The document certifies that Steven Ostrov completed a training program awarded by Tripwire Enterprise 8.3 Professional. It also lists Shannon Schlothauer but does not specify her role. The summary is only 2 sentences to keep it brief as requested.
The document certifies that Steven Ostrov completed the Tripwire Enterprise 8.3 Operator training program. It was awarded by Shannon Schlothauer. The document certifies Steven Ostrov's participation in a security training program.
Kevin Parrish successfully completed a Lean Six Sigma Awareness training course on October 25, 2007. The course was titled "IMCOM LEAN SIX SIGMA AWARENESS TRAINING (IMCOM LSS-101)" and was administered by the Department of the Army. The certificate verifies Parrish's completion of the Lean Six Sigma training on the specified date.
Attained Practicing Management Consultant (PMC) status by the Singapore Business Advisors & Consultants Council (SBACC) for lifting clients' satisfaction, having achieved more than 1,000 quality consulting hours, received testimonials of exceeding project leadership and management skills.
Dento Aviation is an EASA-approved training organization located in Cyprus that offers pilot training courses. Captain Charalambos Demetriades is the accountable manager and head of training, with over 30 years of experience as an instructor and examiner. Dento is approved to conduct type rating training on the Airbus A320, A330, A340 and Boeing 737NG. In addition to traditional classroom instruction, Dento has developed an e-learning platform and purchased an A320 procedure trainer to enhance pilot training.
pendidikan ict di asia oleh gwang jo kim unescogatothp
presentasi pimpinan unesco asia, tolong cek matematika indonesia dan negara lai dalam perbandingan pengukuran memanfaatkan PISA dll. menarik utk di simak dan di banadingkandan di tarik kesimpulan sendiri utk kemajuan daerah anda.......
Some concerns on laws and regulations about information and expression in Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Presented during Mekong ICT Camp 2015 discussion on how information laws could affect ICT for Development projects, like community wifi and data journalism.
June 2015
The document certifies that Steven Ostrov completed the Tripwire Enterprise 8.3 Operator training program. It was awarded by Shannon Schlothauer. The document certifies Steven Ostrov's participation in a security training program.
Kevin Parrish successfully completed a Lean Six Sigma Awareness training course on October 25, 2007. The course was titled "IMCOM LEAN SIX SIGMA AWARENESS TRAINING (IMCOM LSS-101)" and was administered by the Department of the Army. The certificate verifies Parrish's completion of the Lean Six Sigma training on the specified date.
Attained Practicing Management Consultant (PMC) status by the Singapore Business Advisors & Consultants Council (SBACC) for lifting clients' satisfaction, having achieved more than 1,000 quality consulting hours, received testimonials of exceeding project leadership and management skills.
Dento Aviation is an EASA-approved training organization located in Cyprus that offers pilot training courses. Captain Charalambos Demetriades is the accountable manager and head of training, with over 30 years of experience as an instructor and examiner. Dento is approved to conduct type rating training on the Airbus A320, A330, A340 and Boeing 737NG. In addition to traditional classroom instruction, Dento has developed an e-learning platform and purchased an A320 procedure trainer to enhance pilot training.
pendidikan ict di asia oleh gwang jo kim unescogatothp
presentasi pimpinan unesco asia, tolong cek matematika indonesia dan negara lai dalam perbandingan pengukuran memanfaatkan PISA dll. menarik utk di simak dan di banadingkandan di tarik kesimpulan sendiri utk kemajuan daerah anda.......
Some concerns on laws and regulations about information and expression in Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Presented during Mekong ICT Camp 2015 discussion on how information laws could affect ICT for Development projects, like community wifi and data journalism.
June 2015
This document discusses governance 2.0 and open civil societies. It notes several global issues facing governments and shifts in citizen expectations towards more transparency and participation. Governance 2.0 involves governments openly sharing more of their data online and engaging citizens. Examples are given of governments using tools like mobile apps and data sharing to be more transparent in areas like health, education and the environment. Principles of open government data are outlined around making data open, accessible and reusable. Ways to achieve more open government include establishing open data portals and sharing non-sensitive data through online feeds and catalogs to create value for citizens.
Powering ASEAN's growth. A look at the trends that will impact the use of pow...Tim Hill
How our use of energy will change in the next five years.
