The document summarizes the work of the Open Knowledge Foundation (OKFN) in 3 sentences:
OKFN is a global network that builds open data tools, projects and communities to promote openness through working groups, local chapters, events, and experimental projects through their Labs program. They develop open data management software like CKAN and projects mapping government spending to promote open access to knowledge and its social benefits. OKFN brings together data experts from around the world to organize, understand, and visualize data through various initiatives and principles of openness.
A presentation about the linked data activities in the German National Library accompanying my lunch talk in the National Library of New Zealand on August 13, 2013.
How do you know what you are looking for?Shawn Day
This document discusses finding and capturing digital cultural heritage from various sources on the internet. It provides an overview of Europeana, a digital library that aims to give access to Europe's digitized cultural heritage by 2025. The document notes barriers to digitization like intellectual property and issues around metadata. It also lists some sources of data like Europeana, Project Gutenberg, and NINES as well as tools used for digitization like spiders and Getty vocabularies. Next steps discussed are analyzing digitized collections and upcoming readings on analyzing ship logs, images from the web, and comparing web archives.
New Forms of Collaboration in Humanities ResearchShawn Day
This document discusses new forms of collaboration in humanities research enabled by technology. It outlines evidence that social scholarship is growing, including increased open access publishing and tools that support collaboration. Challenges to social scholarship include lack of recognition and concerns about intellectual property and publication quality. The document examines examples of collaborative projects like crowdsourcing transcription and open source development. It argues that applying principles of open access, participation and distribution can accelerate research by engaging communities in knowledge sharing.
Universities as a site for innovation in publishing: the Ubiquity Press case ...Brian Hole
The document discusses Ubiquity Press, a university-based publishing company that aims to address issues in scientific publishing like validation, dissemination, and development. It presents Ubiquity Press as a case study of university innovation in publishing and discusses how the company fulfills the social contract of science through open access publishing and metajournals that provide incentives.
The role of academic libraries in supporting social sciences researchMichelle Hudson
The document discusses data visualization and the role of libraries and data librarians. It provides examples of websites for data visualization projects and references articles about the increasing role of data in research. Data librarians are seen as having an important role in providing data archiving, education and outreach to a broad range of researchers.
This document provides an overview of data on the web, including:
- A brief history of the development of the web from the 1990s to the present day and a projected timeline to 2026.
- An introduction to big data, open data, and linked open data, including definitions and examples of how these data types are used.
- Descriptions of standards and initiatives related to open data, including open government data and 5-star open data.
- Examples of open data portals and linked open data resources on the web.
The document summarizes the work of the Open Knowledge Foundation (OKFN) in 3 sentences:
OKFN is a global network that builds open data tools, projects and communities to promote openness through working groups, local chapters, events, and experimental projects through their Labs program. They develop open data management software like CKAN and projects mapping government spending to promote open access to knowledge and its social benefits. OKFN brings together data experts from around the world to organize, understand, and visualize data through various initiatives and principles of openness.
A presentation about the linked data activities in the German National Library accompanying my lunch talk in the National Library of New Zealand on August 13, 2013.
How do you know what you are looking for?Shawn Day
This document discusses finding and capturing digital cultural heritage from various sources on the internet. It provides an overview of Europeana, a digital library that aims to give access to Europe's digitized cultural heritage by 2025. The document notes barriers to digitization like intellectual property and issues around metadata. It also lists some sources of data like Europeana, Project Gutenberg, and NINES as well as tools used for digitization like spiders and Getty vocabularies. Next steps discussed are analyzing digitized collections and upcoming readings on analyzing ship logs, images from the web, and comparing web archives.
New Forms of Collaboration in Humanities ResearchShawn Day
This document discusses new forms of collaboration in humanities research enabled by technology. It outlines evidence that social scholarship is growing, including increased open access publishing and tools that support collaboration. Challenges to social scholarship include lack of recognition and concerns about intellectual property and publication quality. The document examines examples of collaborative projects like crowdsourcing transcription and open source development. It argues that applying principles of open access, participation and distribution can accelerate research by engaging communities in knowledge sharing.
