members participate in Working and Interest Groups to discuss issues and develop solutions like data standards. These groups work to enable greater data sharing, discoverability, and reuse to help address major challenges. RDA holds regular plenary meetings for groups to meet face-to-face and share outcomes with the broader community.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization with over 11,000 members from 145 countries working to build the social and technical infrastructure to enable open sharing and re-use of research data across technologies, disciplines, and borders. RDA has 36 working groups and 57 interest groups addressing challenges in domains like agriculture, health, materials science, and more. It has produced 50 technical specifications and standards to reduce barriers to data sharing.
This document provides an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA) from June 2015. It summarizes that the RDA community focuses on building infrastructure to reduce barriers to data sharing and accelerate the development of global data infrastructure. It notes that the RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013 and now has over 2,900 members from 102 countries. It also lists several outputs and deliverables produced by RDA working groups to enable improved data sharing, including standards for data citation, metadata and data type registries.
This document provides an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It summarizes that the RDA community focuses on building infrastructure to reduce barriers to data sharing and accelerate the development of coordinated global data infrastructure. It notes that the RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013 and now has over 3,000 members from over 100 countries. It also summarizes several outputs and deliverables from RDA working groups, including standards for data citation, metadata directories and data type registries. Finally, it previews upcoming RDA plenary meetings in places like Paris, Tokyo, and the United States.
This document provides an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It summarizes that the RDA community focuses on building infrastructure to reduce barriers to data sharing and accelerate the development of coordinated global data infrastructure. It notes that the RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013 and now has over 3,000 members from over 100 countries. It also lists several outputs and deliverables that RDA working groups have produced to enable increased data sharing and interoperability.
This document provides an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It summarizes that the RDA community focuses on building infrastructure to reduce barriers to data sharing and accelerate the development of coordinated global data infrastructure. It notes that the RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013 and now has over 3,000 members from over 100 countries. It also lists several outputs and deliverables that RDA working groups have produced to enable increased data sharing and interoperability.
A Jisc perspective of digital notebooks including a summary of work on e-Lab notebooks, VREs, the next generation research environment and the research data shared service. How might ELNs be incorporated into a future open science shared service? Presented at "Digital Notebooks - how to provide solutions for researchers?" workshop in TU Delft (16 March 2018)
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is a global organization that aims to build the social and technical infrastructure to enable open sharing of data across technologies, disciplines, and countries. It is supported by the European Commission, Australian National Data Service, and US National Science Foundation. RDA brings together experts and practitioners to develop standards, develop tools, and overcome barriers to data sharing through Working Groups and Interest Groups. Upcoming outputs from RDA in 2014 include developing systems for data type registries, persistent identifier information types, metadata standards, and practical data policies. RDA currently has over 1,500 members from over 70 countries working to advance open data sharing.
OSGIS: an introduction to the research data allianceHerman Stehouwer
RDA (Research Data Alliance) was formed in 2013 to facilitate collaboration and data sharing between experts from different disciplines and organizations. It aims to overcome barriers to easy access, sharing, and interoperability of data. RDA members participate in Working and Interest Groups to discuss issues and develop solutions like data standards. These groups work to enable greater data sharing, discoverability, and reuse to help address major challenges. RDA holds regular plenary meetings for groups to meet face-to-face and share outcomes with the broader community.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization with over 11,000 members from 145 countries working to build the social and technical infrastructure to enable open sharing and re-use of research data across technologies, disciplines, and borders. RDA has 36 working groups and 57 interest groups addressing challenges in domains like agriculture, health, materials science, and more. It has produced 50 technical specifications and standards to reduce barriers to data sharing.
This document provides an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA) from June 2015. It summarizes that the RDA community focuses on building infrastructure to reduce barriers to data sharing and accelerate the development of global data infrastructure. It notes that the RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013 and now has over 2,900 members from 102 countries. It also lists several outputs and deliverables produced by RDA working groups to enable improved data sharing, including standards for data citation, metadata and data type registries.
This document provides an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It summarizes that the RDA community focuses on building infrastructure to reduce barriers to data sharing and accelerate the development of coordinated global data infrastructure. It notes that the RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013 and now has over 3,000 members from over 100 countries. It also summarizes several outputs and deliverables from RDA working groups, including standards for data citation, metadata directories and data type registries. Finally, it previews upcoming RDA plenary meetings in places like Paris, Tokyo, and the United States.
This document provides an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It summarizes that the RDA community focuses on building infrastructure to reduce barriers to data sharing and accelerate the development of coordinated global data infrastructure. It notes that the RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013 and now has over 3,000 members from over 100 countries. It also lists several outputs and deliverables that RDA working groups have produced to enable increased data sharing and interoperability.
This document provides an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It summarizes that the RDA community focuses on building infrastructure to reduce barriers to data sharing and accelerate the development of coordinated global data infrastructure. It notes that the RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013 and now has over 3,000 members from over 100 countries. It also lists several outputs and deliverables that RDA working groups have produced to enable increased data sharing and interoperability.
A Jisc perspective of digital notebooks including a summary of work on e-Lab notebooks, VREs, the next generation research environment and the research data shared service. How might ELNs be incorporated into a future open science shared service? Presented at "Digital Notebooks - how to provide solutions for researchers?" workshop in TU Delft (16 March 2018)
The document summarizes updates on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). Key points include:
- The RDA focuses on reducing barriers to data sharing and exchange by building social, organizational, and technical infrastructure.