Clashes in the South China Sea, rising fuel prices, nuclear disasters and choking smog levels have brought energy issues sharply into focus in the region. As the deadline for ASEAN’s Vision 2020 gets nearer, will the region transition to a unified economic group, connected by power, gas and water networks, working together to promote energy efficiency?
Ipsos Business Consulting believes the future will involve a more complex array of energy options, but not necessarily a unified ASEAN program. In a whitepaper on this topic, author Tim Hill has outlined the energy trends that will shape the region. New technologies and practices will emerge in the latter part of this decade which will change the way the region extracts, produces, distributes and consumes energy. Hill hopes that some of these trends will enable ASEAN’s economies to grow without further damage to the environment.
From national grids to micro-grids and off-grid power
160M people in ASEAN (about 28% of the region) have no electricity. Getting full access to all through extending the grid will prove challenging and expensive. Micro-grids, such as the one operating as a test centre in Pulau Ubin will help to bridge this gap. Smaller plants powered by hybrid fossil and renewable sources will help to bring electricity to rural communities in Southeast Asia that previously have had to rely on generators. Remote areas will benefit from advances in technology with solar power and battery storage that will create enough electricity for lighting and other low level devices. In the cities more households will take on individual solar panels to reduce their electricity bills.
Electric vehicles
Other parts of the world are using electric cars and buses, and Singapore is looking at options in this space. SMRT added 600 Toyota Prius hybrid cars to its fleet at the end of last year and there are experiments with fully electric cars. Charging stations are starting to appear in select parts of Singapore.
Electric two wheelers are going to experience a tenfold increase during the course of this decade. Electric bikes are likely to replace petrol motorbikes and scooters throughout the region which will help to manage smog levels as urban populations grow.
Other types of electric personal transport such as Segways, scooters, skateboards etc are starting to pop up in our parks. These will become more mainstream forms of transport for short commutes during the rest of the decade. Governments in the region have been slow to recognise the advantages of electric two wheelers, seeing it as something that needs to be regulated and kept off the roads and off the walkways. This will change as the advantages of low cost, low speed vehicles become more mainstream
This document discusses how enterprise applications need to be prepared for the growing mobile user base. It provides tips for organizations, including adopting the end user's perspective, ensuring services can be accessed 24/7 from any device, and using a "one web" approach to application performance management that treats all devices and browsers equally. The document also stresses the importance of meeting and exceeding user expectations around performance and satisfaction to drive adoption of mobile apps and websites.
This back issue of EAPJ contains valuable case studies for enterprise, solution and business architects. The articles apply enterprise architecture best practices to a wide variety of commercial, government and non-profit situations.
From Point A to Point B: Gaining Momentum through Transitions & New Types of...Rebecca Kate Miller
This document discusses helping students transition through various stages by connecting the dots between high school, college-level research, and adulthood. It notes challenges students face, including inadequate research skills, difficulty tying together information, and balancing multiple roles for adult students. The role of librarians is also discussed, including focusing on concepts rather than tools, embracing pedagogical expertise, and expanding responsibilities. Examples are provided of instruction programs that develop academic integrity tutorials and use communities of practice to strategically grow programming through reflection and partnerships. Overall, the document advocates connecting students to resources and supporting their development through transitions.
Gregynog 2011 Becoming an Information ProfessionalNia Williams
This document summarizes the author's path to becoming an information professional. After graduating with a history degree, the author took various roles including volunteering at a public library and working as a library assistant. The author then earned a Master's degree in Information and Library Management. The author's current role is as a Senior Officer at the National Library of Wales, where they manage digitization projects involving newspapers and periodicals. The author's future goals are to achieve chartership and continue professional development by advancing in their career.
This Lustratus REPAMA presentation explores some of the likely channel models that cloud computing will bring about. It is circulated in DRAFT form to create discussion and debate.
BURMA IN TRANSITION-http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/voices/burma-transi...MYO AUNG Myanmar
Since 2010, Burma has been an epicenter of unexpected, unprecedented, and rapid change. Following a quasi-free election in 2010, the Burmese government released hundreds of political prisoners, relaxed media restrictions, legalized labor unions, implemented crucial economic reforms, and made several attempts at national reconciliation with ethnic armed groups.