Universities as a site for innovation in publishing: the Ubiquity Press case ...Brian Hole
The document discusses Ubiquity Press, a university-based publishing company that aims to address issues in scientific publishing like validation, dissemination, and development. It presents Ubiquity Press as a case study of university innovation in publishing and discusses how the company fulfills the social contract of science through open access publishing and metajournals that provide incentives.
The role of academic libraries in supporting social sciences researchMichelle Hudson
The document discusses data visualization and the role of libraries and data librarians. It provides examples of websites for data visualization projects and references articles about the increasing role of data in research. Data librarians are seen as having an important role in providing data archiving, education and outreach to a broad range of researchers.
This document provides an overview of data on the web, including:
- A brief history of the development of the web from the 1990s to the present day and a projected timeline to 2026.
- An introduction to big data, open data, and linked open data, including definitions and examples of how these data types are used.
- Descriptions of standards and initiatives related to open data, including open government data and 5-star open data.
- Examples of open data portals and linked open data resources on the web.
Linked Open Data en Wikidata - Erfgoed Gelderland 19 januari 2018Sandra Fauconnier
Workshop voor symposium Open-Up! bij Erfgoed Gelderland, Arnhem, 19 januari 2018 http://erfgoedgelderland.nl/wat-doen-we/symposium-open-up-wikimedia-en-erfgoed/
Mapping Historical Photos For The Common GoodJon Voss
The document discusses LookBackMaps, a website that geotags historical photos to make local history more accessible. It summarizes how digital archives have evolved from siloed collections in the 1990s to more open and collaborative models today. It also outlines LookBackMaps' goals to bridge archive silos by creating a centralized, open-source database of images and metadata, using public engagement to add value and make the data searchable via an API. Finally, it notes an iPhone app is in development and solicits feedback.
Linked data in the German National Library at the OCLC IFLA round table 2013Lars G. Svensson
The document discusses the German National Library's efforts to create and share library data as linked open data. It notes that currently library data formats are not readily understood outside of libraries. By linking authority data, national bibliographies, and ontologies, the library aims to make its data more accessible and useful to both libraries and other organizations. This linked data could help improve search capabilities and allow other services to more easily reuse library information. The ultimate goal is to contribute to a global linked data cloud and more interconnected web of bibliographic information.
Mapping Historical Photographs For The CommonJon Voss
The document discusses mapping historical photos for public use and sharing data between organizations. It talks about using crowdsourcing to geotag photos and share collections between institutions. It provides examples of projects that map historical photos and advocates for more collaboration to connect archives and make data searchable through APIs and linked data.
The document discusses the shift to open data and government 2.0 with more transparent, inclusive and user-driven communication. It provides examples of open data portals around the world and in Ireland. It also discusses linked open data and potential applications for open data in areas like transportation, budgets and quality of life indicators. Finally, it addresses challenges around engaging developers and citizens with open data and measuring the success of open data initiatives.
The open data movement has grown exponentially in a relatively short period of time. Many countries and cities have been rolling out initiatives and embracing the potential value that comes with opening up their data. However, as much as open data holds great promise, there is a real danger of initiatives failing.
Speaking at this year’s Canadian Open Data Summit (http://www.opendatasummit.ca/), Open Insitute’s Executive Director Jay Bhalla gives a global perspective of lessons learned through a journey of implementing and building open data ecosystems from around the world.
http://openinstitute.com/open-data-delusion/
This document provides examples of how some media houses and organizations are using crowdsourcing. It lists several websites that demonstrate crowdsourced journalism, including Al Jazeera's coverage of opinions on the Kony 2012 campaign in Uganda, the Guardian's data blog, and Ushahidi platforms used in Uganda, Central African Republic, and Kenya to collect crisis mapping information. The examples show how crowdsourcing is being used to document past events, gather photos of inaugurations, and make open data available through Creative Commons licensing.
Twitter #digitalcollections2016: a meta-collectionNeal Stimler
This lecture was a reflection on scholarly communications with Twitter as part of the Digital Collections 2016 Summer Institute in Lausanne/Zurich, Switzerland from September 4-14, 2016. The institute was supported by The Getty Foundation.
