Satoshi Shimazaki is a vice-chair of the Japan CloudStack User Group (JCSUG). The JCSUG aims to contribute to CloudStack's growth and human resource development in Japan by providing information about CloudStack in Japanese. It has over 450 members in its mailing list. The group hosts events, writes articles, and answers questions to support the CloudStack community in Japan. While there are many private and public CloudStack users in Japan, their cases are often not public. The JCSUG encourages more study, translation, and book reading meetings to promote CloudStack adoption in Japan.
This monthly lightning talk summary covered recent developments in Node.js, front-end tools, Docker, Heroku, AWS, Apple software, IDEs, programming languages, APIs, web technologies, and viral news topics from August 2014. Key items included the release of Node.js v0.12.0, Docker 1.2.0, Yosemite developer preview 6, WebStorm 9 early access, and announcements regarding Scala.js, Java 9, and the Facebook Graph API v2.1.
شرح عن الفروقات بين التصميمات البرمجيه
#Monoliths vs Microservices
#Definitions (Monolithic, Microservices)
#Benefits
#Challenges
When to use
My advice
المصادر
https://medium.com/koderlabs/introduction-to-monolithic-architecture-and-microservices-architecture-b211a5955c63
https://articles.microservices.com/monolithic-vs-microservices-architecture-5c4848858f59
https://microservices.io/patterns/monolithic.html
https://microservices.io/patterns/microservices.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u_LnubpBDCA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KV3j3MZTXgk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-vNG33En88&t=852s
https://programmerfriend.com/monolith-vs-microservices/
https://www.hys-enterprise.com/blog/why-and-how-netflix-amazon-and-uber-migrated-to-microservices-learn-from-their-experience/
My YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE2cLj1ZlV7EUKkCJ3UiZKg
My Twitter account
https://twitter.com/ahmad_ezzeir
My Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/Arabic-DevOps-Ahmad-Ezzeir-100543094861932
slideshare:
https://www.slideshare.net/ahmadezzeir/git-locally-git-rmrevertreset
linkedin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ahmad-ezzeir/
My Twitter account
https://twitter.com/ahmad_ezzeir
My Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/Arabic-DevOps-Ahmad-Ezzeir-100543094861932
linkedin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ahmad-ezzeir/
The Silver Bullet Syndrome by Alexey VasilievPivorak MeetUp
This document discusses various technology trends and challenges related to software development. It cautions against blindly following trends or buzzwords and emphasizes the importance of understanding user needs and making choices based on project context rather than social pressures. While new technologies can enable improvements, there is no single "silver bullet" solution and all code comes with costs that must be weighed against the goals of building useful software.
Cloud Computing - Halfway through the revolutionJoe Drumgoole
This document discusses the ongoing revolution of cloud computing and its impacts. It notes how cloud computing has made infrastructure resources like storage, bandwidth and compute power effectively unlimited and commoditized through services with simple APIs. It also discusses how cloud computing and software as a service have disrupted industries like print journalism, education and manufacturing. Finally, it raises several key ongoing challenges around privacy, data organization and control in the cloud era.
Satoshi Shimazaki is a vice-chair of the Japan CloudStack User Group (JCSUG). The JCSUG aims to contribute to CloudStack's growth and human resource development in Japan by providing information about CloudStack in Japanese. It has over 450 members in its mailing list. The group hosts events, writes articles, and answers questions to support the CloudStack community in Japan. While there are many private and public CloudStack users in Japan, their cases are often not public. The JCSUG encourages more study, translation, and book reading meetings to promote CloudStack adoption in Japan.
This monthly lightning talk summary covered recent developments in Node.js, front-end tools, Docker, Heroku, AWS, Apple software, IDEs, programming languages, APIs, web technologies, and viral news topics from August 2014. Key items included the release of Node.js v0.12.0, Docker 1.2.0, Yosemite developer preview 6, WebStorm 9 early access, and announcements regarding Scala.js, Java 9, and the Facebook Graph API v2.1.
شرح عن الفروقات بين التصميمات البرمجيه
#Monoliths vs Microservices
#Definitions (Monolithic, Microservices)
#Benefits
#Challenges
When to use
My advice
المصادر
https://medium.com/koderlabs/introduction-to-monolithic-architecture-and-microservices-architecture-b211a5955c63
https://articles.microservices.com/monolithic-vs-microservices-architecture-5c4848858f59
https://microservices.io/patterns/monolithic.html
https://microservices.io/patterns/microservices.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u_LnubpBDCA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KV3j3MZTXgk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-vNG33En88&t=852s
https://programmerfriend.com/monolith-vs-microservices/
https://www.hys-enterprise.com/blog/why-and-how-netflix-amazon-and-uber-migrated-to-microservices-learn-from-their-experience/
My YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE2cLj1ZlV7EUKkCJ3UiZKg
My Twitter account
https://twitter.com/ahmad_ezzeir
My Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/Arabic-DevOps-Ahmad-Ezzeir-100543094861932
slideshare:
https://www.slideshare.net/ahmadezzeir/git-locally-git-rmrevertreset
linkedin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ahmad-ezzeir/
My Twitter account
https://twitter.com/ahmad_ezzeir
My Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/Arabic-DevOps-Ahmad-Ezzeir-100543094861932
linkedin
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ahmad-ezzeir/
The Silver Bullet Syndrome by Alexey VasilievPivorak MeetUp
This document discusses various technology trends and challenges related to software development. It cautions against blindly following trends or buzzwords and emphasizes the importance of understanding user needs and making choices based on project context rather than social pressures. While new technologies can enable improvements, there is no single "silver bullet" solution and all code comes with costs that must be weighed against the goals of building useful software.