- Working groups deliver focused efforts like standards, best practices, and code to enable data sharing within 12-18 months.
- The RDA has grown rapidly since launching in 2013 and now includes over 2,500 members from 92 countries.
- The organizational structure includes working groups, interest groups, a council, and secretariat to coordinate efforts.
- The fourth RDA plenary was held in Amsterdam in September 2014, presenting the first deliverables on topics like data types and identifiers.
- Up
The document discusses the Research Data Alliance (RDA) and its process for having its technical specifications identified and approved as ICT Technical Specifications by the European Commission. The RDA works with various stakeholders to develop technical specifications that enhance data sharing and interoperability. Its specifications undergo an open review process before being submitted for identification. Previously identified RDA specifications include recommendations for data citation, repository requirements, and workflows for data publishing. The identification process involves review by the European Multi Stakeholder Platform and the European Commission to ensure specifications meet requirements for adoption in European public procurement.
This document provides an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It summarizes that the RDA community focuses on building infrastructure to reduce barriers to data sharing and accelerate the development of coordinated global data infrastructure. It notes that the RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013 and now has over 3,300 members from 104 countries. It also lists several outputs and deliverables produced by RDA working groups, including standards for data citation, metadata directories and data type registries. Finally, it outlines RDA's organizational structure and previews upcoming plenary meetings in future years.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) aims to facilitate data sharing across disciplines to address societal challenges. Individuals are encouraged to engage with RDA to contribute their expertise to discussions and recommendations, access an international network, receive updates on RDA's work, participate in meetings, and gain experience in all stages of the data lifecycle. RDA benefits from individual participation, as individuals bring ideas, problems, and solutions to create a valuable global community focused on reducing barriers to data sharing.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization with over 10,000 members from 145 countries that works to reduce barriers to data sharing and exchange. RDA brings together researchers, scientists, and data professionals through Working Groups and Interest Groups to develop standards and best practices for data infrastructure and sharing. RDA has produced 50 outputs including technical specifications and has groups working on issues across multiple disciplines.
The document provides an overview of the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It discusses how RDA was established in 2013 to facilitate data sharing and exchange. It outlines RDA's organizational structure, including its Council, Technical Advisory Group, and Working Groups. It also summarizes several initial RDA Working Groups focused on issues like PID information types, data type registries, and metadata standards. The document aims to grow RDA's community and accelerate momentum around its efforts to advance open scientific data practices and infrastructure.
LIBER Webinar: Turning FAIR Data Into RealityLIBER Europe
These slides relate to a LIBER Webinar given on 23 April 2018. Turning FAIR Data Into Reality — Progress and Plans from the European Commission FAIR Data Expert Group.
In this webinar, Simon Hodson, Executive Director of CODATA and Chair of the FAIR Data Expert Group, and Sarah Jones, Associate Director at the Digital Curation Centre and Rapporteur, reported on the Group’s progress.
The document discusses the evolution and history of the Internet and the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It provides details on:
- How the Internet originated from research networks developed by DARPA in the 1960s-70s.
- The RDA aims to build bridges for open sharing of research data globally by facilitating collaboration between experts. It is supported by funding from the EC, Australian NSD, and US NSF/NIST.
- The RDA works through Working and Interest Groups that develop standards and recommendations to advance data sharing at biannual plenary meetings. Several outputs addressing issues like metadata standards, data type registries, and PID information are expected in 2014.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) aims to build social and technical bridges to enable open sharing of data. It has over 8,800 members from 137 countries working in 87 groups to develop recommendations and standards to reduce barriers to data sharing. Some of RDA's outputs include recommendations on data citation, metadata standards, and repository interoperability.
This document summarizes an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It discusses the growth of RDA membership and activities. Key points include:
- RDA works to reduce barriers to data sharing and exchange by building social, organizational and technical infrastructure.
- RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013, with over 2,500 members from over 90 countries working in various working groups.
- Working groups focus on developing deliverables like standards, best practices and code to enable data sharing in various domains and for community needs, data stewardship, and base infrastructure.
- The first deliverables have been presented, with more to come, aimed at making data sharing and discovery more trustworthy
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization focused on building the social and technical infrastructure to enable open sharing of data. It has over 10,000 individual members from 144 countries collaborating in Working and Interest Groups to develop recommendations and standards to reduce barriers to data sharing. Some of RDA's achievements include 47 flagship outputs, 100+ adoption cases, and 93 active groups addressing challenges such as metadata, repositories, legal issues, and more. The ultimate goal is to allow researchers and innovators to openly share data across technologies and disciplines to address societal challenges.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) aims to facilitate open sharing of data across technologies and disciplines to address societal challenges. There are two main components - the volunteer community that builds social and technical connections through Working Groups, and the business operations that support the community. Organizations performing research can engage with RDA in various ways like sponsorship, membership, or participation in Working Groups to help shape standards and address issues like data management, quality, and interoperability. RDA offers a global network and opportunities for collaboration on solutions to research data challenges.