Open government data - the three legged stoolLaurence Millar
The document discusses open government data and proposes a "three-legged stool" approach with supply of data, demand for data, and tools to utilize the data. It advocates making government data openly available and reusable to increase public and economic value. Specific examples are given of types of government data that could be opened up like environmental, transportation, and research data. The benefits mentioned include improving data quality, allowing the public to access data they funded, and enabling innovative uses of data beyond what government agencies can achieve.
The British Library's Digital Research Team supports new ways of exploring and accessing the Library's digital collections through computational methods like machine learning, data visualization, and text mining. The Team collaborates on projects that make more content available digitally, and provides training and guidance to researchers. Examples of projects include crowdsourcing accent maps, analyzing patterns in music history from bibliographic data, and transcribing and georeferencing placenames from historical texts.
Open Access is Just the Beginning: Disrupting PublishingBrian Hole
Ubiquity Press is a researcher-led open access publishing company founded in 2012 that aims to give control of publishing back to universities and researchers. It provides infrastructure and support to allow societies and universities to compete with large legacy publishers. Ubiquity Press takes a comprehensive approach to publishing, offering journals, books, data, software, and more. It is committed to research integrity and has measures like plagiarism checking, rigorous peer review, and support for open data and software archiving. The company also has an inclusive partnership model to help publishing partners in developing countries become independently sustainable over time.
Emerging models in digital scholarship, research, publication and open scienceBrian Hole
The document discusses emerging models in digital scholarship, research, publication, and open science. It addresses the social contract of science including validation, dissemination, and further development. It also mentions scientific malpractice related to data, results, software, and hardware. Finally, it discusses peer review, cascading content, and teamwork.
Weatherstations - Citizen-Apps and eParticipation as sources for DatajournalismLorenz Matzat
Lorenz Matzat discusses the state of data journalism in Germany. He notes that while there are no dedicated data desks or blogs at German media outlets, some newspapers are pursuing investigative projects using data. He also outlines how civil society groups are working to gather and develop applications from open government and other data sources. Matzat suggests journalists could find story ideas by monitoring these "citizen apps" that function like networks of sensors, to better understand political trends and fulfill their watchdog role.
Crowdsourcing in the Cultural Sector: approaches, challenges and issuesMia
Slides for the Crowd-sourcing, Co-creation and Co-curation in the Cultural Sector workshop by the Scottish Network on Digital Cultural Resources Evaluation
Lecture on Open Data and how it can support Government 2.0 and new approaches to the design of Public Space given to the Idea Transition Lab at the Science Gallery, Dublin on 30th January, 2012
The document discusses OpenDataSoft, a company that provides an urban data hub and open data platform. The platform is designed for data sharing and reuse through APIs. It allows organizations to publish, discover, access and analyze data. Over 70 global leaders use the platform to make their data available. The platform also supports applications, monetization, data preparation and management features.
The Durham Open Data Program aims to promote social, environmental, and economic sustainability through an interactive map that better connects the Durham community. The map would utilize Durham's open data and various department databases to engage residents across the public participation spectrum. City staff Laura Biediger and Jessica Kemp are leading the project and welcome community input to help brainstorm how to connect residents to important local information and resources.
Linked Open Data en Wikidata - Erfgoed Gelderland 19 januari 2018Sandra Fauconnier
Workshop voor symposium Open-Up! bij Erfgoed Gelderland, Arnhem, 19 januari 2018 http://erfgoedgelderland.nl/wat-doen-we/symposium-open-up-wikimedia-en-erfgoed/
Mapping Historical Photos For The Common GoodJon Voss
The document discusses LookBackMaps, a website that geotags historical photos to make local history more accessible. It summarizes how digital archives have evolved from siloed collections in the 1990s to more open and collaborative models today. It also outlines LookBackMaps' goals to bridge archive silos by creating a centralized, open-source database of images and metadata, using public engagement to add value and make the data searchable via an API. Finally, it notes an iPhone app is in development and solicits feedback.
Linked data in the German National Library at the OCLC IFLA round table 2013Lars G. Svensson
The document discusses the German National Library's efforts to create and share library data as linked open data. It notes that currently library data formats are not readily understood outside of libraries. By linking authority data, national bibliographies, and ontologies, the library aims to make its data more accessible and useful to both libraries and other organizations. This linked data could help improve search capabilities and allow other services to more easily reuse library information. The ultimate goal is to contribute to a global linked data cloud and more interconnected web of bibliographic information.
