Democratising data by igniting a crowd powered movement.Steve Jennings
How do we democratize data by igniting a crowd powered global movement with the aim of building a collaborative social fabric-enabling layer across diverse cultures and markets?
To do this during times of unprecedented social, economic, environmental, demographic, and political uncertainty will require us to take a bold approach and step outside of the way we normally do things.
What we need is a radical change in attitudes in the society of which we are a part. What we really need is a cultural revolution.
We're suffering from a compassion and integrity deficit. And this matters a lot more to most of us than we dare to admit.
Today, success doesn’t come from a well planned strategy, but rather a moment when luck and preparation collide: A click moment. Here were the top ones of 2012
Bringing Order to Chaos - CGU Insurance at NIBA 2013Scott Gunther
How do businesses adapt and bring order to chaos in this emerging world of digital and technology, and apply this to be successful into the future? CGU Insurance completed a dynamic presentation on this topic at the 2013 NIBA Conference for Insurance in Melbourne in October 2013
Democratising data by igniting a crowd powered movement.Steve Jennings
How do we democratize data by igniting a crowd powered global movement with the aim of building a collaborative social fabric-enabling layer across diverse cultures and markets?
To do this during times of unprecedented social, economic, environmental, demographic, and political uncertainty will require us to take a bold approach and step outside of the way we normally do things.
What we need is a radical change in attitudes in the society of which we are a part. What we really need is a cultural revolution.
We're suffering from a compassion and integrity deficit. And this matters a lot more to most of us than we dare to admit.
Today, success doesn’t come from a well planned strategy, but rather a moment when luck and preparation collide: A click moment. Here were the top ones of 2012
Bringing Order to Chaos - CGU Insurance at NIBA 2013Scott Gunther
How do businesses adapt and bring order to chaos in this emerging world of digital and technology, and apply this to be successful into the future? CGU Insurance completed a dynamic presentation on this topic at the 2013 NIBA Conference for Insurance in Melbourne in October 2013
How do we democratize data by igniting a crowd powered global movement with the aim of building a collaborative social fabric-enabling layer across diverse cultures and markets?
To do this during times of unprecedented social, economic, environmental, demographic, and political uncertainty will require us to take a bold approach and step outside of the way we normally do things.
What we need is a radical change in attitudes in the society of which we are a part. What we really need is a cultural revolution.
We're suffering from a compassion and integrity deficit. And this matters a lot more to most of us than we dare to admit.
Can the core ideals of political revolution be applied in a social fabric context to empower large numbers of people and launch a new kind of crowd powered social fabric enabling layer?
Moo world order, mooworldorder.org.docxhamserjalsen
How do we create a system that creates a better world but is anti-corruption? You remove the means of surplus generated by the value creating mechanisms and create the network of pawns. You turn the surplus into assets that reinvest into the high returning vehicle of entrepreneurship and continue to build global enterprises that interlink in new ways because they are aligned.
Predicting the social culture of our future – The Neurobiology of social networking
What is expected of tomorrow’s social networks to address the needs of a more and more complex society? Where is Facebook falling short? What can Neurobiology tell us about the wellbeing of our digital culture?
In an entertaining and inspiring talk, the speakers will use an Australian model of Neurobiology to answer these questions.
The story begins where we will explore the different personas present in our minds. We find out that different platforms such as Tinder, Facebook and Snapchat are just manifestations of these personas and our deepest longings. Then, we will enter the secret side of our brains and explore what Whisper and Lord of the Rings have in common. The speakers will then reveal the six intelligence centers of the human brain in order to classify today’s social networks and predict what is needed to build more sustainable digital platforms. In an inspiring crescendo, the speakers will make bold predictions impacting our social culture as well as our digital future.
Entrepreneurs, listen up! The speakers will predict what social platforms need to emerge to satisfy the social cognitive needs of the human brain. Using the insights of focus groups with digital natives and drawing from a wealth of research and Neurobiology, the speakers will explore the underlying motives of a digital society. This will include an outlook on Google Glass as well as an exploration into the depth of our psychological being.