The Research Data Alliance: Opportunities for Public/Private Partnerships in...Research Data Alliance
The document discusses the Research Data Alliance (RDA), an international organization focused on reducing barriers to data sharing and exchange. It provides information on:
- What RDA is and its goals of openly sharing data across technologies, disciplines and countries.
- RDA's activities including working groups and interest groups focused on developing infrastructure, standards, and best practices.
- Benefits of RDA membership for individuals, researchers, enterprises/businesses, and policymakers.
- Examples of RDA recommendations and outputs like data citation standards and metadata directories.
- RDA community size and composition, including over 4,000 members from 110 countries in academia, government, and private industry.
Research Data Shared Service update at DPCJisc RDM
The document discusses the Jisc Research Data Shared Service (RDSS) and its role in coordinating the preservation and sharing of research data. RDSS aims to provide core functionality for researchers to deposit, describe, store, publish, and ensure the integrity of their research data. It will also offer advice and best practices for research data management. The service coordinates efforts across universities and involves partnerships with other organizations to develop shared technology solutions for preserving UK research outputs.
Lessons from the UK: Data access, patient trust & real-world impact with heal...Varsha Khodiyar
HDR UK is facilitating health data access in the UK for researchers through The Innovation Gateway. This allows researchers to discover and access de-identified health data from various custodians. HDR UK has emphasized transparency and patient/public involvement. During the COVID-19 pandemic, HDR UK coordinated data-driven research efforts and accelerated data access to support priority studies. This included enabling a clinical trial to more rapidly recruit participants using daily COVID test results. HDR UK is also laying the foundations for an international health data alliance to support open COVID-19 research globally.
ISPE is the Society of Choice for 25,000 pharmaceutical science and manufacturing professionals. For information about joining ISPE, visit www.ISPE.org/membership.
The document discusses a proposed joint venture between Health Spring, a US-based health insurance company, and St. Luke's Medical Center in the Philippines to establish Health Spring as a medical tourism facilitator. This would allow Health Spring to offer lower-cost medical procedures to its customers in the Philippines while also increasing business and revenues for St. Luke's. Key benefits include lower costs for Health Spring (20-80% savings on procedures), business expansion into medical tourism, and increased revenues and patient volumes for St. Luke's. A 3-year plan and potential risks are also outlined.
The document summarizes updates on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). Key points include:
- The RDA focuses on reducing barriers to data sharing and exchange by building social, organizational, and technical infrastructure.
- Working groups deliver focused efforts like standards, best practices, and code to enable data sharing within 12-18 months.
- The RDA has grown rapidly since launching in 2013 and now includes over 2,500 members from 92 countries.
- The organizational structure includes working groups, interest groups, a council, and secretariat to coordinate efforts.
- The fourth RDA plenary was held in Amsterdam in September 2014, presenting the first deliverables on topics like data types and identifiers.
- Up
The document discusses the Research Data Alliance (RDA) and its process for having its technical specifications identified and approved as ICT Technical Specifications by the European Commission. The RDA works with various stakeholders to develop technical specifications that enhance data sharing and interoperability. Its specifications undergo an open review process before being submitted for identification. Previously identified RDA specifications include recommendations for data citation, repository requirements, and workflows for data publishing. The identification process involves review by the European Multi Stakeholder Platform and the European Commission to ensure specifications meet requirements for adoption in European public procurement.
This document provides an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It summarizes that the RDA community focuses on building infrastructure to reduce barriers to data sharing and accelerate the development of coordinated global data infrastructure. It notes that the RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013 and now has over 3,300 members from 104 countries. It also lists several outputs and deliverables produced by RDA working groups, including standards for data citation, metadata directories and data type registries. Finally, it outlines RDA's organizational structure and previews upcoming plenary meetings in future years.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) aims to facilitate data sharing across disciplines to address societal challenges. Individuals are encouraged to engage with RDA to contribute their expertise to discussions and recommendations, access an international network, receive updates on RDA's work, participate in meetings, and gain experience in all stages of the data lifecycle. RDA benefits from individual participation, as individuals bring ideas, problems, and solutions to create a valuable global community focused on reducing barriers to data sharing.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization with over 10,000 members from 145 countries that works to reduce barriers to data sharing and exchange. RDA brings together researchers, scientists, and data professionals through Working Groups and Interest Groups to develop standards and best practices for data infrastructure and sharing. RDA has produced 50 outputs including technical specifications and has groups working on issues across multiple disciplines.
The document provides an overview of the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It discusses how RDA was established in 2013 to facilitate data sharing and exchange. It outlines RDA's organizational structure, including its Council, Technical Advisory Group, and Working Groups. It also summarizes several initial RDA Working Groups focused on issues like PID information types, data type registries, and metadata standards. The document aims to grow RDA's community and accelerate momentum around its efforts to advance open scientific data practices and infrastructure.
LIBER Webinar: Turning FAIR Data Into RealityLIBER Europe
These slides relate to a LIBER Webinar given on 23 April 2018. Turning FAIR Data Into Reality — Progress and Plans from the European Commission FAIR Data Expert Group.
In this webinar, Simon Hodson, Executive Director of CODATA and Chair of the FAIR Data Expert Group, and Sarah Jones, Associate Director at the Digital Curation Centre and Rapporteur, reported on the Group’s progress.