Most significantly, the government allowed for the development of a more open political environment in which leading opposition leader and former political prisoner Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, and her party, the National League for Democracy, won a landslide victory in parliamentary by-elections. Civil society is in overdrive and determined to make the most of the openings. Protests on Burma’s streets are a common occurrence.
However, despite the positive developments, Burma remains mired in conflict. These photographs present a snapshot of life in Burma today, highlighting both the causes for hope and progress and the immense challenges that remain.
Protestors still feel the threat of arrest and violent crackdowns, and though nominal democracy has replaced military autocracy, its processes are far from democratic. Military attacks against the ethnic Kachin and Shan villages continue, and have resulted in an increase in the number of internally displaced persons in the country. Decades of misrule have crippled Burma’s infrastructure and its economy at large. Additionally, the health care and education systems are in disarray and severely underfunded.
For the past two decades, Burma’s democracy movement has advocated for tripartite dialogue between the government, Aung San Suu Kyi, and representatives of ethnic nationalities. While the government is now in dialogue with opposition forces, its tenuous ceasefire processes with ethnic leaders often lack transparency, divide ethnic representatives, and exclude civil society.
Genuine peace and national reconciliation will not be possible without respect for the fundamental principles of equality and non-discrimination. Arakan State witnessed what appeared to be state-sanctioned violence against the minority Rohingya ethnic group, which resulted in mass displacement, arrests, and deaths. Government officials continue to practice systematic discrimination against the mostly Muslim group, denying their most basic rights. In addition, several hundred political prisoners remain behind bars. And Burmese democracy is hamstrung by its undemocratic 2008 Constitution, which mandates that 25 percent of seats in Parliament belong to the military.
Transitions are never easy and Burma’s is more complicated than it may seem. The general desire for a democratic and inclusive state is widely shared, but the country is hardly out of the weeds. Civil society victories, such as the successful protests that suspended the Myitsone Dam in 2011, are undermined by events like the violent crackdown on monks and villagers protesting at the Letpadaung c
Leverage your career competencies to map out your route to personal and profe...Vlerick Business School
Leverage your career competencies to map out your route to personal and professional success
Career coach Inge De Clippeleer
Ever wondered what differentiates a successful professional career from an unsuccessful one? Ever wondered where your career is taking you in the next 10 years? This session will provide you some guidelines for steering your career in the right direction by outlining the basic principles of career self-management and by gaining insight into internal and external factors that influence your career success.
Leveraging Apps, Social Media, and Your Digital Reputation for Professional S...Paul Brown
Originally presented as a webinar to the membership of OSA-The Optical Society in November of 2015. This presentation provides an overview of how to leverage social media and online tools to enhance networking and one's own visibility and brand.
The Enterprise Network's Role in Business Resilienceeircom
Ronan McCarthy, Managed Services Principal of eircom explores what it means to be Business Resilient, the challenges and opportunities this brings, and the role of the enterprise network in optimising resilience.
This document discusses embracing Government 2.0, which leverages Web 2.0 and social networking technologies to drive transformative change in the public sector. Government 2.0 harnesses knowledge, participation, and collaboration through social networks to improve results for citizens. It advocates employing effective change management skills to help government organizations transition to more open and collaborative models. The document provides examples of Government 2.0's benefits and discusses challenges public sector leaders may face in adopting new approaches.
Welcome to the new Enterprise Architecture Professional Journal! We serve practicing and aspiring enterprise architects, as well as those who apply the holistic perspective of enterprise architecture to other disciplines. EAPJ informs their daily work and benefits their careers with content that is focused, concise, authoritative, practical and accessible. In this column, we preview all articles and recommend introductory reading each piece that assumes specialized knowledge.
This issue focuses on how EA can empower organizations to achieve their goals. EA and quality expert Mike Novak compares the TOGAF® framework for enterprise architecture with the Baldrige approach to organizational performance assessment and improvement, and shows how organizations could benefit from integrating the two paradigms. This is a great article for all those who have wondered about the relationship between EA and quality practices, or would like to learn more about either paradigm. The article assumes a bit of familiarity with the TOGAF standard, so novices should consult one of the references at the end of this article.