Mapping Historical Photographs For The CommonJon Voss
The document discusses mapping historical photos for public use and sharing data between organizations. It talks about using crowdsourcing to geotag photos and share collections between institutions. It provides examples of projects that map historical photos and advocates for more collaboration to connect archives and make data searchable through APIs and linked data.
The document discusses the shift to open data and government 2.0 with more transparent, inclusive and user-driven communication. It provides examples of open data portals around the world and in Ireland. It also discusses linked open data and potential applications for open data in areas like transportation, budgets and quality of life indicators. Finally, it addresses challenges around engaging developers and citizens with open data and measuring the success of open data initiatives.
The open data movement has grown exponentially in a relatively short period of time. Many countries and cities have been rolling out initiatives and embracing the potential value that comes with opening up their data. However, as much as open data holds great promise, there is a real danger of initiatives failing.
Speaking at this year’s Canadian Open Data Summit (http://www.opendatasummit.ca/), Open Insitute’s Executive Director Jay Bhalla gives a global perspective of lessons learned through a journey of implementing and building open data ecosystems from around the world.
http://openinstitute.com/open-data-delusion/
This document provides examples of how some media houses and organizations are using crowdsourcing. It lists several websites that demonstrate crowdsourced journalism, including Al Jazeera's coverage of opinions on the Kony 2012 campaign in Uganda, the Guardian's data blog, and Ushahidi platforms used in Uganda, Central African Republic, and Kenya to collect crisis mapping information. The examples show how crowdsourcing is being used to document past events, gather photos of inaugurations, and make open data available through Creative Commons licensing.
Twitter #digitalcollections2016: a meta-collectionNeal Stimler
This lecture was a reflection on scholarly communications with Twitter as part of the Digital Collections 2016 Summer Institute in Lausanne/Zurich, Switzerland from September 4-14, 2016. The institute was supported by The Getty Foundation.
Open government data - the three legged stoolLaurence Millar
The document discusses open government data and proposes a "three-legged stool" approach with supply of data, demand for data, and tools to utilize the data. It advocates making government data openly available and reusable to increase public and economic value. Specific examples are given of types of government data that could be opened up like environmental, transportation, and research data. The benefits mentioned include improving data quality, allowing the public to access data they funded, and enabling innovative uses of data beyond what government agencies can achieve.
The British Library's Digital Research Team supports new ways of exploring and accessing the Library's digital collections through computational methods like machine learning, data visualization, and text mining. The Team collaborates on projects that make more content available digitally, and provides training and guidance to researchers. Examples of projects include crowdsourcing accent maps, analyzing patterns in music history from bibliographic data, and transcribing and georeferencing placenames from historical texts.
Open Access is Just the Beginning: Disrupting PublishingBrian Hole
Ubiquity Press is a researcher-led open access publishing company founded in 2012 that aims to give control of publishing back to universities and researchers. It provides infrastructure and support to allow societies and universities to compete with large legacy publishers. Ubiquity Press takes a comprehensive approach to publishing, offering journals, books, data, software, and more. It is committed to research integrity and has measures like plagiarism checking, rigorous peer review, and support for open data and software archiving. The company also has an inclusive partnership model to help publishing partners in developing countries become independently sustainable over time.
Emerging models in digital scholarship, research, publication and open scienceBrian Hole
The document discusses emerging models in digital scholarship, research, publication, and open science. It addresses the social contract of science including validation, dissemination, and further development. It also mentions scientific malpractice related to data, results, software, and hardware. Finally, it discusses peer review, cascading content, and teamwork.
Weatherstations - Citizen-Apps and eParticipation as sources for DatajournalismLorenz Matzat
Lorenz Matzat discusses the state of data journalism in Germany. He notes that while there are no dedicated data desks or blogs at German media outlets, some newspapers are pursuing investigative projects using data. He also outlines how civil society groups are working to gather and develop applications from open government and other data sources. Matzat suggests journalists could find story ideas by monitoring these "citizen apps" that function like networks of sensors, to better understand political trends and fulfill their watchdog role.
