Retail and retailing is at the cusp of change driven by a raft of new technologies that will blend on and off line markets, real and virtual experiences.
Mobility and social networks are two clear examples of very recent change. We have also seen improved databases and search engines as well as cameras and barcode readers, but are now poised to increase its power with readers of "near field" (RFID). Even more extreme is the imminent deployment design, printing, manufacturing and distribution of 3D printers. So the main question is, how do change and adapt yourself and your organization to harness the potential of new businesses being offered?
Open source and free technologies for study skillsE.A. Draffan
The document discusses open source and free technologies that can help with study skills. It provides an overview of creative commons licensing and open educational resources. It then lists and describes various open source, portable, free, phone-based, commercial, and online tools that students can use for tasks like text-to-speech, spell checking, mind mapping, reminders, speech recognition, scanning, dictionaries, calculators, note taking, and references. The document encourages choosing tools based on skills, strategies, and needs and provides additional resources for further information.
Managers and companies have never been under so much pressure to change with technology accelerating and people demands and expectations on the rise. Just how do organisations take advantage of the pent up energy and enthusiasm for the new, the social, and the sharing?
A practical walk through the process of doing a start up in the UK v the USA experience. Contrasts the different attitudes, success and failure mechanisms.
El documento resume los eventos de celebración del centenario de la Escuela N° 8 en el año 2009. Se formaron comisiones para organizar las festividades que incluyeron eventos a lo largo del año y un gran día de celebración el 1 de abril con visitas de exalumnos, docentes, autoridades y la comunidad. Hubo suelta de palomas, estatuas vivientes y torta de cumpleaños. El 4 de abril fue el acto oficial y luego una gran fiesta para celebrar los 100 años de la escuela.
Cloud Computing could be the biggest single opportunity for a significant improvement in our network and information security for decades. Multiple operators and suppliers offering multiple access points, services and applications that we can tap at the same time will give us a diversity of new protection mechanisms way beyond those we enjoy today.
For sure we need to improve our log-on processes, firewalls and malware protection, but thin clients change the name of the game. A lack of memory and processing power leverage down any malware sophistication, whilst access and utilisation will be harder to compromise when we choose different devices and servers at random. If we also sign up for applications and services from multiple players, and disperse our information in parsed and scattered locations that are never connected in the same manner more than once, then infiltration will be orders of magnitude more difficult.
All clouds are not the same, and their will be large numbers of them spanning corporates, governments, social and personal applications. Some will last, others will be sporadic and last for seconds. Connections too will be continually varying and sporadic. A moving target is harder to hit, and The Cloud might be the ultimate target!
Floyd Provo has a variety of skills including as a project engineer, toolmaker, testing engineer, and experience with RF communications. He has a 4-year degree and journeyman's certification as a toolmaker. He has managed projects from concept to production. He also has Microsoft and FCC certifications. He has experience building, repairing, and troubleshooting radio equipment as well as various electronics projects like amplifiers, regulators, and antennas using scrap materials. His vision is to use these skills while working with a growing company.
Open source and free technologies for study skillsE.A. Draffan
The document discusses open source and free technologies that can help with study skills. It provides an overview of creative commons licensing and open educational resources. It then lists and describes various open source, portable, free, phone-based, commercial, and online tools that students can use for tasks like text-to-speech, spell checking, mind mapping, reminders, speech recognition, scanning, dictionaries, calculators, note taking, and references. The document encourages choosing tools based on skills, strategies, and needs and provides additional resources for further information.
Managers and companies have never been under so much pressure to change with technology accelerating and people demands and expectations on the rise. Just how do organisations take advantage of the pent up energy and enthusiasm for the new, the social, and the sharing?
A practical walk through the process of doing a start up in the UK v the USA experience. Contrasts the different attitudes, success and failure mechanisms.
El documento resume los eventos de celebración del centenario de la Escuela N° 8 en el año 2009. Se formaron comisiones para organizar las festividades que incluyeron eventos a lo largo del año y un gran día de celebración el 1 de abril con visitas de exalumnos, docentes, autoridades y la comunidad. Hubo suelta de palomas, estatuas vivientes y torta de cumpleaños. El 4 de abril fue el acto oficial y luego una gran fiesta para celebrar los 100 años de la escuela.
Cloud Computing could be the biggest single opportunity for a significant improvement in our network and information security for decades. Multiple operators and suppliers offering multiple access points, services and applications that we can tap at the same time will give us a diversity of new protection mechanisms way beyond those we enjoy today.
For sure we need to improve our log-on processes, firewalls and malware protection, but thin clients change the name of the game. A lack of memory and processing power leverage down any malware sophistication, whilst access and utilisation will be harder to compromise when we choose different devices and servers at random. If we also sign up for applications and services from multiple players, and disperse our information in parsed and scattered locations that are never connected in the same manner more than once, then infiltration will be orders of magnitude more difficult.
All clouds are not the same, and their will be large numbers of them spanning corporates, governments, social and personal applications. Some will last, others will be sporadic and last for seconds. Connections too will be continually varying and sporadic. A moving target is harder to hit, and The Cloud might be the ultimate target!
Floyd Provo has a variety of skills including as a project engineer, toolmaker, testing engineer, and experience with RF communications. He has a 4-year degree and journeyman's certification as a toolmaker. He has managed projects from concept to production. He also has Microsoft and FCC certifications. He has experience building, repairing, and troubleshooting radio equipment as well as various electronics projects like amplifiers, regulators, and antennas using scrap materials. His vision is to use these skills while working with a growing company.
The Social Web - Creating an Interactive Digital ExperienceJessKupferman
You’ve got Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIN, Google +, a blog and a website. But are they all speaking the same language? Are they all branded with the same look? Are they all working FOR you instead of against you? Learn why your website should be your “home base” where all of your digital marketing should lead – and how to grow your fans, your mailing list, and therefore, your bank account!
This document discusses various apps that journalists should have on their mobile devices to aid their work. It outlines note-taking apps like Evernote, cloud storage apps like Dropbox, scanner apps, social media apps, and tools for taking audio, photos and video on mobile. It also discusses how geolocation apps like Foursquare can help journalists find sources and cover events. The document concludes by discussing future technology trends like internet television and how they may impact journalism.
The document discusses how digital marketing has evolved from simply having a website presence to building full digital ecosystems. It notes that a few years ago digital marketing was focused on "cool ash sites" but that things have changed dramatically. Specifically, digital marketing now focuses on adding tangible value through experiences rather than just destinations on the web. The document emphasizes that digital marketing should ultimately be about people rather than technology itself. It concludes by highlighting some emerging trends in digital marketing like the growth of mobile phones and opportunities around data usage.
The document discusses mobile information literacy and trends in mobile device use at the New York Society Library. It provides statistics on library membership and collections, as well as policies regarding phone and laptop use. It outlines classes held on mobile topics and plans to increase mobile-friendly resources like the website and catalog. Unique mobile apps and using QR codes in books are highlighted as interesting trends.
The document discusses how using real-time data can power relevant conversations by focusing on data that is happening now rather than past behaviors, and emphasizes that knowing what is occurring now through location, time, and proximity data can redefine how organizations prioritize their data and engage with customers. It also explains that analyzing real-time and now data can lead to understanding what may happen soon through linking different data elements like who, what, where, and when together dynamically.
Clement Alteresco - pariSoma - Stanford - Jan3 2011Burton Lee
Coworking has grown to over 10,000 members worldwide in just 5 years, enabled by technologies like internet, WiFi, and collaborative tools. It started with two French companies sharing an empty office and has expanded to include sharing resources, knowledge, and goals in a community that promotes values like innovation, openness, and sustainability. The document discusses how coworking spaces provide events and services to startups while also forming local, national, and international networks of coworkers.
The document provides an overview of using social media for real estate marketing. It discusses the basics of social media marketing and platforms like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter. Tips are provided for setting up profiles, targeting audiences, growing followers, and using features like hashtags, tagging, and ads. QR codes are introduced as a way to drive traffic from physical marketing materials to online content. The presentation emphasizes listening to customers, building relationships through social platforms, and tying social media into an overall marketing strategy.
This document discusses optimizing a company for employee happiness. It argues that focusing on happiness can also optimize business success. It recommends hiring the best people through personal networks to avoid biases. Companies should optimize employee autonomy, mastery, and purpose. This includes self-managed teams, flat structures, shipping products, and flexible work hours based on trust rather than control. The physical workspace should also be optimized for creativity through an open layout and collaborative environment. Overall, optimizing for happiness can reduce costs from lower turnover while increasing productivity through more motivated employees.
Effective Presenting with ‘Think, Feel, Do!’Ray Poynter
Effective research needs to result in outcomes, and changes that are beneficial to the organisation commissioning the research.
The ability of the research to help bring about change depends on how it is communicated. In many cases, the only part of the research that has any impact or visibility is the presentation, i.e. the actual presentation and any report / ‘leave behind’/ or 'take-aways'.
In this webinar, Ray Poynter, focuses on how to use the ‘Think, Feel, Do!’ approach to create effective communications, i.e. communications that result in actions.
This document summarizes a presentation about revising resource sharing policies and opening up library collections for interlibrary loan lending. The presentation discusses the history of interlibrary loan dating back to ancient Alexandria, best practices for efficient lending, strategies for advocating for broader lending policies using data and examples from peer institutions, and considerations for lending different formats like books, microfilm, audiovisual materials, and e-resources both domestically and internationally. The goal is to encourage libraries to change their resource sharing tune and foster a greater sense of community through open collection sharing.