The document discusses the evolution and history of the Internet and the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It provides details on:
- How the Internet originated from research networks developed by DARPA in the 1960s-70s.
- The RDA aims to build bridges for open sharing of research data globally by facilitating collaboration between experts. It is supported by funding from the EC, Australian NSD, and US NSF/NIST.
- The RDA works through Working and Interest Groups that develop standards and recommendations to advance data sharing at biannual plenary meetings. Several outputs addressing issues like metadata standards, data type registries, and PID information are expected in 2014.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) aims to build social and technical bridges to enable open sharing of data. It has over 8,800 members from 137 countries working in 87 groups to develop recommendations and standards to reduce barriers to data sharing. Some of RDA's outputs include recommendations on data citation, metadata standards, and repository interoperability.
This document summarizes an update on the Research Data Alliance (RDA). It discusses the growth of RDA membership and activities. Key points include:
- RDA works to reduce barriers to data sharing and exchange by building social, organizational and technical infrastructure.
- RDA has grown significantly since its launch in 2013, with over 2,500 members from over 90 countries working in various working groups.
- Working groups focus on developing deliverables like standards, best practices and code to enable data sharing in various domains and for community needs, data stewardship, and base infrastructure.
- The first deliverables have been presented, with more to come, aimed at making data sharing and discovery more trustworthy
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization focused on building the social and technical infrastructure to enable open sharing of data. It has over 10,000 individual members from 144 countries collaborating in Working and Interest Groups to develop recommendations and standards to reduce barriers to data sharing. Some of RDA's achievements include 47 flagship outputs, 100+ adoption cases, and 93 active groups addressing challenges such as metadata, repositories, legal issues, and more. The ultimate goal is to allow researchers and innovators to openly share data across technologies and disciplines to address societal challenges.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) aims to facilitate open sharing of data across technologies and disciplines to address societal challenges. There are two main components - the volunteer community that builds social and technical connections through Working Groups, and the business operations that support the community. Organizations performing research can engage with RDA in various ways like sponsorship, membership, or participation in Working Groups to help shape standards and address issues like data management, quality, and interoperability. RDA offers a global network and opportunities for collaboration on solutions to research data challenges.
The Research Data Alliance: Opportunities for Public/Private Partnerships in...Research Data Alliance
The document discusses the Research Data Alliance (RDA), an international organization focused on reducing barriers to data sharing and exchange. It provides information on:
- What RDA is and its goals of openly sharing data across technologies, disciplines and countries.
- RDA's activities including working groups and interest groups focused on developing infrastructure, standards, and best practices.
- Benefits of RDA membership for individuals, researchers, enterprises/businesses, and policymakers.
- Examples of RDA recommendations and outputs like data citation standards and metadata directories.
- RDA community size and composition, including over 4,000 members from 110 countries in academia, government, and private industry.
Research Data Shared Service update at DPCJisc RDM
The document discusses the Jisc Research Data Shared Service (RDSS) and its role in coordinating the preservation and sharing of research data. RDSS aims to provide core functionality for researchers to deposit, describe, store, publish, and ensure the integrity of their research data. It will also offer advice and best practices for research data management. The service coordinates efforts across universities and involves partnerships with other organizations to develop shared technology solutions for preserving UK research outputs.
Lessons from the UK: Data access, patient trust & real-world impact with heal...Varsha Khodiyar
HDR UK is facilitating health data access in the UK for researchers through The Innovation Gateway. This allows researchers to discover and access de-identified health data from various custodians. HDR UK has emphasized transparency and patient/public involvement. During the COVID-19 pandemic, HDR UK coordinated data-driven research efforts and accelerated data access to support priority studies. This included enabling a clinical trial to more rapidly recruit participants using daily COVID test results. HDR UK is also laying the foundations for an international health data alliance to support open COVID-19 research globally.
ISPE is the Society of Choice for 25,000 pharmaceutical science and manufacturing professionals. For information about joining ISPE, visit www.ISPE.org/membership.
The document discusses a proposed joint venture between Health Spring, a US-based health insurance company, and St. Luke's Medical Center in the Philippines to establish Health Spring as a medical tourism facilitator. This would allow Health Spring to offer lower-cost medical procedures to its customers in the Philippines while also increasing business and revenues for St. Luke's. Key benefits include lower costs for Health Spring (20-80% savings on procedures), business expansion into medical tourism, and increased revenues and patient volumes for St. Luke's. A 3-year plan and potential risks are also outlined.
Southwest Memorial Hospital in Cortez, Colorado was recently named one of the top 100 critical access hospitals in the United States. The hospital offers a wide range of medical services to the community including emergency care, surgery, imaging, and various outpatient services. Several new physicians have also joined the hospital's staff. The document also discusses Medicaid expansion and average hospital charges in Colorado.
A former Queensland government official alleges the state government covered up the true extent of the fire ant problem. Pam Swepson claims reports of the spread of fire ants were altered to downplay the issue in order to continue receiving federal funding that required claiming eradication was possible. While the Crime and Misconduct Commission investigated, they only looked at internal reporting and not the substance of Swepson's allegations. The government will now use a $1 million infrared camera attached to a helicopter to search for remaining fire ant colonies from over 100 meters above ground as a new strategy, having previously relied more on large-scale treatments.
python-message is a Python publish-subscribe broker for messages within an application. It allows components to subscribe to messages on topics and publish messages to subscribed listeners on those topics. Key features include using hashable objects like strings as topics, synchronous publishing to subscribed listeners, and APIs for subscribing, unsubscribing, publishing, and managing topic declarations. Examples show how it can decouple logging from libraries and allow dancing with processes, threads, and coroutines by decorating listener functions.