Crowdsourcing in the Cultural Sector: approaches, challenges and issuesMia
Slides for the Crowd-sourcing, Co-creation and Co-curation in the Cultural Sector workshop by the Scottish Network on Digital Cultural Resources Evaluation
Lecture on Open Data and how it can support Government 2.0 and new approaches to the design of Public Space given to the Idea Transition Lab at the Science Gallery, Dublin on 30th January, 2012
The document discusses OpenDataSoft, a company that provides an urban data hub and open data platform. The platform is designed for data sharing and reuse through APIs. It allows organizations to publish, discover, access and analyze data. Over 70 global leaders use the platform to make their data available. The platform also supports applications, monetization, data preparation and management features.
The Durham Open Data Program aims to promote social, environmental, and economic sustainability through an interactive map that better connects the Durham community. The map would utilize Durham's open data and various department databases to engage residents across the public participation spectrum. City staff Laura Biediger and Jessica Kemp are leading the project and welcome community input to help brainstorm how to connect residents to important local information and resources.
Ian Henshaw gave a presentation on open data to Chapel Hill, NC. He discussed key US laws around transparency including the Freedom of Information Act and state public records laws. He defined open data as data that is publicly available in machine readable formats with open licenses allowing reuse. Open data can provide benefits like increased government transparency, economic opportunities, and greater citizen engagement.
Joel Reyes, Microsoft - Biz Spark Presentation at Triangle Open Data DayIan Henshaw
Presentation by Joel Reyes, Senior Startup Evangelist, Microsoft - Startups Track (BizSpark and BizSpark Plus programs) at Triangle Open Data Day, February 22, 2014 in Raleigh, NC
NC Data4Good: Understanding Childhood Hunger in Our CommunitiesIan Henshaw
This document summarizes the work of NC Data4Good to address childhood hunger in local communities using data science. Their mission is to bring together citizen data scientists to make an impact through social good projects. For a United Way challenge, they analyzed various datasets to identify areas with high numbers of children in poverty and gaps in access to food pantries, transportation, summer meal sites, and farmers markets across Durham, Orange, Wake, and Johnston counties. The group found disparities between need and access across different regions and aims to use their findings to help address childhood hunger.
Application submission, management and manetization in Firefox MarketplaceNoritada Shimizu
This slide explains key points of application submission to Firefox Marketplace. Also we can overview monetization options.
Firefox Marketplace へのアプリ登録の注意点と、収益化の手段についてまとめてあります。
A project done as part of the MOOC course of Business strategy on coursera.com. The document uses several strategic analysis tools accompanied with latest data to make strategic recommendations in future for Microsoft Corp.
This document summarizes a civic data hackathon focused on open data related to bike and pedestrian crashes in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. It discusses an existing visualization of crash data and how adding additional context like usage rates, interviews with bicyclists and pedestrians, intersection types, activity correlations, street lighting, and weather conditions could make the data more actionable in identifying and addressing potential problem areas. The goal is to take open data and basic information provided and transform it into solutions by providing more information and context.
From Anecdote to Analysis a data journey with the carying place from 2018 to ...Ian Henshaw
This document discusses introducing data analytics to a nonprofit organization called The Carying Place. The Carying Place provides transitional housing and support services to homeless families. The goals are to share how the organization transitioned from relying on anecdotes to using data analysis over the past year. Key points discussed include identifying useful metrics like housing utilization and volunteer hours, preparing the data, choosing analysis tools, and presenting charts to track performance and ensure continued monitoring. The document walks through the process of working with staff reports to create initial charts and identifies areas that could be further analyzed.
BaleFire Global and Socrata in Puerto Rico - 12/17/2014Ian Henshaw
A case study on the on-site implementation of an open data portal in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico by BaleFire Global and Socrata between the months April and June 2014.
Examples of Civic Projects and Agile Web redesignIan Henshaw
January 13, 2016 Presentation to the UNC Chapel Hill student chapter of the ICMA. Examples of Code for America and Civic apps and Agile User-Centric Website Redesign
The document discusses open data and civic engagement. It describes how government transparency laws and open data initiatives can help bridge the gap between what government provides and what citizens need. Open data and new approaches like agile development, user-centered design, and Code for America can help engage citizens and improve government services.