When I was asked to give a companion lecture in support of ‘The Philosophy of Science’ (https://shorturl.at/4pUXz) I decided not to walk through the detail of the many methodologies in order of use. Instead, I chose to employ a long standing, and ongoing, scientific development as an exemplar. And so, I chose the ever evolving story of Thermodynamics as a scientific investigation at its best.
Conducted over a period of >200 years, Thermodynamics R&D, and application, benefitted from the highest levels of professionalism, collaboration, and technical thoroughness. New layers of application, methodology, and practice were made possible by the progressive advance of technology. In turn, this has seen measurement and modelling accuracy continually improved at a micro and macro level.
Perhaps most importantly, Thermodynamics rapidly became a primary tool in the advance of applied science/engineering/technology, spanning micro-tech, to aerospace and cosmology. I can think of no better a story to illustrate the breadth of scientific methodologies and applications at their best.
It should be no surprise that AI is treading a similar path to computing which began with single-purpose machines tasked for payroll calculations, banking transactions, or weapons targeting et al, but nothing more! It took decades for General Purpose Computing to emerge in the form of the now ubiquitous PC. Today, AI is still in a single-purpose/task-specific phase, and we have no general-purpose platforms, but their emergence is only a matter of time!
Recent AI progress has seen a repeat of the media debate and alarmist warnings for our computing past, compounded by consequential advances in robotics. In turn, this has promoted numerous attempts to draw biological equivalences defining the time when machines will overtake humans. But without any workable definitions or framework that tend to little more than un/educated guesses. Recourse to IQ measures and the Touring test have proved to be irrelevant, and without a reference framework or formal characterisation, continued discussion and debate remain futile
We therefore approach this AI problem from the bottom up by defining the simplest of machines and lifeforms to derive clues, pointers and basic boundary conditions . This sees a fundamental Entropic description emerge that is applicable to both machine and lifeforms.
This presentation is suitable for professionals and the public alike, and is fully illustrated by high-quality graphics, animations and, movies. Inevitably, it contains some mathematics that non-practitioners will have to take on trust, but the focus is on defining the key characteristics, parameters, and important features of AI, our total dependence, and the future!
Note: A 40 min session for a predominantly ley audience and not all the slides presented here were used on the day. Their inclusion here is in response to those audience members requesting more detail at the end of/during the event.
Past civilisations have nurtured small populations of those trying to understand and manipulate nature to some advantage in materials, tools, weapons, food, and wealth. However, they never formed communities and lacked the means of recording, communicating, and sharing successes and failures. They also lacked a common framework/philosophy to qualify them as scientists, but that all began to change in the 16th Century. In this lecture we consider the progression to a philosophy of science, and the underlying principles and assumptions that now guide scientific inquiry.We also examines the nature of scientific knowledge, the methods of acquisition, evolution, and significance over past centuries, and reflect on the value to society.
In the struggle to solve problems, deliver understanding, and reveal the truth about our universe, science had to suffer and survive: ignorance, bigotry, established superstitions, and the ‘diktats’ of religions and politics, and latterly, falling education standards mired by social media. We chart that ‘scientific’ journey emphasising the importance of observation, experimentation, and the search for universal laws. Ultimately, this essentially Aristotelian perspective was challenged and overtaken by the rise of empiricism, which emphasised the importance of sensory experience and the limitations of human knowledge.
Science continues to evolve and provide us with the best truths attainable with our leading edge technologies of observation and experimentation. Today, it stands as the greatest and richest contributor to human knowledge, understanding, progress, and wellbeing. In turn, debates and controversies are ongoing, shaping the field and philosophy which remains essential for understanding the nature of scientific knowledge and the models it creates. But unlike any belief system, the answers and models furnishers by science are not certain and invariant, they tend to be stochastic and incomplete - ‘the best we can do’ at a given time.
In this workshop session we identify aging technology design concepts, old business and operating models, plus energy supply limits as the prime constraints of 6G and beyond. We also identify the notion of an erroneous spectrum shortage born of the bands and channel mode of operation which is fundamentally unsuited to 6G and IoT demands in the near and far future.
We strongly link optical fibre in the local loop with future wireless systems and the need for very low-energy ‘tower-less’ systems. We also postulate a future demanding UWB and HWB (Hyper) with transmission energies ~𝛍W and signals below the ambient noise level. This will be necessary to power an IoT of >2.4Tn Things which we estimate to be necessary for Industry 4/5 and sustainable societies.
It is hard to understate the importance of ‘Thermodynamics’ in providing an almost complete (Grand Unified Theory) picture of the inner physics of energy transfer spanning machines and chemistry thro information.
Apparently, Einstein had two favourite theories: General Relativity and Thermodynamics! He championed both because of their ‘beauty’, completeness, and emergent properties purely derived from the fundamental consideration of how the universe works.
The origins of this topic mainly reside in the Industrial revolution and the realisation that the early machinery was grossly inefficient. E.G. Engines were only converting the energy consumed to ~2% of useful work output. This drew the attention of Savery (1698), Newcomen (1712), Carnot (1769), and for the next 200 years the conundrum of lost energy occupied many of the greatest scientific minds. This culminated in Rudolf Clausius (~1850)publishing his theory of Thermodynamics with further refinement by Boltzmann (1872).
Why was all this so important? In the 1700s a ‘beam engine’ weighing in at >20 tons consumed vast amounts of coal, to deliver an output ~10hp. Today a Turbofan jet Engine can deliver >30k hp at a weight of ~6 tons. This is the difference between working with little understanding, and today where our knowledge is far more complete. Our latest challenges tend around non-linear loss mechanisms associated with turbulent air and fuel flow.. And like many other fields we have to step beyond our generalise mathematical models and turn to the power of our computers for deeper insights.
Ultimately all machines, mechanisms, computing processes and information itself, involve the transformation of matter and/or bits, and thus they are Entropic and subject to the theory of Thermodynamics. This lecture therefore presents a foundation spanning the history and progress to date in preparation for the embracing other science and engineering disciplines.
This document discusses systems and complexity from multiple perspectives. It begins by exploring definitions of systems and noting their complexity can range from simple to complicated to complex. Complex systems are characterized as having emergent behaviors that are unpredictable and non-linear. The document then examines trends toward greater complexity in both natural and designed systems. It emphasizes that simple solutions are inadequate for complex problems and notes the biggest challenge is many do not comprehend the shift from a linear to non-linear world.
IoT growth forecasts currently tend to span 30 – 60 Bn ‘Things’ by 2030. However, this ignores the central IoT role in realising sustainable societies where raw materials and component use have to see very high levels of reuse, repurposing, and recycling. In such a world almost everything we possess and use will have to be tagged and be electronically addressable as a part of the IoT. Such a need immediately sees growth estimates of 2Tn or more over the span of Industry 4 and 5. On the basis of energy demands alone, it is inconceivable that the technologies of BlueTooth, WiFi, 4, 5, and 6G could support such demand, and nor are the signaling and security protocols viable on such a scale.
The evolution of the IoT will therefore most likely see a new form of dynamic network requiring new lightweight protocols employing very little signal processing, together with very low energy wireless technologies (in the micro-Watt range) operating over extremely short distances (~10m). This need might be best satisfied by a new form of ‘Zero Infrastructure Mesh Networks’ that engage in active resource sharing, lossy probabilistic routing, and cyber security realised through an integrated ‘auto-immunity’ system. Ultimately, we might also envisage data amalgamation at key nodes that have a direct connection into the internet along with an additional layer of cyber checks and protection.
We justify the above assertions by illustrating the energy and network limitations of today’s 5G networks and those already obvious in current 6G proposals. We then go on to detail how a suitable IoT MeshNet might be configured and realised, along with a few solutions and emergent outcomes on the way.
Recently, it has become increasingly evident that we have engineers and scientists reaching a professional level of practice without a clear understanding of the scientific method, its origins, and its fundamental workings. There also appears to be a lack of appreciation of our total dependence on the truths that science continually reveals. How this situation ensued appears to vary from country to country, and the flavour of education system encountered by students. But a common complaint is the progressive dumbing down of the science curriculum along with a dire shortage of qualified teachers. This also seems to be compounded with the increasing speciation of science and engineering into narrower and narrower disciplines. So this situation (crisis?) prompted a request for a corrective series of foundation lectures focussed on healing these educational flaws across relevant disciplines, graduating and practicing levels. This then is the first in this foundation series.
Uncanny Valley addresses our reactions to humanoid objects, such as robots, a video game characters, or dolls, and how they look and act ‘almost’ like a real human. Feeling of uneasiness or disgust in the observer are addressed directly, rather than familiarity or attraction. The theory was proposed by Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori in 1970 and has been explored by many researchers and artists since. It has application in AI, robotics, MMI, and human-computer interaction, and helps designers to create more appealing devices that can interact with people in various domains, such as industry, education, entertainment, defence, health care, et al.
In this lecture we explain and demonstrate the fundamentals before extending the principle to sound, motion, actions, and eyes as an output mechanism. We also note that all this poses some challenges and risks in the potential for reduced the emotional connections, empathy, acceptance, and trust between humans and machines. On a further dimension the potential to create threat and terror can be useful opportunity in the military domain. It is thus important to understand the causes and effects of the uncanny valley in the wider sense in order to meet the needs of each application space
Only 40 years ago, the rate of technologically driven change was such that companies could re-organize efficiently and economically over considerable periods of time, but about 30 years ago this changed as the arrival of new technologies accelerated. We effectively moved from a world of slow periodic changes to one where change became a continuum. The leading-edge sectors were fast to recognize and adopt this new mode of continual adaptation driven by new technologies. This saw these ever more efficient and expansive companies dominating some sectors. For the majority, however, it seems that this transition was not recognized until relatively recently, and a so new movement was born under the banner of digitalization. This not only impacts the way people work, it affects company operations and changes markets, and it does so suddenly!.