PN London and a team of experts has been analyzing some of the key themes emerging from this year's SXSW.
For more information, please email Philip Honour on philip.honour@porternovelli.co.uk
The 7 Shifts were developed by Tommy Crawford, Brian Fitzgerald, Amrekha Sharma, and Iris Maertens to help frame a change agenda for Greenpeace International. They were derived from a series of workshops worldwide that articulated Greenpeace's overarching story and posed the question: "What would be different about the organisation that truly lived that story from the organisation of today?"
Tommy and Brian now help other beautiful troublemakers articulate their stories and their shifts through their creative agency, Dancing Fox.
Attribution: Story Team, Greenpeace International
Presented on Thursday 7 September at the NCVO Campaigning Conference 2017.
Aidan Warner, external relations manager, NCVO
Tamsyn Hyatt, digital communications manager, Equality and Diversity Forum
If you would like to find out more about our training and events, visit our website at https://www.ncvo.org.uk/training-and-events.
Like every year, BETC Digital travelled to Austin to bring you fresh inspiration and new ideas from SXSW, the famous digital festival.
Where is digital heading in the following years? We attended conferences by people such as Eric Schmidt, Julian Assange or Edward Snowden to gather their views of the topic.
What If - University of Oregon School of Journalism presentationStephen Landau
Slides from the presentation given by Peter Yesawich, Jr. and Stephen Landau to the University of Oregon.
The graphs on slides 19 - 26 are from the SoDA Digital Marketing Outlook - http://www.societyofdigitalagencies.org/page/digital-marketing-outlook
How do we democratize data by igniting a crowd powered global movement with the aim of building a collaborative social fabric-enabling layer across diverse cultures and markets?
To do this during times of unprecedented social, economic, environmental, demographic, and political uncertainty will require us to take a bold approach and step outside of the way we normally do things.
What we need is a radical change in attitudes in the society of which we are a part. What we really need is a cultural revolution.
We're suffering from a compassion and integrity deficit. And this matters a lot more to most of us than we dare to admit.
Can the core ideals of political revolution be applied in a social fabric context to empower large numbers of people and launch a new kind of crowd powered social fabric enabling layer?
Moo world order, mooworldorder.org.docxhamserjalsen
How do we create a system that creates a better world but is anti-corruption? You remove the means of surplus generated by the value creating mechanisms and create the network of pawns. You turn the surplus into assets that reinvest into the high returning vehicle of entrepreneurship and continue to build global enterprises that interlink in new ways because they are aligned.
Predicting the social culture of our future – The Neurobiology of social networking
What is expected of tomorrow’s social networks to address the needs of a more and more complex society? Where is Facebook falling short? What can Neurobiology tell us about the wellbeing of our digital culture?
In an entertaining and inspiring talk, the speakers will use an Australian model of Neurobiology to answer these questions.
The story begins where we will explore the different personas present in our minds. We find out that different platforms such as Tinder, Facebook and Snapchat are just manifestations of these personas and our deepest longings. Then, we will enter the secret side of our brains and explore what Whisper and Lord of the Rings have in common. The speakers will then reveal the six intelligence centers of the human brain in order to classify today’s social networks and predict what is needed to build more sustainable digital platforms. In an inspiring crescendo, the speakers will make bold predictions impacting our social culture as well as our digital future.
Entrepreneurs, listen up! The speakers will predict what social platforms need to emerge to satisfy the social cognitive needs of the human brain. Using the insights of focus groups with digital natives and drawing from a wealth of research and Neurobiology, the speakers will explore the underlying motives of a digital society. This will include an outlook on Google Glass as well as an exploration into the depth of our psychological being.
PN London and a team of experts has been analyzing some of the key themes emerging from this year's SXSW.