This issue also features an interview with Mike Callahan, a senior partner in AgileLayer, a business architecture methodology, software and consulting provider. Mike Callahan introduces us to his area of expertise, and explains how business architects practice many of the approaches Mike Novak describes in his TOGAF/Baldrige article.
I’d like to thank our expert reviewers for this issue, Jeff Hensgen and Chris McCurdy. EAPJ needs additional seasoned professionals like them willing to willing to help develop and select the best articles.
This document discusses disruptive technology in human resources. It provides examples of disruptive technologies like the Apple computer, FedEx overnight delivery, Avon's home cosmetic sales, and McDonald's fast food model. It argues that while cost controls, technology, finance, and marketing are important, human capital is the most differentiating force for organizations. People are the only active asset and nothing happens until a human is involved. All improvements, incremental or massive, come from human capital.
Enhance your aged infrastructure without impacting operationsEaton Electrical
Data centers are built for multi-year lifecycles, but technology and business continue to evolve, making the infrastructure less than optimal. How do you take a former high-performance facility and transform it to meet today’s business and environmental needs without “throwing it all away” – and maintaining full operations?
Explore how H5 Data Centers upgraded its Denver facility to meet efficiency goals with a flexible solution that addresses its growing demands and ensures reliability and scalability. As a colocation provider, H5 Data Centers needed to ensure 100 percent continuous uptime for a broad set of customers while transforming its 20+-year-old facility to a modern standard.
Cloud the new disruptive technology v2 by Raymondannekee
The document discusses how cloud computing is a disruptive technology with the potential to transform traditional industries. It provides statistics showing strong growth in cloud spending and adoption. Examples are given of companies in different industries that have been disrupted through new cloud-based business models and technologies, such as online banking without physical branches, mobile apps that provide product information to consumers, and digital payment systems without traditional intermediaries. The document highlights IBM's leadership in both private/hybrid cloud infrastructure services and the cloud professional services market.
This document discusses governance 2.0 and open civil societies. It notes several global issues facing governments and shifts in citizen expectations towards more transparency and participation. Governance 2.0 involves governments openly sharing more of their data online and engaging citizens. Examples are given of governments using tools like mobile apps and data sharing to be more transparent in areas like health, education and the environment. Principles of open government data are outlined around making data open, accessible and reusable. Ways to achieve more open government include establishing open data portals and sharing non-sensitive data through online feeds and catalogs to create value for citizens.
Powering ASEAN's growth. A look at the trends that will impact the use of pow...Tim Hill
How our use of energy will change in the next five years.
Clashes in the South China Sea, rising fuel prices, nuclear disasters and choking smog levels have brought energy issues sharply into focus in the region. As the deadline for ASEAN’s Vision 2020 gets nearer, will the region transition to a unified economic group, connected by power, gas and water networks, working together to promote energy efficiency?
Ipsos Business Consulting believes the future will involve a more complex array of energy options, but not necessarily a unified ASEAN program. In a whitepaper on this topic, author Tim Hill has outlined the energy trends that will shape the region. New technologies and practices will emerge in the latter part of this decade which will change the way the region extracts, produces, distributes and consumes energy. Hill hopes that some of these trends will enable ASEAN’s economies to grow without further damage to the environment.
From national grids to micro-grids and off-grid power
160M people in ASEAN (about 28% of the region) have no electricity. Getting full access to all through extending the grid will prove challenging and expensive. Micro-grids, such as the one operating as a test centre in Pulau Ubin will help to bridge this gap. Smaller plants powered by hybrid fossil and renewable sources will help to bring electricity to rural communities in Southeast Asia that previously have had to rely on generators. Remote areas will benefit from advances in technology with solar power and battery storage that will create enough electricity for lighting and other low level devices. In the cities more households will take on individual solar panels to reduce their electricity bills.
Electric vehicles
Other parts of the world are using electric cars and buses, and Singapore is looking at options in this space. SMRT added 600 Toyota Prius hybrid cars to its fleet at the end of last year and there are experiments with fully electric cars. Charging stations are starting to appear in select parts of Singapore.
Electric two wheelers are going to experience a tenfold increase during the course of this decade. Electric bikes are likely to replace petrol motorbikes and scooters throughout the region which will help to manage smog levels as urban populations grow.