Perhaps the most impactive and recent driver of change in this regard has been COVID which saw the adoption of video conferencing and working as a survival imperative in much less than a month. This now stands as a beacon of proof that companies, organizations, and society, can indeed change and adapt to the new at a rate previously considered impossible. The big danger for digitalization programmes now is the simple-minded view that there are singular (magic) solutions that fit every company and organization, but this is not the case. The reality is that the needs and culture of an organization are not the same and may not be uniform from top to bottom.
Manufacturing necessitates very steep hierarchical management structures and tight control to ensure the consistency of the quality of products. On the other hand, a research laboratory or design company requires a low flat management hierarchy and an apparently relaxed level of control. This is absolutely necessary to foster creativity, innovation, and invention. This presentation gives practical examples of management and organizational, extremes. We then go on to highlight the need to embrace AI and Quantum Computing over the coming decade to deal with future technologies, operating
and market complexity.
The Social Web - Creating an Interactive Digital ExperienceJessKupferman
You’ve got Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIN, Google +, a blog and a website. But are they all speaking the same language? Are they all branded with the same look? Are they all working FOR you instead of against you? Learn why your website should be your “home base” where all of your digital marketing should lead – and how to grow your fans, your mailing list, and therefore, your bank account!
This document discusses various apps that journalists should have on their mobile devices to aid their work. It outlines note-taking apps like Evernote, cloud storage apps like Dropbox, scanner apps, social media apps, and tools for taking audio, photos and video on mobile. It also discusses how geolocation apps like Foursquare can help journalists find sources and cover events. The document concludes by discussing future technology trends like internet television and how they may impact journalism.
The document discusses how digital marketing has evolved from simply having a website presence to building full digital ecosystems. It notes that a few years ago digital marketing was focused on "cool ash sites" but that things have changed dramatically. Specifically, digital marketing now focuses on adding tangible value through experiences rather than just destinations on the web. The document emphasizes that digital marketing should ultimately be about people rather than technology itself. It concludes by highlighting some emerging trends in digital marketing like the growth of mobile phones and opportunities around data usage.
The document discusses mobile information literacy and trends in mobile device use at the New York Society Library. It provides statistics on library membership and collections, as well as policies regarding phone and laptop use. It outlines classes held on mobile topics and plans to increase mobile-friendly resources like the website and catalog. Unique mobile apps and using QR codes in books are highlighted as interesting trends.
The document discusses how using real-time data can power relevant conversations by focusing on data that is happening now rather than past behaviors, and emphasizes that knowing what is occurring now through location, time, and proximity data can redefine how organizations prioritize their data and engage with customers. It also explains that analyzing real-time and now data can lead to understanding what may happen soon through linking different data elements like who, what, where, and when together dynamically.
Clement Alteresco - pariSoma - Stanford - Jan3 2011Burton Lee
Coworking has grown to over 10,000 members worldwide in just 5 years, enabled by technologies like internet, WiFi, and collaborative tools. It started with two French companies sharing an empty office and has expanded to include sharing resources, knowledge, and goals in a community that promotes values like innovation, openness, and sustainability. The document discusses how coworking spaces provide events and services to startups while also forming local, national, and international networks of coworkers.
The document provides an overview of using social media for real estate marketing. It discusses the basics of social media marketing and platforms like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter. Tips are provided for setting up profiles, targeting audiences, growing followers, and using features like hashtags, tagging, and ads. QR codes are introduced as a way to drive traffic from physical marketing materials to online content. The presentation emphasizes listening to customers, building relationships through social platforms, and tying social media into an overall marketing strategy.
This document discusses optimizing a company for employee happiness. It argues that focusing on happiness can also optimize business success. It recommends hiring the best people through personal networks to avoid biases. Companies should optimize employee autonomy, mastery, and purpose. This includes self-managed teams, flat structures, shipping products, and flexible work hours based on trust rather than control. The physical workspace should also be optimized for creativity through an open layout and collaborative environment. Overall, optimizing for happiness can reduce costs from lower turnover while increasing productivity through more motivated employees.
Effective Presenting with ‘Think, Feel, Do!’Ray Poynter
Effective research needs to result in outcomes, and changes that are beneficial to the organisation commissioning the research.
The ability of the research to help bring about change depends on how it is communicated. In many cases, the only part of the research that has any impact or visibility is the presentation, i.e. the actual presentation and any report / ‘leave behind’/ or 'take-aways'.
In this webinar, Ray Poynter, focuses on how to use the ‘Think, Feel, Do!’ approach to create effective communications, i.e. communications that result in actions.
This document summarizes a presentation about revising resource sharing policies and opening up library collections for interlibrary loan lending. The presentation discusses the history of interlibrary loan dating back to ancient Alexandria, best practices for efficient lending, strategies for advocating for broader lending policies using data and examples from peer institutions, and considerations for lending different formats like books, microfilm, audiovisual materials, and e-resources both domestically and internationally. The goal is to encourage libraries to change their resource sharing tune and foster a greater sense of community through open collection sharing.
When I was asked to give a companion lecture in support of ‘The Philosophy of Science’ (https://shorturl.at/4pUXz) I decided not to walk through the detail of the many methodologies in order of use. Instead, I chose to employ a long standing, and ongoing, scientific development as an exemplar. And so, I chose the ever evolving story of Thermodynamics as a scientific investigation at its best.
Conducted over a period of >200 years, Thermodynamics R&D, and application, benefitted from the highest levels of professionalism, collaboration, and technical thoroughness. New layers of application, methodology, and practice were made possible by the progressive advance of technology. In turn, this has seen measurement and modelling accuracy continually improved at a micro and macro level.
Perhaps most importantly, Thermodynamics rapidly became a primary tool in the advance of applied science/engineering/technology, spanning micro-tech, to aerospace and cosmology. I can think of no better a story to illustrate the breadth of scientific methodologies and applications at their best.
It should be no surprise that AI is treading a similar path to computing which began with single-purpose machines tasked for payroll calculations, banking transactions, or weapons targeting et al, but nothing more! It took decades for General Purpose Computing to emerge in the form of the now ubiquitous PC. Today, AI is still in a single-purpose/task-specific phase, and we have no general-purpose platforms, but their emergence is only a matter of time!
Recent AI progress has seen a repeat of the media debate and alarmist warnings for our computing past, compounded by consequential advances in robotics. In turn, this has promoted numerous attempts to draw biological equivalences defining the time when machines will overtake humans. But without any workable definitions or framework that tend to little more than un/educated guesses. Recourse to IQ measures and the Touring test have proved to be irrelevant, and without a reference framework or formal characterisation, continued discussion and debate remain futile
We therefore approach this AI problem from the bottom up by defining the simplest of machines and lifeforms to derive clues, pointers and basic boundary conditions . This sees a fundamental Entropic description emerge that is applicable to both machine and lifeforms.
This presentation is suitable for professionals and the public alike, and is fully illustrated by high-quality graphics, animations and, movies. Inevitably, it contains some mathematics that non-practitioners will have to take on trust, but the focus is on defining the key characteristics, parameters, and important features of AI, our total dependence, and the future!
Note: A 40 min session for a predominantly ley audience and not all the slides presented here were used on the day. Their inclusion here is in response to those audience members requesting more detail at the end of/during the event.
Past civilisations have nurtured small populations of those trying to understand and manipulate nature to some advantage in materials, tools, weapons, food, and wealth. However, they never formed communities and lacked the means of recording, communicating, and sharing successes and failures. They also lacked a common framework/philosophy to qualify them as scientists, but that all began to change in the 16th Century. In this lecture we consider the progression to a philosophy of science, and the underlying principles and assumptions that now guide scientific inquiry.We also examines the nature of scientific knowledge, the methods of acquisition, evolution, and significance over past centuries, and reflect on the value to society.
In the struggle to solve problems, deliver understanding, and reveal the truth about our universe, science had to suffer and survive: ignorance, bigotry, established superstitions, and the ‘diktats’ of religions and politics, and latterly, falling education standards mired by social media. We chart that ‘scientific’ journey emphasising the importance of observation, experimentation, and the search for universal laws. Ultimately, this essentially Aristotelian perspective was challenged and overtaken by the rise of empiricism, which emphasised the importance of sensory experience and the limitations of human knowledge.
Science continues to evolve and provide us with the best truths attainable with our leading edge technologies of observation and experimentation. Today, it stands as the greatest and richest contributor to human knowledge, understanding, progress, and wellbeing. In turn, debates and controversies are ongoing, shaping the field and philosophy which remains essential for understanding the nature of scientific knowledge and the models it creates. But unlike any belief system, the answers and models furnishers by science are not certain and invariant, they tend to be stochastic and incomplete - ‘the best we can do’ at a given time.
In this workshop session we identify aging technology design concepts, old business and operating models, plus energy supply limits as the prime constraints of 6G and beyond. We also identify the notion of an erroneous spectrum shortage born of the bands and channel mode of operation which is fundamentally unsuited to 6G and IoT demands in the near and far future.