/International Agency for Research on Cancer(IARC)Claudiu Nemeş
International Agency for Research on Cancer(IARC) has
classified radiofrequency electromagnetic fields as possibly carcinogenic to humans(Group 2B),
based on an increased risk for glioma, a malignant type of brain cancer1
, associated with
wireless phone use.
This document summarizes a dispute between a family and the Building Services Authority (BSA) regarding defective bamboo flooring installed in the family's newly constructed home. The flooring buckled severely, preventing the family from moving in. While the BSA initially found in the family's favor, requiring the floors be replaced, the BSA later reversed its decision without informing the family. The family has spent $30,000 fighting the case so far and repairs are estimated to cost over $100,000. Brisbane's Lord Mayor criticized the BSA for being "bogged down with red tape" and failing to properly handle building disputes.
This document summarizes a study on unionism in the Philippines. It begins by outlining the legal foundations for unionization and self-organization under the Philippine Labor Code. It then reviews literature on the history and development of trade unions globally and locally in response to industrialization and changing economic conditions. Tables show declining union registration and membership in the Philippines in recent decades. The document introduces various forms and roles of trade unions discussed in academic literature and traces the development of trade unionism in the Philippines in the post-WWII period.
We understand the importance of delivering the basic: attention to instructions accompanied by an accurate and timely response to the problem. We provide simple yet accurate and reliable solutions to all your BPO needs.
As a strategic partner, SixEleven provides a 24/7 inbound and outbound support enterprise than can improve your company's position in today's very competitive and highly technologically involved market. We take pride in utilizing today's state of the art technologies by incorporating them in to our day to day operations, while keeping things simple and precise to achieve specific goals. We provide you with the solutions and with services that work.
This document is a registration form for the 2010 National Convention of the Philippine Pharmacists Association to be held from April 7-9, 2010 at the Leyte Park Hotel in Tacloban City. It requests information such as name, chapter affiliation, contact details, and registration fee from participants. Early bird and pre-registration fees are listed, as well as the on-site fee. Payment can be made in cash, check, or bank transfer. Contact information is provided for the PPhA Secretariat.
International Company is a global firm that operates in over 50 countries worldwide. They have a diverse portfolio of business lines including manufacturing, technology, and financial services. The company aims to continue its growth strategy through expanding into new markets and pursuing strategic acquisitions.
The document discusses team sales commission (TSC) structures. TSC is based on "cycles" earned from binary volume units (BUV) placed on the left and right sales teams. One cycle is earned for every 300 BUV, requiring 150 BUV on each side. Members earn different commission amounts per cycle depending on their package and number of personally sponsored distributors. Working as a team maximizes income potential by balancing BUV across legs. Higher ranks allow more cycles and income per day, up to a maximum. The Strong Leg Retention feature unique to the company helps maximize income by reducing losses when maximums are reached.
LISTA DE PRECIOS CAMARAS ANALOGAS HIKVISION EPCOM
VENTAS@GRUPOTECNOMEGA.COM
CALLE 10 N.22-14 LOCAL B-210
CENTRO COMERCIAL PUERTA GRANDE
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www.grupotecnomega.tk
This document discusses the role of citizens and social media in nation-building. It emphasizes that social media is about human interaction and communication, and that people support what they help to create. It encourages citizens to participate actively and take on small actions that can help the country, such as following traffic rules, not buying smuggled goods, and speaking positively about the nation. It profiles Alex Lacson as an example of one hero who dared to change the world through his inspiring book.
Este documento presenta información sobre la topología de Internet, incluyendo definiciones de conceptos clave como ADSL, HTTP, URL, TCP, SMTP y WWW. Explica brevemente el propósito y características de cada uno de estos protocolos y tecnologías fundamentales para la operación de Internet.
The document provides guidance on using social communications like Facebook and Twitter to promote the Knights of Columbus. It outlines best practices for personal accounts, groups, pages, and subordinate units' sites. Members and leaders are encouraged to share the good works of the KC and recruit new members by publicizing charitable activities online, while maintaining Catholic values and respecting others. Approval is required before using trademarks, and content must comply with KC policies.