The document describes Triangle Open Data Day, a two-day event taking place on February 21-22, 2015 in the Triangle area of North Carolina. On the first day, there will be keynote speeches, lightning talks on open data projects, and a hackathon beginning at 11:30 am. The second day will continue the hackathon and include project presentations at 3:00 pm. Lightning talks will cover topics like education, economic development, safety, health, and CodeAcross challenges. The event is sponsored by Socrata and aims to inform and inspire the use of open data.
Gail Roper will be the keynote speaker at Triangle Open Data Day. She is the Chief Information and Community Relations Officer for the City of Raleigh and has previously held IT leadership roles in other cities. Ms. Roper advocates for open source and open data initiatives and founded a youth program in Raleigh to train young people in technology. Technology Tank is the presenting sponsor of Triangle Open Data Day, which aims to unite the Research Triangle region through open data on February 22-23, 2014.
This document contains a summary of crime incidents reported in the Town of Cary since 2012. It includes lists of single family residential building permits, certificates of occupancy, Town of Cary park information, and Town of Cary street lights.
Triangle Open Data Day - Announcements Feb 21, 2015Ian Henshaw
This document announces and provides details about Triangle Open Data Day 2015, which was a two-day event on February 21-22, 2015 that brought together data professionals and civic hackers. It provides information on sponsors, keynote speakers from Durham County and the City of Durham, participant demographics from previous years, the schedule of activities including lightning talks and hackathon projects, and upcoming related events.
Cary Technology Task Force (TTF) Final Report December 2012Ian Henshaw
Mission Statement
Determine how the Town’s use of technology services can better serve its citizens. Specifically, the TTF shall review, evaluate, and prioritize new and emerging technologies that will facilitate better engagement, citizen outreach, and service delivery by increasing involvement and lowering costs, with the overall goal of making it easier for citizens to communicate with the Town and consume available information.
Zoom is a comprehensive platform designed to connect individuals and teams efficiently. With its user-friendly interface and powerful features, Zoom has become a go-to solution for virtual communication and collaboration. It offers a range of tools, including virtual meetings, team chat, VoIP phone systems, online whiteboards, and AI companions, to streamline workflows and enhance productivity.
Flutter is a popular open source, cross-platform framework developed by Google. In this webinar we'll explore Flutter and its architecture, delve into the Flutter Embedder and Flutter’s Dart language, discover how to leverage Flutter for embedded device development, learn about Automotive Grade Linux (AGL) and its consortium and understand the rationale behind AGL's choice of Flutter for next-gen IVI systems. Don’t miss this opportunity to discover whether Flutter is right for your project.
UI5con 2024 - Keynote: Latest News about UI5 and it’s EcosystemPeter Muessig
Learn about the latest innovations in and around OpenUI5/SAPUI5: UI5 Tooling, UI5 linter, UI5 Web Components, Web Components Integration, UI5 2.x, UI5 GenAI.
Recording:
https://www.youtube.com/live/MSdGLG2zLy8?si=INxBHTqkwHhxV5Ta&t=0
Software Engineering, Software Consulting, Tech Lead, Spring Boot, Spring Cloud, Spring Core, Spring JDBC, Spring Transaction, Spring MVC, OpenShift Cloud Platform, Kafka, REST, SOAP, LLD & HLD.
Introducing Crescat - Event Management Software for Venues, Festivals and Eve...Crescat
Crescat is industry-trusted event management software, built by event professionals for event professionals. Founded in 2017, we have three key products tailored for the live event industry.
Crescat Event for concert promoters and event agencies. Crescat Venue for music venues, conference centers, wedding venues, concert halls and more. And Crescat Festival for festivals, conferences and complex events.
With a wide range of popular features such as event scheduling, shift management, volunteer and crew coordination, artist booking and much more, Crescat is designed for customisation and ease-of-use.