We strongly link optical fibre in the local loop with future wireless systems and the need for very low-energy ‘tower-less’ systems. We also postulate a future demanding UWB and HWB (Hyper) with transmission energies ~𝛍W and signals below the ambient noise level. This will be necessary to power an IoT of >2.4Tn Things which we estimate to be necessary for Industry 4/5 and sustainable societies.
It is hard to understate the importance of ‘Thermodynamics’ in providing an almost complete (Grand Unified Theory) picture of the inner physics of energy transfer spanning machines and chemistry thro information.
Apparently, Einstein had two favourite theories: General Relativity and Thermodynamics! He championed both because of their ‘beauty’, completeness, and emergent properties purely derived from the fundamental consideration of how the universe works.
The origins of this topic mainly reside in the Industrial revolution and the realisation that the early machinery was grossly inefficient. E.G. Engines were only converting the energy consumed to ~2% of useful work output. This drew the attention of Savery (1698), Newcomen (1712), Carnot (1769), and for the next 200 years the conundrum of lost energy occupied many of the greatest scientific minds. This culminated in Rudolf Clausius (~1850)publishing his theory of Thermodynamics with further refinement by Boltzmann (1872).
Why was all this so important? In the 1700s a ‘beam engine’ weighing in at >20 tons consumed vast amounts of coal, to deliver an output ~10hp. Today a Turbofan jet Engine can deliver >30k hp at a weight of ~6 tons. This is the difference between working with little understanding, and today where our knowledge is far more complete. Our latest challenges tend around non-linear loss mechanisms associated with turbulent air and fuel flow.. And like many other fields we have to step beyond our generalise mathematical models and turn to the power of our computers for deeper insights.
Ultimately all machines, mechanisms, computing processes and information itself, involve the transformation of matter and/or bits, and thus they are Entropic and subject to the theory of Thermodynamics. This lecture therefore presents a foundation spanning the history and progress to date in preparation for the embracing other science and engineering disciplines.
This document discusses systems and complexity from multiple perspectives. It begins by exploring definitions of systems and noting their complexity can range from simple to complicated to complex. Complex systems are characterized as having emergent behaviors that are unpredictable and non-linear. The document then examines trends toward greater complexity in both natural and designed systems. It emphasizes that simple solutions are inadequate for complex problems and notes the biggest challenge is many do not comprehend the shift from a linear to non-linear world.
IoT growth forecasts currently tend to span 30 – 60 Bn ‘Things’ by 2030. However, this ignores the central IoT role in realising sustainable societies where raw materials and component use have to see very high levels of reuse, repurposing, and recycling. In such a world almost everything we possess and use will have to be tagged and be electronically addressable as a part of the IoT. Such a need immediately sees growth estimates of 2Tn or more over the span of Industry 4 and 5. On the basis of energy demands alone, it is inconceivable that the technologies of BlueTooth, WiFi, 4, 5, and 6G could support such demand, and nor are the signaling and security protocols viable on such a scale.
The evolution of the IoT will therefore most likely see a new form of dynamic network requiring new lightweight protocols employing very little signal processing, together with very low energy wireless technologies (in the micro-Watt range) operating over extremely short distances (~10m). This need might be best satisfied by a new form of ‘Zero Infrastructure Mesh Networks’ that engage in active resource sharing, lossy probabilistic routing, and cyber security realised through an integrated ‘auto-immunity’ system. Ultimately, we might also envisage data amalgamation at key nodes that have a direct connection into the internet along with an additional layer of cyber checks and protection.
We justify the above assertions by illustrating the energy and network limitations of today’s 5G networks and those already obvious in current 6G proposals. We then go on to detail how a suitable IoT MeshNet might be configured and realised, along with a few solutions and emergent outcomes on the way.
Recently, it has become increasingly evident that we have engineers and scientists reaching a professional level of practice without a clear understanding of the scientific method, its origins, and its fundamental workings. There also appears to be a lack of appreciation of our total dependence on the truths that science continually reveals. How this situation ensued appears to vary from country to country, and the flavour of education system encountered by students. But a common complaint is the progressive dumbing down of the science curriculum along with a dire shortage of qualified teachers. This also seems to be compounded with the increasing speciation of science and engineering into narrower and narrower disciplines. So this situation (crisis?) prompted a request for a corrective series of foundation lectures focussed on healing these educational flaws across relevant disciplines, graduating and practicing levels. This then is the first in this foundation series.
Uncanny Valley addresses our reactions to humanoid objects, such as robots, a video game characters, or dolls, and how they look and act ‘almost’ like a real human. Feeling of uneasiness or disgust in the observer are addressed directly, rather than familiarity or attraction. The theory was proposed by Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori in 1970 and has been explored by many researchers and artists since. It has application in AI, robotics, MMI, and human-computer interaction, and helps designers to create more appealing devices that can interact with people in various domains, such as industry, education, entertainment, defence, health care, et al.
In this lecture we explain and demonstrate the fundamentals before extending the principle to sound, motion, actions, and eyes as an output mechanism. We also note that all this poses some challenges and risks in the potential for reduced the emotional connections, empathy, acceptance, and trust between humans and machines. On a further dimension the potential to create threat and terror can be useful opportunity in the military domain. It is thus important to understand the causes and effects of the uncanny valley in the wider sense in order to meet the needs of each application space
Only 40 years ago, the rate of technologically driven change was such that companies could re-organize efficiently and economically over considerable periods of time, but about 30 years ago this changed as the arrival of new technologies accelerated. We effectively moved from a world of slow periodic changes to one where change became a continuum. The leading-edge sectors were fast to recognize and adopt this new mode of continual adaptation driven by new technologies. This saw these ever more efficient and expansive companies dominating some sectors. For the majority, however, it seems that this transition was not recognized until relatively recently, and a so new movement was born under the banner of digitalization. This not only impacts the way people work, it affects company operations and changes markets, and it does so suddenly!.
Perhaps the most impactive and recent driver of change in this regard has been COVID which saw the adoption of video conferencing and working as a survival imperative in much less than a month. This now stands as a beacon of proof that companies, organizations, and society, can indeed change and adapt to the new at a rate previously considered impossible. The big danger for digitalization programmes now is the simple-minded view that there are singular (magic) solutions that fit every company and organization, but this is not the case. The reality is that the needs and culture of an organization are not the same and may not be uniform from top to bottom.
Manufacturing necessitates very steep hierarchical management structures and tight control to ensure the consistency of the quality of products. On the other hand, a research laboratory or design company requires a low flat management hierarchy and an apparently relaxed level of control. This is absolutely necessary to foster creativity, innovation, and invention. This presentation gives practical examples of management and organizational, extremes. We then go on to highlight the need to embrace AI and Quantum Computing over the coming decade to deal with future technologies, operating
and market complexity.
The aspirational visions of Society 5.0 coined by many nations around 2015/16 have now been eclipsed by technological progress and world events including another European war, global warming, climate change and resource shortages. In this new context, the published 5.0 documents now seem naive and simplistic, high on aspiration, and very short on ‘the how’. The stark reality is that the present situation has been induced by our species and our inability to understand and cope with complexity.
“There are no simple solutions to complex problems”
What is now clear is that our route to survival and Society 5.0 will be born of Industry 4.0/5.0 and a symbiosis between Mother Nature, Machines, and Mankind. Today we consume and destroy near 50% more resources than the planet might reasonably support, and merely improving the efficiency of all our processes and what we do will only delay the end point. And so I4.0 is founded on new materials and new processes that are far less damaging, inherently sustainable, and most importantly, readily dispensable across the planet.
“Reversing global warming will not see a climatic reversal to some previously stable state”
In this presentation, we start with the nature of climate change, move on to the technology changes that might save the day, the impact of Industry 4.0/5.0, and then postulate what Society 5.0 might actually look like.
In a world of accelerating innovation and increasingly complex digital services, applications, appliances, and devices, it seems unreasonable to expect customers to understand and maintain their own cyber security. We are way past the point where even the well educated can cope with the compounded complexity of an ‘on-line-life’. The reality is, today's products and services are incomplete and sport wholly inadequate cyber defence applications.
Perhaps the single biggest problem is that defenders have never been professional attackers - and they don’t share the same level of thinking and deviousness, or indeed, the inventiveness of their enemies. Apart from an education embracing the attack techniques, and in some cases, engaging in war games, the defenders remain on the back foot However, there a number of new, an potentially significant, approaches yet to be addressed, and we care to look at the problem from a new direction.
In the maintenance of high-tech equipment and systems across many industries, identifiable precursors are employed to flag impending outages and failures. This realisation prompted a series of experiments to see if it was possible to presage pending cyber attacks. And indeed it was found to be the case!
In this presentation we give an overview of our early experimental and observational results, long with our current thinking spanning networks through to individual hackers, and inside actors.
When people are exposed to the new for the first time their reaction, quite rightly, is generally one of caution and perhaps a degree of suspicion. And, when that ‘new born’ is a novel technology, reactions can quickly become amplified and biased toward the dystopian by the sensationalism of media and mis-information of social networks. In this modern era I think we can also safely assume that Hollywood has more than a ‘bit part’ in nurturing extreme reactions with movies such as Terminator, AI and Ex-Machina.
Our purpose here is to dispel the modern myth that technology is, or can be, inherently evil and a direct threat to humanity. We do so by positing three basic axioms:
“Without technology we would know and understand
almost nothing”
“The greatest threat to humanity is humanity”
“If technology progress and societal advance stall, then civilisations collapse”
Having briefly establishing these in the context of our wider history, we focus on the Industrial Revolutions and their beneficial upside and consequential negatives. We then move on to examine Robotics, Artificial Intelligence, Artificial Life, and Quantum Computing in the context of our current needs and realising sustainable futures, and the survival of our civilisation.