This document discusses water sustainability challenges in commercial buildings and introduces Dolphin WaterCare as a chemical-free solution for cooling tower water treatment. Traditional chemical water treatment uses handling of chemicals which presents risks, while Dolphin WaterCare uses pulsed electromagnetic fields to control scale, corrosion and bacteria without chemicals. It provides benefits like water and energy savings, reduced operating expenses, and helps earn LEED points. Customers have seen increased efficiency and measurable economic and sustainability benefits compared to chemical treatment.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization focused on data sharing infrastructure and community activities. It has over 3,200 members from over 100 countries, representing data professionals from academia, libraries, earth sciences, astronomy and other disciplines. RDA develops recommendations and standards to reduce barriers to data sharing through working groups. It aims to enable open sharing of data to address societal challenges. Members collaborate on issues like reproducibility, data preservation, and metadata through regional and global activities. RDA membership is free and open to any individual or organization with an interest in data sharing.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization focused on data sharing infrastructure. With over 3,200 members from over 100 countries, RDA develops recommendations and outputs to reduce barriers to data sharing. Key activities include working groups that develop standards, best practices, and reference architectures. RDA also coordinates events to facilitate collaboration and outputs adoption. The organization aims to build the social and technical bridges needed to enable open data sharing globally.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization focused on data sharing infrastructure. With over 3,200 members from over 100 countries, RDA develops recommendations and outputs to reduce barriers to data sharing. Key activities include working groups that develop standards, best practices, and reference frameworks. RDA also holds plenary meetings to share developments and foster collaboration across disciplines. The organization aims to build the social and technical foundations for open data sharing to address global challenges.
Lessons from Journal Research Data Policy Registry PilotJisc RDM
Linda Naughton presenting on the lessons learnt from the Journal Research Data Policy Registry pilot at a workshop organised by National Institutes of Health and SPARC held at the World Bank on the 7th of October in Washington, DC.
The document discusses the Research Data Alliance (RDA), an international organization focused on data sharing. It provides information on RDA's vision, mission, members, activities, and outputs. RDA has over 6,400 members from 133 countries working in groups to develop infrastructure and standards to facilitate open data sharing across disciplines. The document outlines the various domain-specific and cross-cutting working groups and interest groups within RDA addressing issues like metadata, data citation, and interoperability.
RDA is an international organization focused on reducing barriers to data sharing. It has over 6,100 members from 130 countries working to build social and technical bridges for open sharing of data. RDA develops infrastructure and holds working groups to tackle issues like standards, best practices, and data policies in order to accelerate data-driven innovation worldwide.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization with over 3,200 members from over 100 countries that works to reduce barriers to data sharing and exchange. RDA develops infrastructure and standards to facilitate data sharing across disciplines and borders. It has numerous working groups addressing issues like metadata, data citation, and interoperability. Membership is free and open to individuals and organizations with an interest in open data. RDA produces recommendations and outputs to enhance data infrastructure, practices, and policies. It holds plenary meetings to discuss progress and foster collaboration.
RDA is an international organization focused on reducing barriers to data sharing. With over 6,000 members from 130 countries, RDA develops infrastructure and standards to make data more accessible and reusable. RDA members participate in working groups that address issues like metadata, attribution, and interoperability. RDA produces recommendations and outputs that are adopted by data professionals, organizations, and projects worldwide to improve data practices.
RDA is an international organization with over 6,700 members from 136 countries that works to reduce barriers to data sharing and exchange. RDA develops infrastructure and community activities through working groups and interest groups to accelerate data-driven innovation worldwide. Members collaborate on issues like reproducibility, data citation, metadata standards, and more. Individual membership is free and open to anyone interested in open data sharing.
RDA is an international organization focused on data sharing and exchange. It has over 4,100 members from over 110 countries working to reduce barriers to data sharing across disciplines. RDA develops infrastructure and standards to enable open data sharing through working groups. Its goals are to address challenges like reproducibility, data preservation, and metadata. RDA outputs include recommendations on data citation, registries, and repository certification to facilitate greater data access and use.
RDA is an international organization focused on reducing barriers to data sharing. It has over 4,700 individual members from 117 countries working in various domains and disciplines. RDA develops infrastructure and standards to facilitate open data sharing through working groups and recommendations. Its goals are to address challenges around reproducibility, data citation, metadata standards, and more to achieve its vision of open data sharing to solve societal problems.
RDA is an international organization focused on data sharing and exchange. It has over 4,100 members from over 110 countries working to reduce barriers to data sharing across disciplines. RDA develops infrastructure and standards to enable open data sharing through working groups. Its goals are to address challenges like reproducibility, data preservation, and metadata. RDA outputs include recommendations on data citation, registries, and repository certification to facilitate greater data access and use.
RDA is an international organization focused on reducing barriers to data sharing and exchange to enable open sharing of data across technologies and disciplines. It has over 4,000 members from over 110 countries representing various data-related fields. RDA develops infrastructure and standards to facilitate data sharing through working groups that address issues like metadata, data citation, and interoperability. The organization produces recommendations and other outputs aimed at making data discovery, access, use and reuse more reliable for researchers and innovators worldwide.
Data ecosystems: turning data into public valueSlim Turki, Dr.
Africa Information Highway Live Exchange #Session 7
8 October 2021
The AIH Live Exchange between the Africa Information Highway Team, partners and countries is a free monthly webinar hosted by the African Development Bank to discuss topics related to government data and statistics. This webinar series is the main platform for countries to share their experiences and best practices around open data including using their Open Data Platform of the AIH.
This session is co-organized with the Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology (LIST) which is a mission-driven Research and Technology Organization (RTO) that develops advanced technologies and delivers innovative products and services to industry and society. These innovations can also be used to solve several societal challenges, particularly in the areas of the environment, security, education and culture, sustainable development, as well as the efficient use of resources.