Other types of electric personal transport such as Segways, scooters, skateboards etc are starting to pop up in our parks. These will become more mainstream forms of transport for short commutes during the rest of the decade. Governments in the region have been slow to recognise the advantages of electric two wheelers, seeing it as something that needs to be regulated and kept off the roads and off the walkways. This will change as the advantages of low cost, low speed vehicles become more mainstream
This document discusses how enterprise applications need to be prepared for the growing mobile user base. It provides tips for organizations, including adopting the end user's perspective, ensuring services can be accessed 24/7 from any device, and using a "one web" approach to application performance management that treats all devices and browsers equally. The document also stresses the importance of meeting and exceeding user expectations around performance and satisfaction to drive adoption of mobile apps and websites.
This back issue of EAPJ contains valuable case studies for enterprise, solution and business architects. The articles apply enterprise architecture best practices to a wide variety of commercial, government and non-profit situations.
From Point A to Point B: Gaining Momentum through Transitions & New Types of...Rebecca Kate Miller
This document discusses helping students transition through various stages by connecting the dots between high school, college-level research, and adulthood. It notes challenges students face, including inadequate research skills, difficulty tying together information, and balancing multiple roles for adult students. The role of librarians is also discussed, including focusing on concepts rather than tools, embracing pedagogical expertise, and expanding responsibilities. Examples are provided of instruction programs that develop academic integrity tutorials and use communities of practice to strategically grow programming through reflection and partnerships. Overall, the document advocates connecting students to resources and supporting their development through transitions.
Gregynog 2011 Becoming an Information ProfessionalNia Williams
This document summarizes the author's path to becoming an information professional. After graduating with a history degree, the author took various roles including volunteering at a public library and working as a library assistant. The author then earned a Master's degree in Information and Library Management. The author's current role is as a Senior Officer at the National Library of Wales, where they manage digitization projects involving newspapers and periodicals. The author's future goals are to achieve chartership and continue professional development by advancing in their career.
This Lustratus REPAMA presentation explores some of the likely channel models that cloud computing will bring about. It is circulated in DRAFT form to create discussion and debate.
BURMA IN TRANSITION-http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/voices/burma-transi...MYO AUNG Myanmar
Since 2010, Burma has been an epicenter of unexpected, unprecedented, and rapid change. Following a quasi-free election in 2010, the Burmese government released hundreds of political prisoners, relaxed media restrictions, legalized labor unions, implemented crucial economic reforms, and made several attempts at national reconciliation with ethnic armed groups.
Most significantly, the government allowed for the development of a more open political environment in which leading opposition leader and former political prisoner Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, and her party, the National League for Democracy, won a landslide victory in parliamentary by-elections. Civil society is in overdrive and determined to make the most of the openings. Protests on Burma’s streets are a common occurrence.
However, despite the positive developments, Burma remains mired in conflict. These photographs present a snapshot of life in Burma today, highlighting both the causes for hope and progress and the immense challenges that remain.
Protestors still feel the threat of arrest and violent crackdowns, and though nominal democracy has replaced military autocracy, its processes are far from democratic. Military attacks against the ethnic Kachin and Shan villages continue, and have resulted in an increase in the number of internally displaced persons in the country. Decades of misrule have crippled Burma’s infrastructure and its economy at large. Additionally, the health care and education systems are in disarray and severely underfunded.
For the past two decades, Burma’s democracy movement has advocated for tripartite dialogue between the government, Aung San Suu Kyi, and representatives of ethnic nationalities. While the government is now in dialogue with opposition forces, its tenuous ceasefire processes with ethnic leaders often lack transparency, divide ethnic representatives, and exclude civil society.
Genuine peace and national reconciliation will not be possible without respect for the fundamental principles of equality and non-discrimination. Arakan State witnessed what appeared to be state-sanctioned violence against the minority Rohingya ethnic group, which resulted in mass displacement, arrests, and deaths. Government officials continue to practice systematic discrimination against the mostly Muslim group, denying their most basic rights. In addition, several hundred political prisoners remain behind bars. And Burmese democracy is hamstrung by its undemocratic 2008 Constitution, which mandates that 25 percent of seats in Parliament belong to the military.