Connecting Everything Vital to Sustainability
Mobile network evolution has followed a reasonably predictable path almost entirely focused on the needs of human communication. The transition from 1 to 2G was dictated by the economics of reliability, performance, and scale, whilst 3, 4, and 5G saw the transition to mobile computing with full internet access, AI and an ever-expanding plethora of applications. But 5G could be the end of the line as cell-site energy demands have become excessive at ~10kW.
Midway between the migration from 4G to 5G, M2M and the IoT machines overtook the human population of 8Bn people with near (estimated) 20Bn devices. Current IoT growth rates suggest a 40 - 60Bn population by 2030 to 2050. However, we present evidence that it could be far more ~ 1,000Bn ‘Things’. This is based on the observation of the number of IoT components populating modern vehicles, homes, offices, factories and plants, along with smart ‘human implants’ and ‘smart bolts’ plus the instrumentation of civil; structures.
The bold assumption that 5G would be a dominant player in the IoT is now patently one of naivety and the world has become far more complex with over 10 wireless standards currently in use. So, this poses the question; will 6G rise to the challenge? We see this as highly unlikely as the diversity of need is extremely broad, and we propose that it could be the end of tower based networks for a lot of applications. A migration to mesh-nets, UWB and (Hyper Wide Band) for the IoT at frequencies above 100GHz seems the most obvious engineering choice as it allows for far simpler designs with extremely low power at sub $0.01/device cost. 5G is already on the margins of being sustainable, and a ‘more-of-the-same’ thinking 6G can lonely be far worse!
Seventy years on from AI appearing on the public scene and all the optimistic projections have been largely overtaken with systems outgunning humans at all board, card and computer games including Chess, Poker and GO. Of course; general knowledge, medical diagnosis, genetics and proteomics, image and pattern recognition are now all firmly in the grasp of AI.
Interestingly, AI is treading a similar path to computing in that it began with single purpose/task machines that could only deal with a company payroll calculations or banking transactions and nothing more! General purpose computing emerged over further decades to give us the PCs and devices we now enjoy. So, AI currently runs as task specific applications on these general purpose platforms, and no doubt, general purpose AI will also become tractable in a few decades too!
Recent progress has promoted a deal of debate and discussion along with hundreds of published papers and definitions that attempt to characterise biological and artificial intelligence. But they all suffer the same futility and fail! Without reference to any formal characterisation, all discussion and debate remains relatively meaningless.
Somewhat ironically, it was the defence industry that triggered the analysis work here. Two of key steps to success were: the abandonment of all performance comparisons between biological and machine entities; and the avoidance of using the human brain as some ‘golden’ intelligence reference.
This presentation is suitable for professionals and public alike, and comes fully illustrated by high quality graphics, animations and movies. Inevitably, it contains (engineering) mathematics that non-practitioners will have to take on trust, whilst professionals may wish challenge on the basis that the focus on getting a solution rather than the purity of the process!
This document discusses emerging technologies and their potential impacts. It covers topics like artificial intelligence, quantum computing, robotics, cyborgs, smart materials, fusion power, artificial life, malware, biobots, network bots, and more. The document notes that many of these technologies are still in early experimental stages and face challenges before being ready for widespread use. It also discusses debates around AI safety and the relationship between humans and increasingly intelligent machines.
We are engaged in a war the like of which we have never seen or experienced before. Our enemies are invisible and relentless; with globally dispersed forces working at all levels and in all sectors of our societies. They are better organised, resourced, motivated, and adaptive than any of our organisations or institutions, and they are winning. This war is also one of paradox!
“The cost to many nations is now on a par with their GDP”
“No previous war has seen so many suffer so much to (almost) never retaliate”
“We are up against attackers who operate as a virtual (ghost-like) guerrilla army”
“No state can defend its population and organisations, and they stand alone - isolated and exposed”
“A real army/defence force would rehearse and play all day and very occasionally engage in warfare. We, on the other hand, are at war every day but never play, war-game, or anticipate new forms of attack”
To turn this situation around we need to understand our enemies and adopt their tactics and tools as a part of our defence strategy. We also have to be united, and organised so the no one, and no organisation, stands alone. We also have to engage in sharing attack data, experiences and solutions.
All this has to be supported by wargaming, and anticipatory solutions creation.
The good news is; we have better, and more, people, machines, networks, facilities, and expertise than our enemies. All it requires is the embracing of advanced R&D, leadership, sharing, and orchestration on a global scale.
In 2015/16 a number of bodies/nations set about defining societies they would aspire to in the near future. Each vision document similarly described some idealistic, egalitarian, super-smart, human centred, state providing a near uniformity of living conditions, and opportunity. At the same time, each society would be free of adversity, with economic development guided by ecological and human need. Of course, economic growth was defined to continue in line with the past. Very nice, but a product of old linear thinking and modelling!
It is now approaching 2022 and in the past 5/7 years our base silicon technology has advanced to enjoy a >30 fold increase in computing power. Our top end mobile devices would now challenge a super computer of 1996/7 era, whist AI systems now pervade our homes, offices, vehicles, professions and all our on-line services. At the same time, information overload has started to rival some medical conditions!
All of this has also been compounded by two years of COVID-19 lockdowns and restrictions that have seen the normalisation of social isolation, limited travel, working and eduction from home, virtualised medicine and care, support services, shopping and meetings. In turn, this has resulted in empty offices, towns and cities. Concurently, climate change, global warming, pollution, finite resources, a stressed planetary system, and social unrest have suddenly become urgent issues. Against this backdrop it really seems to be time to revisit those Society 5.0 Visions and the limited linear thinking that contrived them!
In this presentation we examine many of the core parameters and assumptions to highlight existing, or soon to be realised, solutions and remedies. In doing so, a different picture of Society 5.0 emerges.
The biggest force for social change since the first industrial revolution has been adjusting to, and taking advantage of, the new and accelerating capabilities of our advancing technologies. And in our entire history, the dominant technology driver has been silicon-based electronics. It has prompted revolutions in Computing, Telecoms, Automation, AI, and Robotics that radically changed the human condition. Today, that same exponential revolution is accelerating us into Industry 4.0 and onto Industry 5.0.
The consequential transformation of medicine, industrial design and production, farming, food, processing, supply and demand has seen living standards improve and life expectancy widen. Many of our institutions have also seen tech-driven transformations in line with industry. If there has been a down-side to this progression, it has been our inability to transform the workforce ahead of new demands. Unemployment has persisted whilst reeducation and retraining have been on the back foot, whilst, the net creation of new jobs has always exceeded the demise of the old. As a result, leading countries in the first world now have labour shortages at all levels right across the spectrum.
Recently, COVID-19 has demonstrated that we have the technology and we can rapidly reorganise and change society if we have to. So in this presentation, we examine ‘the force functions’ and changes engineered to date, and then peer over the horizon to sample what is to come in terms of technologies and working practices…
Throughout my career in science, engineering and management I attended numerous meeting where many misconceptions and misinterpretations were evident. Perhaps the most expansive and expensive were the probabilities assumed and calculated for system reliability and/or product manufacturing quality. Eventually, I began to refer to this as ‘five nines’ problem!
Not fully understanding the origins of the reliability measures, it is so easy to demand a 99.999% instead of 99.99% up time for an electronic system. What could be easier? At face value it appears to be trivial and straightforward! Likewise, taking a 5s manufacturing plant up to a 6s defect level turns out to be a monumental engineering challenge! And at the time of writing 6s has never been achieved!
It appears that to few engineering and management courses address this topic, and if they do, it is as a scant reference of insufficient depth. So, we see far too many students understand in any depth, if at all! And when they become managers they just ‘don’t get it’!
This presentation and the associated lecture have been specifically created to address this problem with relevance to BSc, BA, MSc and MBA students along with anyone needing a refresher or explicit introduction to the topic. In addition to the graphics, animations and movies, the lecture is also littered with practical examples and the outcomes of case studies.
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
TrustArc Webinar - 2024 Global Privacy SurveyTrustArc
How does your privacy program stack up against your peers? What challenges are privacy teams tackling and prioritizing in 2024?
In the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey, we asked over 1,800 global privacy professionals and business executives to share their perspectives on the current state of privacy inside and outside of their organizations. This year’s report focused on emerging areas of importance for privacy and compliance professionals, including considerations and implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies, building brand trust, and different approaches for achieving higher privacy competence scores.
See how organizational priorities and strategic approaches to data security and privacy are evolving around the globe.
This webinar will review:
- The top 10 privacy insights from the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey
- The top challenges for privacy leaders, practitioners, and organizations in 2024
- Key themes to consider in developing and maintaining your privacy program
Skybuffer AI: Advanced Conversational and Generative AI Solution on SAP Busin...Tatiana Kojar
Skybuffer AI, built on the robust SAP Business Technology Platform (SAP BTP), is the latest and most advanced version of our AI development, reaffirming our commitment to delivering top-tier AI solutions. Skybuffer AI harnesses all the innovative capabilities of the SAP BTP in the AI domain, from Conversational AI to cutting-edge Generative AI and Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG). It also helps SAP customers safeguard their investments into SAP Conversational AI and ensure a seamless, one-click transition to SAP Business AI.