Official statistical data are recognized as high-value datasets for the society and economy, to enrich research, inform decision making or develop new products and services. The use of these authoritative data sources contributes to building a society with more empowered people, better policies, more effective and accountable decision-making, greater participation and stronger democratic mechanisms.
Official statistics are produced to be used and re-used to make an impact on society through a higher degree of openness and transparency while ensuring confidentiality and, at the same time, providing equal access to information to citizens.
The value of data lies in its use and re-use. In this interactive webinar, you will learn new techniques to improve the use and re-use of your statistical data, going beyond the provision logic and adopting the ecosystem mindset. You will:
● Sharpen your capacity at identifying and engaging users and re-users and stakeholders (data ecosystem mapping)?
● Effectively tackle technical and organizational barriers to stimulate data use and re-use?
● Smartly orchestrate a self-sustainable data ecosystem to increase the impact of statistical data.
This session is an opportunity for Regional members countries to '' Sharpen their skills in making data used and re-used by developing an ecosystem mindset to effectively build sustainable community of users around their Open Data Platform thus promoting transparency and better decision-making”
In recent years governments and research institutions have emphasized the need for open data as a fundamental component of open science. But we need much more than the data themselves for them to be reusable and useful. We need descriptive and machine-readable metadata, of course, but we also need the software and the algorithms necessary to fully understand the data. We need the standards and protocols that allow us to easily read and analyze the data with the tools of our choice. We need to be able to trust the source and derivation of the data. In short, we need an interoperable data infrastructure, but it must be a flexible infrastructure able to work across myriad cultures, scales, and technologies. This talk will present a concept of infrastructure as a body of human, organisational, and machine relationships built around data. It will illustrate how a new organization, the Research Data Alliance, is working to build those relationships to enable functional data sharing and reuse.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization with over 7,300 members from 137 countries working to build the social and technical infrastructure to enable open sharing of data. RDA has produced 25 flagship recommendations and outputs that have been adopted in over 75 cases to reduce barriers to data sharing. RDA members collaborate in 94 groups to develop solutions to challenges in domains like agriculture, health, geospatial and more.
RDA is an international organization focused on reducing barriers to data sharing. With over 6,300 members from 132 countries, RDA develops infrastructure and standards to facilitate open data sharing across technologies and disciplines. RDA produces recommendations and outputs through working groups to address issues like data citation, metadata standards, and legal interoperability. RDA's goal is to enable researchers and innovators to openly share data and address global challenges.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization with over 4,900 members from 118 countries that works to reduce barriers to data sharing and exchange. RDA develops infrastructure and holds working groups to develop recommendations and standards to facilitate open data sharing across technologies and disciplines. Key activities of RDA include developing recommendations for data citation, metadata standards, and repository platforms. RDA outputs include specifications, code, policies and practices to enable greater data interoperability, discoverability, and reuse globally.
The Research Data Alliance (RDA) is an international organization with over 5,100 members from 122 countries that works to reduce barriers to data sharing and exchange. RDA develops infrastructure and facilitates collaboration between domain experts, legal and policy professionals, and technologists to address challenges related to reproducibility, data preservation, metadata standards, and more. Key activities of RDA include the work of volunteer working and interest groups, developing recommendations and outputs to enable open data sharing, and providing a global network for professionals involved in data-driven research and innovation.
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2. 2The Vision
2
Researchers and innovators openly share data
across technologies, disciplines, and countries to
address the grand challenges of society.
RDA is building the social and
technical bridges that enable
open sharing of data.
Researchers, scientists, data
practitioners from around the
world are invited to work
together with us to achieve
the RDA vision
3. 3
“Knowledge is the engine of our
economy. And data is its fuel.”
(Neelie Kroes, Vice-President of the European Commission)
RDA – Research Data Alliance
Data will become the key resource to
tackle the big challenges in the world
4. 4
RDA – Research Data Alliance
How to tackle big challenges if data
is highly fragmented by disciplines,
domains and countries?
RDA is building bridges to overcome the hurdles for
easy data access, data sharing and
interoperability by facilitating collaboration
between experts from all over the world belonging to
different disciplines and organisations
5. 5
RDA – How does it work?
Experts and Data practitioners come together in
RDA Working and Interest Groups
to overcome concrete hurdles
They discuss matters at the Plenaries and
on the RDA online platform
They discuss matters at the Plenaries and
on the RDA online platform
6. 6
May 2014 - The orchard needs to be managed
Rescuing
Heritage
Structural
Biology
Wheat
Interop
Life
Sciences
Photon &
Neutron
Toxico
genomics
Public
Sector info
Agricultural
Marine
History &
ethnogr’y
Data Types
Registries
PIds
Metadata
Preservation
Semantic
Interop
Federated Ids
Provenance
Data citation
Data
publication
Data
bibliometrics
Applications draw up data from the ground like water
Technologies make data discoverable and accessible
RDA is the trunk that brings the two together
7. 7
RDA Working Groups
Form the Foundation for RDA Community Impact!
Working Groups envisioned as accelerants to data sharing
practice and infrastructure in the short-term with the overarching
goal of advancing global data-driven discovery and innovation
RDA Working Group profile:
Short-term: 12-18 months
Focused efforts with specific actions
adopted by specific communities
International participation
Open, voluntary, consensus-driven
Complementary to effective efforts
elsewhere
Potential outcomes / deliverables:
•New data standards or harmonization of existing
standards.