Transitions are never easy and Burma’s is more complicated than it may seem. The general desire for a democratic and inclusive state is widely shared, but the country is hardly out of the weeds. Civil society victories, such as the successful protests that suspended the Myitsone Dam in 2011, are undermined by events like the violent crackdown on monks and villagers protesting at the Letpadaung c
Leverage your career competencies to map out your route to personal and profe...Vlerick Business School
Leverage your career competencies to map out your route to personal and professional success
Career coach Inge De Clippeleer
Ever wondered what differentiates a successful professional career from an unsuccessful one? Ever wondered where your career is taking you in the next 10 years? This session will provide you some guidelines for steering your career in the right direction by outlining the basic principles of career self-management and by gaining insight into internal and external factors that influence your career success.
Leveraging Apps, Social Media, and Your Digital Reputation for Professional S...Paul Brown
Originally presented as a webinar to the membership of OSA-The Optical Society in November of 2015. This presentation provides an overview of how to leverage social media and online tools to enhance networking and one's own visibility and brand.
The Enterprise Network's Role in Business Resilienceeircom
Ronan McCarthy, Managed Services Principal of eircom explores what it means to be Business Resilient, the challenges and opportunities this brings, and the role of the enterprise network in optimising resilience.
This document discusses embracing Government 2.0, which leverages Web 2.0 and social networking technologies to drive transformative change in the public sector. Government 2.0 harnesses knowledge, participation, and collaboration through social networks to improve results for citizens. It advocates employing effective change management skills to help government organizations transition to more open and collaborative models. The document provides examples of Government 2.0's benefits and discusses challenges public sector leaders may face in adopting new approaches.
Welcome to the new Enterprise Architecture Professional Journal! We serve practicing and aspiring enterprise architects, as well as those who apply the holistic perspective of enterprise architecture to other disciplines. EAPJ informs their daily work and benefits their careers with content that is focused, concise, authoritative, practical and accessible. In this column, we preview all articles and recommend introductory reading each piece that assumes specialized knowledge.
This issue focuses on how EA can empower organizations to achieve their goals. EA and quality expert Mike Novak compares the TOGAF® framework for enterprise architecture with the Baldrige approach to organizational performance assessment and improvement, and shows how organizations could benefit from integrating the two paradigms. This is a great article for all those who have wondered about the relationship between EA and quality practices, or would like to learn more about either paradigm. The article assumes a bit of familiarity with the TOGAF standard, so novices should consult one of the references at the end of this article.
This issue also features an interview with Mike Callahan, a senior partner in AgileLayer, a business architecture methodology, software and consulting provider. Mike Callahan introduces us to his area of expertise, and explains how business architects practice many of the approaches Mike Novak describes in his TOGAF/Baldrige article.
I’d like to thank our expert reviewers for this issue, Jeff Hensgen and Chris McCurdy. EAPJ needs additional seasoned professionals like them willing to willing to help develop and select the best articles.
This document discusses disruptive technology in human resources. It provides examples of disruptive technologies like the Apple computer, FedEx overnight delivery, Avon's home cosmetic sales, and McDonald's fast food model. It argues that while cost controls, technology, finance, and marketing are important, human capital is the most differentiating force for organizations. People are the only active asset and nothing happens until a human is involved. All improvements, incremental or massive, come from human capital.
Enhance your aged infrastructure without impacting operationsEaton Electrical
Data centers are built for multi-year lifecycles, but technology and business continue to evolve, making the infrastructure less than optimal. How do you take a former high-performance facility and transform it to meet today’s business and environmental needs without “throwing it all away” – and maintaining full operations?
Explore how H5 Data Centers upgraded its Denver facility to meet efficiency goals with a flexible solution that addresses its growing demands and ensures reliability and scalability. As a colocation provider, H5 Data Centers needed to ensure 100 percent continuous uptime for a broad set of customers while transforming its 20+-year-old facility to a modern standard.
Cloud the new disruptive technology v2 by Raymondannekee
The document discusses how cloud computing is a disruptive technology with the potential to transform traditional industries. It provides statistics showing strong growth in cloud spending and adoption. Examples are given of companies in different industries that have been disrupted through new cloud-based business models and technologies, such as online banking without physical branches, mobile apps that provide product information to consumers, and digital payment systems without traditional intermediaries. The document highlights IBM's leadership in both private/hybrid cloud infrastructure services and the cloud professional services market.