With Skybuffer AI, various AI models can be integrated into a single communication channel such as Microsoft Teams. This integration empowers business users with insights drawn from SAP backend systems, enterprise documents, and the expansive knowledge of Generative AI. And the best part of it is that it is all managed through our intuitive no-code Action Server interface, requiring no extensive coding knowledge and making the advanced AI accessible to more users.
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technologies, XML continues to play a vital role in structuring, storing, and transporting data across diverse systems. The recent advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) present new methodologies for enhancing XML development workflows, introducing efficiency, automation, and intelligent capabilities. This presentation will outline the scope and perspective of utilizing AI in XML development. The potential benefits and the possible pitfalls will be highlighted, providing a balanced view of the subject.
We will explore the capabilities of AI in understanding XML markup languages and autonomously creating structured XML content. Additionally, we will examine the capacity of AI to enrich plain text with appropriate XML markup. Practical examples and methodological guidelines will be provided to elucidate how AI can be effectively prompted to interpret and generate accurate XML markup.
Further emphasis will be placed on the role of AI in developing XSLT, or schemas such as XSD and Schematron. We will address the techniques and strategies adopted to create prompts for generating code, explaining code, or refactoring the code, and the results achieved.
The discussion will extend to how AI can be used to transform XML content. In particular, the focus will be on the use of AI XPath extension functions in XSLT, Schematron, Schematron Quick Fixes, or for XML content refactoring.
The presentation aims to deliver a comprehensive overview of AI usage in XML development, providing attendees with the necessary knowledge to make informed decisions. Whether you’re at the early stages of adopting AI or considering integrating it in advanced XML development, this presentation will cover all levels of expertise.
By highlighting the potential advantages and challenges of integrating AI with XML development tools and languages, the presentation seeks to inspire thoughtful conversation around the future of XML development. We’ll not only delve into the technical aspects of AI-powered XML development but also discuss practical implications and possible future directions.
How to Interpret Trends in the Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart.pdfChart Kalyan
A Mix Chart displays historical data of numbers in a graphical or tabular form. The Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart specifically shows the results of a sequence of numbers over different periods.
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift.pdfTosin Akinosho
Monitoring and Managing Anomaly Detection on OpenShift
Overview
Dive into the world of anomaly detection on edge devices with our comprehensive hands-on tutorial. This SlideShare presentation will guide you through the entire process, from data collection and model training to edge deployment and real-time monitoring. Perfect for those looking to implement robust anomaly detection systems on resource-constrained IoT/edge devices.
Key Topics Covered
1. Introduction to Anomaly Detection
- Understand the fundamentals of anomaly detection and its importance in identifying unusual behavior or failures in systems.
2. Understanding Edge (IoT)
- Learn about edge computing and IoT, and how they enable real-time data processing and decision-making at the source.
3. What is ArgoCD?
- Discover ArgoCD, a declarative, GitOps continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes, and its role in deploying applications on edge devices.
4. Deployment Using ArgoCD for Edge Devices
- Step-by-step guide on deploying anomaly detection models on edge devices using ArgoCD.
5. Introduction to Apache Kafka and S3
- Explore Apache Kafka for real-time data streaming and Amazon S3 for scalable storage solutions.
6. Viewing Kafka Messages in the Data Lake
- Learn how to view and analyze Kafka messages stored in a data lake for better insights.
7. What is Prometheus?
- Get to know Prometheus, an open-source monitoring and alerting toolkit, and its application in monitoring edge devices.
8. Monitoring Application Metrics with Prometheus
- Detailed instructions on setting up Prometheus to monitor the performance and health of your anomaly detection system.
9. What is Camel K?
- Introduction to Camel K, a lightweight integration framework built on Apache Camel, designed for Kubernetes.
10. Configuring Camel K Integrations for Data Pipelines
- Learn how to configure Camel K for seamless data pipeline integrations in your anomaly detection workflow.
11. What is a Jupyter Notebook?
- Overview of Jupyter Notebooks, an open-source web application for creating and sharing documents with live code, equations, visualizations, and narrative text.
12. Jupyter Notebooks with Code Examples
- Hands-on examples and code snippets in Jupyter Notebooks to help you implement and test anomaly detection models.
Programming Foundation Models with DSPy - Meetup SlidesZilliz
Prompting language models is hard, while programming language models is easy. In this talk, I will discuss the state-of-the-art framework DSPy for programming foundation models with its powerful optimizers and runtime constraint system.
Best 20 SEO Techniques To Improve Website Visibility In SERPPixlogix Infotech
Boost your website's visibility with proven SEO techniques! Our latest blog dives into essential strategies to enhance your online presence, increase traffic, and rank higher on search engines. From keyword optimization to quality content creation, learn how to make your site stand out in the crowded digital landscape. Discover actionable tips and expert insights to elevate your SEO game.
Fueling AI with Great Data with Airbyte WebinarZilliz
This talk will focus on how to collect data from a variety of sources, leveraging this data for RAG and other GenAI use cases, and finally charting your course to productionalization.
Your One-Stop Shop for Python Success: Top 10 US Python Development Providersakankshawande
Simplify your search for a reliable Python development partner! This list presents the top 10 trusted US providers offering comprehensive Python development services, ensuring your project's success from conception to completion.
HCL Notes and Domino License Cost Reduction in the World of DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-and-domino-license-cost-reduction-in-the-world-of-dlau/
The introduction of DLAU and the CCB & CCX licensing model caused quite a stir in the HCL community. As a Notes and Domino customer, you may have faced challenges with unexpected user counts and license costs. You probably have questions on how this new licensing approach works and how to benefit from it. Most importantly, you likely have budget constraints and want to save money where possible. Don’t worry, we can help with all of this!
We’ll show you how to fix common misconfigurations that cause higher-than-expected user counts, and how to identify accounts which you can deactivate to save money. There are also frequent patterns that can cause unnecessary cost, like using a person document instead of a mail-in for shared mailboxes. We’ll provide examples and solutions for those as well. And naturally we’ll explain the new licensing model.
Join HCL Ambassador Marc Thomas in this webinar with a special guest appearance from Franz Walder. It will give you the tools and know-how to stay on top of what is going on with Domino licensing. You will be able lower your cost through an optimized configuration and keep it low going forward.
These topics will be covered
- Reducing license cost by finding and fixing misconfigurations and superfluous accounts
- How do CCB and CCX licenses really work?
- Understanding the DLAU tool and how to best utilize it
- Tips for common problem areas, like team mailboxes, functional/test users, etc
- Practical examples and best practices to implement right away
Digital Marketing Trends in 2024 | Guide for Staying AheadWask
https://www.wask.co/ebooks/digital-marketing-trends-in-2024
Feeling lost in the digital marketing whirlwind of 2024? Technology is changing, consumer habits are evolving, and staying ahead of the curve feels like a never-ending pursuit. This e-book is your compass. Dive into actionable insights to handle the complexities of modern marketing. From hyper-personalization to the power of user-generated content, learn how to build long-term relationships with your audience and unlock the secrets to success in the ever-shifting digital landscape.
Skybuffer SAM4U tool for SAP license adoptionTatiana Kojar
Manage and optimize your license adoption and consumption with SAM4U, an SAP free customer software asset management tool.
SAM4U, an SAP complimentary software asset management tool for customers, delivers a detailed and well-structured overview of license inventory and usage with a user-friendly interface. We offer a hosted, cost-effective, and performance-optimized SAM4U setup in the Skybuffer Cloud environment. You retain ownership of the system and data, while we manage the ABAP 7.58 infrastructure, ensuring fixed Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and exceptional services through the SAP Fiori interface.
Ocean lotus Threat actors project by John Sitima 2024 (1).pptxSitimaJohn
Ocean Lotus cyber threat actors represent a sophisticated, persistent, and politically motivated group that poses a significant risk to organizations and individuals in the Southeast Asian region. Their continuous evolution and adaptability underscore the need for robust cybersecurity measures and international cooperation to identify and mitigate the threats posed by such advanced persistent threat groups.
Introduction of Cybersecurity with OSS at Code Europe 2024Hiroshi SHIBATA
I develop the Ruby programming language, RubyGems, and Bundler, which are package managers for Ruby. Today, I will introduce how to enhance the security of your application using open-source software (OSS) examples from Ruby and RubyGems.
The first topic is CVE (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures). I have published CVEs many times. But what exactly is a CVE? I'll provide a basic understanding of CVEs and explain how to detect and handle vulnerabilities in OSS.
Next, let's discuss package managers. Package managers play a critical role in the OSS ecosystem. I'll explain how to manage library dependencies in your application.
I'll share insights into how the Ruby and RubyGems core team works to keep our ecosystem safe. By the end of this talk, you'll have a better understanding of how to safeguard your code.
GraphRAG for Life Science to increase LLM accuracyTomaz Bratanic
GraphRAG for life science domain, where you retriever information from biomedical knowledge graphs using LLMs to increase the accuracy and performance of generated answers
A Comprehensive Guide to DeFi Development Services in 2024Intelisync
DeFi represents a paradigm shift in the financial industry. Instead of relying on traditional, centralized institutions like banks, DeFi leverages blockchain technology to create a decentralized network of financial services. This means that financial transactions can occur directly between parties, without intermediaries, using smart contracts on platforms like Ethereum.
In 2024, we are witnessing an explosion of new DeFi projects and protocols, each pushing the boundaries of what’s possible in finance.
In summary, DeFi in 2024 is not just a trend; it’s a revolution that democratizes finance, enhances security and transparency, and fosters continuous innovation. As we proceed through this presentation, we'll explore the various components and services of DeFi in detail, shedding light on how they are transforming the financial landscape.