•Greater data sharing, exchange, interoperability,
usability and re-usability.
•Greater discoverability of research data sets.
•Better management, stewardship, and preservation
of research data.
8. 8
• An Interest Group (IGs) can be established prior to a Working Group
for community discussion of issues and areas that facilitate data-driven
research.
• IGs are longer-term groups defining common issues and interests.
•WGs and IGs are collaborating intensively
with groups in comparable initiatives such
as IETF, CODATA, WDS, W3C.
RDA Interest Groups
9. 9
The RDA Engine – Working & Interest Groups
9 Working groups including Community Capability
Model, Data Citation, Data Foundation and
Terminology, Data Type Registries...
https://rd-alliance.org/workinggroup-list.html
24 Interest groups including Agricultural Data
Interoperability, Big Data Analytics...
https://rd-alliance.org/interestgroup-list.html
including joint groups
with CODATA and WDS
10. 10
Data Foundation and Terminology WG
Currently scientific communities are working on their own data
organizations and even within communities there is a lot of heterogenity
-> different data models and terminology
• This WG is building a reference data model
• Core for trust:
Metadata
PID
Find, Access, Interpret, Re-use
Currently 21 approaches are being studied
•Goal to come to a harmonized, reference model with a widely agreed
terminology
Examples from WGs
11. 11
PID information types WG
• Persistent identifiers (PID) are the core of proper data
management and access
•This WG will provide a first solution for standardized PID
types
•Later, the WG will design and implement an API for interaction
with typed information
•Automated data management across disciplines and
repositories can highly benefit from standardized types
Examples from WGs
12. 12
Data Type Registry WG
•There are so many data types in use, and new ones are
continuously defined in science
•The result is that often researchers see interesting data, but don’t know
how to open, process or visualize the data
•This WG is implementing a type registry for data, which explains how to
open, visualize and process the data
• New data types can be added to the register with information how to open,
visualize and process the data
•In september a worldwide setup for a type registry is expected from this
work package
Examples from WGs
13. 13
Metadata Standards Directory WG
Registration of existing Metadata schemes
Communities, initiatives need to make their choices explicit.
Controlled vocabularies often are key to understand the categories.
Communities can look for standards that come close to their needs.
Ability to harvest other metadata, interpret and map it semantically.
A first step to formalize the metadata domain to enable efficient
machine processing of metadata.
Examples from WGs
14. 14
Practical Policy WG
Computer Actionable Policies
to identify a number of typical application scenarios for policies such as
replication, preservation etc.
to collect exemplary practical policies for a first number of such
application scenarios, register them, allow people to compare and re-use
them and to extract options for commonalities and optimizations
to create awareness about ways to come to reproducible science, to
come to trusted repositories and to allow proper certification
Examples from WGs
15. 15
Five first groups
Essential data life-cycle building blocks / bridges
Expected Impact
creating
data
preserving
data
re-using
data
giving access
to data
processing
data
analysing
data
Data
LifeCycle
16. 16
Community-Driven RDA Groups by Focus
Reference and Sharing -
focused
Data Citation IG
Data Categories and Codes WG
Legal Interoperability IG
Community Needs -
focused
Community Capability Model IG
Engagement IG
Clouds in Developing Countries
IG
17. 17
RDA Plenary Meetings …
Plenary 1 – 18- 20 March 2013
Goteborg, Sweden
240 participants
3 WG, 9 IG
Plenary 2 - 18-20 September 2013 in Washington, DC, USA
380 participants
6 WG, 17 IG, 5 BOF
Plenary 3 - 26-28 March 2014 in Dublin, Ireland
490 participants
16 WG, 35 IG and 20 BOF meetings
10 co-located workshops & meetings
Plenary 4 - 22-24 September 2014 , Amsterdam, Netherlands
Working & interest groups get together
and hold face-to-face discussions
New groups proposals & Birds of a
Feather
RDA member networking
Co-located events
18. 18
How can you become a member?
Register to the on-line community and become a
Member of RDA.
No fees involved for individual participation.
Membership is open to any individual who subscribes to
the RDA Guiding Principles.
As a Member one may join and form Working and
Interest Groups and participate in RDA elections.
https://www.rd-alliance.org/user/register
19. 19
How can your Organisation become a
member?
Organisational Members can include R&D agencies, for-
profit companies and non-profit foundations, community
organizations, institutions, etc.
Annual membership fee based on size of organisation (in number of
persons).
Why should your Organisation become
a member?
Affiliation with likeminded organisations in order to
coordinate efforts in mutual areas of interest and to
avoid unnecessary duplication and conflict.
21. 21
European Scientists feedback on RDA ….
A number of issues emerged as essential in helping to achieve the
RDA vision:
Infrastructures must work and be persistent and sustainable, i.e.
the work must be repeatable in a number of years.
Work must be reproducible.
Credit must be given for work and this credit must be useful in
careers.
Data must be referable.
Infrastructures must be trustworthy and this trust must be earned.
…… for complete outputs see rd-alliance.org
Exchange and interaction with European Scientists on
a wide range of topics including Sharing and Re-use of
Data, Publishing and Citing Data, Infrastructures and
Repositories