Over 125,000 events have been planned in Crescat and with hundreds of customers of all shapes and sizes, from boutique event agencies through to international concert promoters, Crescat is rigged for success. What's more, we highly value feedback from our users and we are constantly improving our software with updates, new features and improvements.
If you plan events, run a venue or produce festivals and you're looking for ways to make your life easier, then we have a solution for you. Try our software for free or schedule a no-obligation demo with one of our product specialists today at crescat.io
Hand Rolled Applicative User ValidationCode KataPhilip Schwarz
Could you use a simple piece of Scala validation code (granted, a very simplistic one too!) that you can rewrite, now and again, to refresh your basic understanding of Applicative operators <*>, <*, *>?
The goal is not to write perfect code showcasing validation, but rather, to provide a small, rough-and ready exercise to reinforce your muscle-memory.
Despite its grandiose-sounding title, this deck consists of just three slides showing the Scala 3 code to be rewritten whenever the details of the operators begin to fade away.
The code is my rough and ready translation of a Haskell user-validation program found in a book called Finding Success (and Failure) in Haskell - Fall in love with applicative functors.
SMS API Integration in Saudi Arabia| Best SMS API ServiceYara Milbes
Discover the benefits and implementation of SMS API integration in the UAE and Middle East. This comprehensive guide covers the importance of SMS messaging APIs, the advantages of bulk SMS APIs, and real-world case studies. Learn how CEQUENS, a leader in communication solutions, can help your business enhance customer engagement and streamline operations with innovative CPaaS, reliable SMS APIs, and omnichannel solutions, including WhatsApp Business. Perfect for businesses seeking to optimize their communication strategies in the digital age.
Artificia Intellicence and XPath Extension FunctionsOctavian Nadolu
The purpose of this presentation is to provide an overview of how you can use AI from XSLT, XQuery, Schematron, or XML Refactoring operations, the potential benefits of using AI, and some of the challenges we face.
Neo4j - Product Vision and Knowledge Graphs - GraphSummit ParisNeo4j
Dr. Jesús Barrasa, Head of Solutions Architecture for EMEA, Neo4j
Découvrez les dernières innovations de Neo4j, et notamment les dernières intégrations cloud et les améliorations produits qui font de Neo4j un choix essentiel pour les développeurs qui créent des applications avec des données interconnectées et de l’IA générative.
8 Best Automated Android App Testing Tool and Framework in 2024.pdfkalichargn70th171
Regarding mobile operating systems, two major players dominate our thoughts: Android and iPhone. With Android leading the market, software development companies are focused on delivering apps compatible with this OS. Ensuring an app's functionality across various Android devices, OS versions, and hardware specifications is critical, making Android app testing essential.
Using Query Store in Azure PostgreSQL to Understand Query PerformanceGrant Fritchey
Microsoft has added an excellent new extension in PostgreSQL on their Azure Platform. This session, presented at Posette 2024, covers what Query Store is and the types of information you can get out of it.
Microservice Teams - How the cloud changes the way we workSven Peters
A lot of technical challenges and complexity come with building a cloud-native and distributed architecture. The way we develop backend software has fundamentally changed in the last ten years. Managing a microservices architecture demands a lot of us to ensure observability and operational resiliency. But did you also change the way you run your development teams?
Sven will talk about Atlassian’s journey from a monolith to a multi-tenanted architecture and how it affected the way the engineering teams work. You will learn how we shifted to service ownership, moved to more autonomous teams (and its challenges), and established platform and enablement teams.
Top Benefits of Using Salesforce Healthcare CRM for Patient Management.pdfVALiNTRY360
Salesforce Healthcare CRM, implemented by VALiNTRY360, revolutionizes patient management by enhancing patient engagement, streamlining administrative processes, and improving care coordination. Its advanced analytics, robust security, and seamless integration with telehealth services ensure that healthcare providers can deliver personalized, efficient, and secure patient care. By automating routine tasks and providing actionable insights, Salesforce Healthcare CRM enables healthcare providers to focus on delivering high-quality care, leading to better patient outcomes and higher satisfaction. VALiNTRY360's expertise ensures a tailored solution that meets the unique needs of any healthcare practice, from small clinics to large hospital systems.
For more info visit us https://valintry360.com/solutions/health-life-sciences