At Intelisync, we specialize in providing comprehensive DeFi development services tailored to meet the unique needs of our clients. From smart contract development to dApp creation and security audits, we ensure that your DeFi project is built with innovation, security, and scalability in mind. Trust Intelisync to guide you through the intricate landscape of decentralized finance and unlock the full potential of blockchain technology.
Ready to take your DeFi project to the next level? Partner with Intelisync for expert DeFi development services today!
Generating privacy-protected synthetic data using Secludy and MilvusZilliz
During this demo, the founders of Secludy will demonstrate how their system utilizes Milvus to store and manipulate embeddings for generating privacy-protected synthetic data. Their approach not only maintains the confidentiality of the original data but also enhances the utility and scalability of LLMs under privacy constraints. Attendees, including machine learning engineers, data scientists, and data managers, will witness first-hand how Secludy's integration with Milvus empowers organizations to harness the power of LLMs securely and efficiently.
Generating privacy-protected synthetic data using Secludy and Milvus
Soup to Nuts Retailing
1. Soup to Nuts Retailng
M sopa a las nueces Retail
Peter Cochrane
COCHRANE
a s s o c i a t e s
cochrane.org.uk
ca-global.org
Thursday, 3 November 2011
2. What we know for sure !
Lo que sabemos a ciencia
cierta !
Thursday, 3 November 2011
3. Fundamentally nothing much has changed!
Fundamentalmente no ha cambiado mucho!
• The customer experience 1932 - 2010
• Customers expect/want more
• Pile em high and sell em cheap is not enough
• Today there are alternatives on-line!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
4. Customers are looking for convenience...
Los clientes buscan la comodidad ...
• People will pay for quality
• They will go for brands
• They love good service
• But they won’t buy your wine if you don’t have a parking lot!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
5. Home deliver services can be made to work...
Inicio prestación de servicios puede llegar a funcionar ...
• Busy people love it
• It is a growing market
• It is also far more sophisticated than people think
• It is a Green Solution
Thursday, 3 November 2011
6. A new opportunity space !
Un espacio de nueva oportunidad!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
9. But it all requires even more attention to data...
Pero todo requiere una mayor atención a los datos ...
• There is $$ in data
• Even more $$ in meta data
Hold that thought...
Espere un momento ...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
10. But it all requires even more attention to data...
Pero todo requiere una mayor atención a los datos ...
• There is $$ in data
• Even more $$ in meta data
Hold that thought...
Espere un momento ...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
11. Online is now mainstream and growing...
En línea es ahora la corriente principal y en crecimiento
• Only technophobes dislike it
• The changing demographic will see it grow
• In some cases the high street is the showroom for the on-liners
• It is another Green Solution
Thursday, 3 November 2011
12. On-line sector is the master
of data & metadata...
On-line del sector es el amo
de los datos y metadatos ...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
13. On-line sector is the master
of data & metadata...
On-line del sector es el amo
de los datos y metadatos ...
• They make $$ on both
• The know ever more about us...
• We are happy for them to know
• It is a win - win situation
• This trend will grow in future
Thursday, 3 November 2011
14. Stop Press !
Dejar de Presionar
Thursday, 3 November 2011
15. John Lewis offers free wifi across all stores...
John Lewis ofrece wifi gratuito en todas las tiendas ...
The chain said it is also now working on an iPhone app aimed at
in-store customers, giving access to product reviews and videos
Thursday, 3 November 2011
16. Why ? ¿Ppor Qué
"We know our customers are mobile and
want to be connected anywhere, anytime
and anyplace”
Thursday, 3 November 2011
17. Why ? ¿Ppor Qué
"We know our customers are mobile and
want to be connected anywhere, anytime
and anyplace”
The Meta
Data
Los
Metadatos
Thursday, 3 November 2011
18. Why ? ¿Ppor Qué
"We know our customers are mobile and
want to be connected anywhere, anytime
and anyplace”
• Who you are
The Meta • Where you are
Data • Where you have been
• What you purchased
• What you did not purchase
• How often you visit
Los • Who you visit with
• Who your friends are
Metadatos • +++++++
• Real time advertising
• Real time offers
Thursday, 3 November 2011
19. Why ? ¿Ppor Qué
"We know our customers are mobile and
?
so
want to be connected anywhere, anytime
al
and anyplace”
3 G
t o • Who you are
ly
The Meta • Where you are
app Data • Where you have been
is
s th •
What you purchased
• What you did not purchase
oe
D • How often you visit
Los • Who you visit with
• Who your friends are
Metadatos • +++++++
• Real time advertising
• Real time offers
Thursday, 3 November 2011
20. Why ? ¿Ppor Qué
"We know our customers are mobile and
?
so
want to be connected anywhere, anytime
al
and anyplace”
3 G
to • Who you are
ly
The Meta !
• Where you are
app Data s
•eWhere you have been
Y What you purchased
is
h •
t
oes • What you did not purchase
D • How often you visit
Los • Who you visit with
• Who your friends are
Metadatos • +++++++
• Real time advertising
• Real time offers
Thursday, 3 November 2011
22. Proximity selling
La proximidad de venta
• A market of one
• On the move
• Real time
• Push and pull
• Dynamic
• Availability driven
• Meta data support
Thursday, 3 November 2011
23. Proximity selling
La proximidad de venta
g !
in • A market of one
th
ry
eve • On the move
s
ge
an • Real time
ch
h is • Push and pull
T
• Dynamic
• Availability driven
• Meta data support
Thursday, 3 November 2011
24. Proximity selling
La proximidad de venta
! l ty
g ya
in • A market lof one
o
th f
e ry o
g move
ev • Onin
the
e s an
eReal time
n g m•
a e
ch s th • Push and pull
h is ne
T e fi
d • Dynamic
re
It • Availability driven
• Meta data support
Thursday, 3 November 2011
25. Shopping is changing everywhere...
De la compra está cambiando en todas partes ...
Text
Thursday, 3 November 2011
26. Shopping is changing everywhere...
De la compra está cambiando en todas partes ...
Text
Essentials Only
Thursday, 3 November 2011
27. Shopping is changing everywhere...
De la compra está cambiando en todas partes ...
Text
Essentials Only Luxuries
Thursday, 3 November 2011
28. Shopping is changing everywhere...
De la compra está cambiando en todas partes ...
Text
Essentials Only Luxuries Fun
Thursday, 3 November 2011
29. It really is about the complete experience...
Realmente se trata de una experiencia completa ...
• Part purchase part entertainment
• Good brands/green solutions
• Perceived quality
• Convenience & pleasure !
Thursday, 3 November 2011
30. BUT even the really big hitters are in trouble
Pero incluso los bateadores realmente grandes están en problemas
NEWS
Las Vegas retail market deteriorates
Las Vegas retail market deteriorates as vacancy rate
escalated to a new high of 10.5 percent. Almost 200,000
square feet of retail space was returned to the market.....
Thursday, 3 November 2011
31. To survive and prosper we
have to change !
Para sobrevivir y prosperar
todos los negocios tienen que
cambiar!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
32. Changing an established business/sector!
Cambio de una empresa establecida / del sector!
“…can be almost impossible, and it is
generally far easier to build a new one”
"... Puede ser casi imposible, y
es generalmente mucho más
fácil construir uno nuevo"
Niccolò Machiavelli 1469 - 1527
Thursday, 3 November 2011
33. Changing an established business/sector!
Cambio de una empresa establecida / del sector!
“…can be almost impossible, and it is
generally far easier to build a new one”
"... Puede ser casi imposible, y
es generalmente mucho más
fácil construir what nuevo"
This is uno you have
Niccolò Machiavelli 1469 - 1527
Thursday, 3 November 2011
34. Changing an established business/sector!
Cambio de una empresa establecida / del sector!
“…can be almost impossible, and it is
generally far easier to build a new one”
"... Puede ser casi imposible, y
es generalmente mucho más
fácil construiris what you need
This is what nuevo"
This uno you have
Niccolò Machiavelli 1469 - 1527
Thursday, 3 November 2011
35. ...if we continue to do what we have always done...
• ...we will continue to get what we have always got
• Others will eat our lunch
• Customers will vote with their feet
• Turnover and profit will decline.....toward an unpleasant end !
Thursday, 3 November 2011
36. To be absolutely clear !
Para ser absolutamente claro !
Thursday, 3 November 2011
37. Change is not an option - it is the only constant!
El cambio no es una opción - es la única constante!
• It is driven by technology, need, fad & fashion
• It goes way beyond the on-line experience
• No sector goes unaffected
• Only the form and timing is different !
Thursday, 3 November 2011
38. An existence theorem!
Un teorema de existencia!
• You have to think different - not me too!
• Customers have to feel special
• Products and service has to be outstanding
• In the real world and the virtual
Thursday, 3 November 2011
39. An existence theorem!
Un teorema de existencia!
• Staff are there to help you - beyond sales!
• It is a hands on experience
• Lectures and tutorials by experts
• A totally new way of selling
Thursday, 3 November 2011
40. An existence theorem!
Un teorema de existencia!
• They create anticipation and excitement!
• They generate expectation and loyalty
• It is an ‘all embracing’ experience
• They were the first - and remain the only company to do this
Thursday, 3 November 2011
41. Technology powers a global abundance!
Tecnología poderes una abundancia global!
• It continually improves quality and reduces prices
• Seasonality has been banished
• But we still see the haves and have nots
• Logistics, PoS, and the ecology remain a big concern !