For more information, please email Philip Honour on philip.honour@porternovelli.co.uk
The 7 Shifts were developed by Tommy Crawford, Brian Fitzgerald, Amrekha Sharma, and Iris Maertens to help frame a change agenda for Greenpeace International. They were derived from a series of workshops worldwide that articulated Greenpeace's overarching story and posed the question: "What would be different about the organisation that truly lived that story from the organisation of today?"
Tommy and Brian now help other beautiful troublemakers articulate their stories and their shifts through their creative agency, Dancing Fox.
Attribution: Story Team, Greenpeace International
Presented on Thursday 7 September at the NCVO Campaigning Conference 2017.
Aidan Warner, external relations manager, NCVO
Tamsyn Hyatt, digital communications manager, Equality and Diversity Forum
If you would like to find out more about our training and events, visit our website at https://www.ncvo.org.uk/training-and-events.
Like every year, BETC Digital travelled to Austin to bring you fresh inspiration and new ideas from SXSW, the famous digital festival.
Where is digital heading in the following years? We attended conferences by people such as Eric Schmidt, Julian Assange or Edward Snowden to gather their views of the topic.
What If - University of Oregon School of Journalism presentationStephen Landau
Slides from the presentation given by Peter Yesawich, Jr. and Stephen Landau to the University of Oregon.
The graphs on slides 19 - 26 are from the SoDA Digital Marketing Outlook - http://www.societyofdigitalagencies.org/page/digital-marketing-outlook
How Successful Crowdsourcing Depends on asking 'Interesting Questions'Crowdsourcing Week
Writing Interesting Questions is as much art as as science. Here are some 100%Open has written recently. How can we double the fun of the LEGO play experience? How can I wash my home, myself, or my clothes with a single cup of water? (Unilever) How can we enable all Detroiters to travel more easily, safely and reliably? (Ford) How can we empower investors and their advisers to consider the CO2 impact of their investment decisions? (UBS) How can we help people do good by using their mobile phone in 3 minutes or less? (EE) Our Interesting Question methodology (https://www.100open.com/toolkit_2/interesting-question/) ensure that questions are accessible, contagious and as inspiring to the Challenge Holder organisation as they are to the Innovator target group.
Contestant Centered Design: creative approaches to designing competitionsCrowdsourcing Week
Creativity is critical to solving complex problems, developing new strategies, facilitating innovation, and driving organizational change. NIST’s Public Safety Communications Research Division’s open innovation efforts focuses on advancing wireless communications for America’s first responders by leveraging expertise and innovative solutions through crowdsourcing and collaboration. Success relies on creating competitions that achieve NIST’s organizational goals, incentivize world class science, remove barriers to entry, and maximize participation. Not an easy equation to balance. This session will discuss how design tradeoffs are considered for a variety of competition elements as concepts develop into a competition and as competitions are implemented. The goal of this interactive session is to provide a behind-the-scenes view of our process, engage audience ideas, and dive into a discussion about crowdsourcing and contestant-centered design.
Ethan will talk about the opportunity to reward crowdsourcing participants through crypto assets/tokens that allows the possibility of performing many micro transactions, saving costs for both the business and the users. In addition, the topic of transparency coming from the blockchain sector where business are now becoming more open to have the public help with tough R&D questions that in the past would have been kept internal. The blockchain industry is in fact growing communities as their branding strategy from the start, and rely on transparency for their community to trust them. All in all, we are seeing the tools in the making to ignite crowdsourcing’s future potential within decentralized business models. Lastly, we will dive into current use case studies from crowdholding.com, on creating a crowd rewarding mechanism for both crowd intelligence and crowd marketing.
Adjusting primitives for graph : SHORT REPORT / NOTESSubhajit Sahu
Graph algorithms, like PageRank Compressed Sparse Row (CSR) is an adjacency-list based graph representation that is
Multiply with different modes (map)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector multiply.
2. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector multiply.