Thursday, 3 November 2011
42. Some key trends ...
Algunas de las tendencias clave ...
• All markets are global
• The customer is always on-line
• Meta data is where the money is
• Customer expectation is on the up
• Quality is augmenting cheap and plentiful
• Online threats & opportunities are growing
• Pres-used/second hand is becoming fashionable
• Discounting is dying - but group buying is growing
• Consumers will know ever more product detail
• Prosumers will be a disruptive retail force
• Selling fewer & better for much more
• Production will become more local
• Flash sales will overwhelm supply
• +++++
• Green really is an issue
Thursday, 3 November 2011
43. So what else is on the cards ?
Entonces, ¿qué otra cosa es en las
tarjetas?
Thursday, 3 November 2011
44. Tech savvi and driven consumers & employees!
Savvi tecnología y los consumidores impulsados y empleados!
• Any platform, OS, Application, fixed and mobile
• Socially networked and well connected
• Ecologically and fashion aware
• An entirely different expectation !
Thursday, 3 November 2011
45. Social networking Redes sociales
Other people:
* Read
* Watch
* Listen
* Search
* Think
* Work
* Solve problems
* Try products
* Find good services
* Organise group purchases
So I don’t have to !
Thursday, 3 November 2011
46. Social networking leads to social
shopping and consumer leverage
taking out the middleman...
Las redes sociales lleva a la compra
social y el apalancamiento de los
consumidores sacar el intermediario ...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
47. The movie and music felt the impact early...
El cine y la música se sintió el impacto temprano ...
Mobile phones and music players were the tools
Thursday, 3 November 2011
48. Social networking impacts markets quickly...
No Social Net With Social Net
Music sales with and without social networking
Impactos sociales mercados de redes con rapidez ...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
49. Social networking impacts markets quickly...
No Social Net With Social Net
Off the scale
Music sales with and without social networking
Impactos sociales mercados de redes con rapidez ...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
50. You no longer upset one person...
...you upset a community !
Bad news spreads faster and further than good
Thursday, 3 November 2011
51. Creativity, publishing, information is
all moving to the edge - it is out of
control, open, global, accessible
anywhere by anyone...
a creatividad, la publicación, la
información es todo movimiento en el
borde - que está fuera de control,
abierto, global, accesible desde
cualquier lugar por cualquier persona ...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
52. History and speed of change in trading
BC AD
~3000 ~400 ~700 ~800 ~1940
Thursday, 3 November 2011
53. History and speed of change in trading
BC AD
~3000 ~400 ~700 ~800 ~1940
Atoms Bits
Thursday, 3 November 2011
54. History and speed of change in trading
BC AD
~3000 ~400 ~700 ~800 ~1940 ~2010
Atoms Bits
Thursday, 3 November 2011
55. History and speed of change in trading
BC AD
~3000 ~400 ~700 ~800 ~1940 ~2010
Atoms On
Hands Bits
Hands Off
Thursday, 3 November 2011
56. History and speed of change in trading
BC AD <10years
~3000 ~400 ~700 ~800 ~1940 ~2010
Atoms On
Hands Bits
Hands Off
Real Virtual
Thursday, 3 November 2011
60. Unequals
Worlds apart - a completely
new paradigm!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
61. So what is going to happen in this world?
Thursday, 3 November 2011
62. Incramentalism ?
This really isn’t the next step - it really isn’t !!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
63. Incramentalism ?
The banks/card companies are gearing up to do this !!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
64. If cards go from swipe to contactless...and that
is all, then there will be another...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
65. If cards go from swipe to contactless...and that
is all, then there will be another...
...only this time it will really hurt!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
66. But the real consumer problem is far bigger!
ID
Pass
Debit
Credit
Guides
Loyalty
Medical
Licences
Insurances
Institutions
Quick Notes
Memberships
++++++++++
How many more can you cope with?
Thursday, 3 November 2011
67. But the real consumer problem is far bigger!
ID
Pass
Debit
Credit
Guides
Loyalty
Medical
Licences
Insurances
Institutions
Quick Notes
Memberships
++++++++++
Just manage my life for me!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
68. But the real consumer problem is far bigger!
Just manage my life for me!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
69. But the real consumer problem is far bigger!
iCards
Just manage my life for me!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
70. But the real consumer problem is far bigger!
iCards
Just manage my life for me!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
72. So, how about that Meta-Data ?
Así que, ¿qué tal que los meta-datos?
Thursday, 3 November 2011
73. Where you are ?
Where you have been ?
Where you are likely to be going to ?
What does it Who you have met ?
Who you are going to meet ?
know Who you call ?
about you? Who calls you ?
Who you TXT - IM - Link ?
All your contacts
All your urls
All you passwords
What you are doing now ?
What have you done in the past ?
What games you play ?
What apps you use ?
What music you listen to ?
What you watch ?
What you read ?
What you buy ?
++++++++++
Thursday, 3 November 2011
74. Tagging for life
Marcado de por vida
Cradle
Chunky
Limited to Pretty
Grave
technology
information Jewellery
Data
Chips and tags on and in everything
including goods, animals & people
Thursday, 3 November 2011
75. Much of this technology will be extended to
other vehicles...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
76. Our logistic systems waste a significant % of
the global GDP...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
77. Logistics inefficiency see losses of $2T a year !
Ineficiencia logística ver pérdidas de US $ 2T un año!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
78. Tagging and tracking changes the name of the game !
De marcado y seguimiento de los cambios en el nombre del juego!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
79. Data, admin, dosage, treatment errors kill
1000’s or sees serious disablemnet !
De datos, de administración, dosis, errores de tratamiento
de matar a 1000 o ve disablemnet en serio!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
80. Modern farming sees tagged crops and animals +
vehicles and supplies !
La agricultura moderna ve a los cultivos y los animales
etiquetados + vehículos y material!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
81. Industrial and personal recycling and reuse could be
vastly improved to reduce waste !
Reciclaje industrial y personal y la reutilización podría ser
ampliamente mejorado para reducir el desperdicio!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
82. Ultimately this is all about sustainability and
survivability!
En última instancia, esto es todo acerca de la
sostenibilidad y la supervivencia!
✦ Not more for the few
✦ But sufficient for all
✦ Using what is plentiful
✦ Not fighting over the scarce
✦ Creating less waste
✦ Helping nature not fighting her
✦ Living in a way the planet can
support
Thursday, 3 November 2011
83. Beyond tagging... Más allá de etiquetas ...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
85. Let's play a
mind game !
Vamos a jugar
un juego de la
mente!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
86. - I see this add
- Come to your store
- Find the jacket to fit
- But wrong colour pants
- Veo que este
complemento
- ¡Ven a tu tienda
- Buscar la chaqueta para
adaptarse
- Pero los pantalones de
color incorrecto
Thursday, 3 November 2011
87. - I see this add
- Come to your store
!
- Find the jacket to fit
a
nt
- But wrong colour pants
ve
y
- Veo que este
ha
complemento
No
- ¡Ven a tu tienda
- Buscar la chaqueta para
adaptarse
!
le
- Pero los pantalones de
Sa
color incorrecto
No
Thursday, 3 November 2011
88. - With RFID you locate
the right pants at another
store
- You promise to send the
same day
- Con la tecnología RFID
a localizar los pantalones
a la derecha en una
tienda de otra
- Usted se compromete a
enviar el mismo dí
Thursday, 3 November 2011
89. - With RFID you locate
the right pants at another
store
- You promise to send the
same day
!
a
nt
- Con la tecnología RFID
Ve
a localizar los pantalones
a la derecha en una
tienda de otra
!
- Usted se compromete a
le
Sa
enviar el mismo dí
Thursday, 3 November 2011
90. So, what else is
on the horizon ?
¿Qué otra cosa es
en la tienda?
Thursday, 3 November 2011
91. An endless stream
of technology!
Una corriente sin fin de la tecnología!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
92. So how about
the non-
obvious !
Así que, ¿qué
el no es obvio?
Thursday, 3 November 2011
93. We can now replicate 3D objects at a distance...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
94. Ultimately we will move
from shipping products
to shipping designs!
En última instancia,
vamos a pasar de
envío de productos a
los diseños de envío!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
95. Problems to come !
Los problemas por venir!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
96. We understand a lot about the sociology of people,
but nothing about the sociology of machines !
Entendemos mucho acerca de la sociología de la gente,
pero nada acerca de la sociología de las máquinas!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
97. Creativity and commerce are
moving to the edge and this
will include machines that will
produce and trade
La creatividad y el comercio
se están moviendo hacia el
borde, lo cual incluye las
máquinas que producen y
comercializan
Thursday, 3 November 2011
98. For sure we will have to
think and operate
differently to leverage
the technology...
Por supuesto que
tendremos que piensan
y actúan de manera
diferente a aprovechar
la tecnología ...
Thursday, 3 November 2011
99. All we can see, forecast, guess,
is just the tip...!
Todo lo que podemos ver, la
previsión, supongo, es sólo la
punta ...!
Thursday, 3 November 2011
100. Final Word
Palabras finales
REMEMBER
RECUERDE
The £ $ € is in the ʻMeta Dataʼ
Los $ £ € se encuentra en la "Meta Data"
Thursday, 3 November 2011
101. ca-global.org
cochrane.org.uk
COCHRANE
a s s o c i a t e s
1995
Thursday, 3 November 2011
102. ca-global.org
cochrane.org.uk
Thank You
Gracias
COCHRANE
a s s o c i a t e s
1995
Thursday, 3 November 2011