Sum with different storage types (reduce)
1. Performance of vector element sum using float vs bfloat16 as the storage type.
Sum with different modes (reduce)
1. Performance of sequential execution based vs OpenMP based vector element sum.
2. Performance of memcpy vs in-place based CUDA based vector element sum.
3. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (memcpy).
4. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
Sum with in-place strategies of CUDA mode (reduce)
1. Comparing various launch configs for CUDA based vector element sum (in-place).
Learn SQL from basic queries to Advance queriesmanishkhaire30
Dive into the world of data analysis with our comprehensive guide on mastering SQL! This presentation offers a practical approach to learning SQL, focusing on real-world applications and hands-on practice. Whether you're a beginner or looking to sharpen your skills, this guide provides the tools you need to extract, analyze, and interpret data effectively.
Key Highlights:
Foundations of SQL: Understand the basics of SQL, including data retrieval, filtering, and aggregation.
Advanced Queries: Learn to craft complex queries to uncover deep insights from your data.
Data Trends and Patterns: Discover how to identify and interpret trends and patterns in your datasets.
Practical Examples: Follow step-by-step examples to apply SQL techniques in real-world scenarios.
Actionable Insights: Gain the skills to derive actionable insights that drive informed decision-making.
Join us on this journey to enhance your data analysis capabilities and unlock the full potential of SQL. Perfect for data enthusiasts, analysts, and anyone eager to harness the power of data!
#DataAnalysis #SQL #LearningSQL #DataInsights #DataScience #Analytics
Adjusting OpenMP PageRank : SHORT REPORT / NOTESSubhajit Sahu
For massive graphs that fit in RAM, but not in GPU memory, it is possible to take
advantage of a shared memory system with multiple CPUs, each with multiple cores, to
accelerate pagerank computation. If the NUMA architecture of the system is properly taken
into account with good vertex partitioning, the speedup can be significant. To take steps in
this direction, experiments are conducted to implement pagerank in OpenMP using two
different approaches, uniform and hybrid. The uniform approach runs all primitives required
for pagerank in OpenMP mode (with multiple threads). On the other hand, the hybrid
approach runs certain primitives in sequential mode (i.e., sumAt, multiply).
Levelwise PageRank with Loop-Based Dead End Handling Strategy : SHORT REPORT ...Subhajit Sahu
Abstract — Levelwise PageRank is an alternative method of PageRank computation which decomposes the input graph into a directed acyclic block-graph of strongly connected components, and processes them in topological order, one level at a time. This enables calculation for ranks in a distributed fashion without per-iteration communication, unlike the standard method where all vertices are processed in each iteration. It however comes with a precondition of the absence of dead ends in the input graph. Here, the native non-distributed performance of Levelwise PageRank was compared against Monolithic PageRank on a CPU as well as a GPU. To ensure a fair comparison, Monolithic PageRank was also performed on a graph where vertices were split by components. Results indicate that Levelwise PageRank is about as fast as Monolithic PageRank on the CPU, but quite a bit slower on the GPU. Slowdown on the GPU is likely caused by a large submission of small workloads, and expected to be non-issue when the computation is performed on massive graphs.
Unleashing the Power of Data_ Choosing a Trusted Analytics Platform.pdfEnterprise Wired
In this guide, we'll explore the key considerations and features to look for when choosing a Trusted analytics platform that meets your organization's needs and delivers actionable intelligence you can trust.
Chatty Kathy - UNC Bootcamp Final Project Presentation - Final Version - 5.23...John Andrews
SlideShare Description for "Chatty Kathy - UNC Bootcamp Final Project Presentation"
Title: Chatty Kathy: Enhancing Physical Activity Among Older Adults
Description:
Discover how Chatty Kathy, an innovative project developed at the UNC Bootcamp, aims to tackle the challenge of low physical activity among older adults. Our AI-driven solution uses peer interaction to boost and sustain exercise levels, significantly improving health outcomes. This presentation covers our problem statement, the rationale behind Chatty Kathy, synthetic data and persona creation, model performance metrics, a visual demonstration of the project, and potential future developments. Join us for an insightful Q&A session to explore the potential of this groundbreaking project.
Project Team: Jay Requarth, Jana Avery, John Andrews, Dr. Dick Davis II, Nee Buntoum, Nam Yeongjin & Mat Nicholas
3. Everything we do is about bringing together
empowered people and enlightened
organizations who are passionate about
delivering measurable social impact and
sustainable citizen prosperity.
4. DATA IS AT ITS BEST
WHEN IT CONNECTS,
SIMPLIFIES AND
EMPOWERS OUR LIVES
38. THERE’S MORE TO COME.
3D PRINTING, AMBIENT INTELLIGIENCE,
AUGMENTED REALITY GAMES, DRONES,
WEARABLE TECHNOLOGY, BITCOIN,
SCREEN-LESS DEVICES, QUANTIFIED
SELF, DRIVERLESS CARS, INTERNET OF
EVERYTHING, MESH NETWORKS.
MUCH, MUCH MORE……
83. Assembling our torchbearers
• Finding our zero-day true believers
• Sharing everything with them
• Asking who will stand for the cause
• Bringing them into the fold
• Empowering them to lead
We can educate 9 billion people
it is solutions to human problems that define prosperity, not money
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
We can feed 9 billion people
We can provide clean water and sanitation for 9 billion people
We can educate 9 billion people
it is solutions to human problems that define prosperity, not money
Epic fail!
We can educate 9 billion people
it is solutions to human problems that define prosperity, not money
Instead we’re focused on I want it and I want it now
This is why the NSA loves the future the hipsters are creating!
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
John in 16 weeks you will be at risk of suicide!!!!!
Are we ready for this?
Because this is what Quantified Self and Ambient Intelligence is going to make possible.
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
I want it and I want it now
I want it and I want it now
Note: Turn text to images
Data obesity
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
The $150BN data economy
The power and influence that these companies have is astonishing
The lines are blurred
The lines are blurred
DATA is about people.
Insights are about life.
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
I want it and I want it now
Surveilance. Watching us.
Maintaining user privacy versus wanting to ‘collect it all’
Surveilance
Surveilance
Surveilance
This is why the NSA loves the future the hipsters are creating!
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
YOU NEED TO KNOW WHO THESE COMPANIES ARE
YOU NEED TO KNOW WHO THESE COMPANIES ARE
We can educate 9 billion people
it is solutions to human problems that define prosperity, not money
We can educate 9 billion people
it is solutions to human problems that define prosperity, not money
We can educate 9 billion people
it is solutions to human problems that define prosperity, not money
We can educate 9 billion people
it is solutions to human problems that define prosperity, not money
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
AND challenge THE wisdom of CROWD to work on an enabler for something we’ve never considered!
AND challenge THE wisdom of CROWD to work on an enabler for something we’ve never considered!
AND challenge THE wisdom of CROWD to work on an enabler for something we’ve never considered!
AND challenge THE wisdom of CROWD to work on an enabler for something we’ve never considered!
AND challenge THE wisdom of CROWD to work on an enabler for something we’ve never considered!
The fabric of society. Seeking connections between the world's needs and our strengths
The lines are blurred
The lines are blurred
Examples:
Going from fearing death by sinus infection one day to having access to life-saving antibiotics the next, for example, is growth.
Going from sweltering in the heat one day to living with air conditioning the next is growth.
Going from walking long distances to driving is growth.
Going from needing to look up basic information in a library to having all the world’s information instantly available on your phone is growth.
MLK didn’t say I have a strategy!!!!!
I need an app!
Our generation are now shaping and participating in what is without doubt the second great revolution, that of the digital technology age.
When we take a step back, just for a moment, and think about the pace at which the digital world is evolving, it’s not inconceivable that before the end of this century,