Cloud Computing - Halfway through the revolutionJoe Drumgoole
This document discusses the ongoing revolution of cloud computing and its impacts. It notes how cloud computing has made infrastructure resources like storage, bandwidth and compute power effectively unlimited and commoditized through services with simple APIs. It also discusses how cloud computing and software as a service have disrupted industries like print journalism, education and manufacturing. Finally, it raises several key ongoing challenges around privacy, data organization and control in the cloud era.
Cloud, Security and opensource 2012-12-28 at SSULINE株式会社
This document discusses cloud computing and open source technologies. It defines cloud computing and the common service models of Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS), Platform as a Service (PaaS), and Software as a Service (SaaS). It then provides examples of commercial and open source implementations for each service model, highlighting technologies like OpenStack, CloudStack, Eucalyptus, OpenShift, and CloudFoundry. The document also discusses security considerations for each service model and the use of open source in cloud computing.
The document discusses options for using C# and .NET for free or at low cost. It explores using free Express editions of Visual Studio, Mono on Linux, and Xamarin for cross-platform mobile development. It also discusses open source .NET application servers and the importance of keeping both new and existing .NET developers by improving cross-platform support and keeping the framework up to date.
The document discusses managed vs unmanaged blockchain and provides examples of managed blockchain platforms on AWS and Azure. It notes that managed blockchain handles infrastructure maintenance and upgrades, allowing users to focus on blockchain development and applications. The presenter's contact information and areas of research are also listed.
The document summarizes the status of the Drupal configuration management initiative. It discusses that there was a code sprint in Denver to work on centralized configuration storage in a standard format to replace variables and improve security. It also discusses plans to move the entity.inc file to a module to introduce a CRUD API for entities. Content staging using UUIDs and the new entity API was also mentioned as an area of focus. The next steps outlined continuing work on UUIDs, updating sandbox code from discussions, and moving initiatives into real-world implementations while continuing discussions.
How to make a iOS 8 touch framework - MOPCON 2014Kai-Yuan Cheng
The document provides information on how to create an iOS 8 touch framework. It discusses what a framework is, the different types of iOS extensions, and how to structure an extension framework. It also provides examples of custom keyboard extensions and considerations for designing extension frameworks, such as supporting different devices and sharing data between the containing app and extension.
hbstudy is a 1,000-person meetup group in Japan focused on sharing knowledge about open source software and technologies. The group holds regular meetups where members give lightning talks on various technical topics. Recent meetups have covered Linux, web development, databases, virtualization, cloud computing and more. The meetups have grown steadily in popularity since starting in 2009, now regularly attracting over 100 attendees.
If you are thinking of trying out a NoSQL document database, there are many good options available to Microsoft-oriented developers. In this session, we’ll compare some of the more popular databases, including: CosmosDb, Couchbase, MongoDb, CouchDb, and RavenDb. We’ll look at the strengths and weaknesses of each system. Querying, scaling, usability, speed, deployment, support and flexibility will all be covered. This session will include a discussion about when NoSQL is right for your project and give you an idea of which technology to pursue for your use case.
This document summarizes a presentation about building a simple web application using Sinatra. It discusses using Sinatra and related gems like Capistrano for deployment and Ridgepole for migrations. It also compares the performance of the Sinatra app to Rails, finding the Sinatra app was faster. The presentation provided details on the Sinatra app called IMASquare that was built for a coding competition.
MySQL is a unique adult (now 21 years old) in many ways. It supports plugins. It supports storage engines. It is also owned by Oracle, thus birthing two branches of the popular opensource database: Percona Server and MariaDB Server. It also once spawned a fork: Drizzle. Lately a consortium of web scale users (think a chunk of the top 10 sites out there) have spawned WebScaleSQL.
You're a busy DBA having to maintain a mix of this. Or you're a CIO planning to choose one branch. How do you go about picking? Supporting multiple databases? Find out more in this talk. Also covered is a deep-dive into what feature differences exist between MySQL/Percona Server/MariaDB/WebScaleSQL, how distributions package the various databases differently. Within the hour, you'll be informed about the past, the present, and hopefully be knowledgeable enough to know what to pick in the future.
Note, there will also be coverage of the various trees around WebScaleSQL, like the Facebook tree, the Alibaba tree as well as the Twitter tree.
This was a short 25 minute talk, but we go into a bit of a history of MySQL, how the branches and forks appeared, what's sticking around today (branch? Percona Server. Fork? MariaDB Server). What should you use? Think about what you need today and what the roadmap holds.
The document discusses machine learning and AI projects from mofmof inc. It mentions tools and frameworks like Ruby, Rails, Python, scikit-learn, TensorFlow, and links to courses on Coursera. It also lists several projects including Peers, Bot My-ope, and links to code on GitHub for projects like Get Wild and image classification samples using TensorFlow.
5 Popular Choices for NoSQL on a Microsoft Platform - Tulsa - July 2018Matthew Groves
If you are thinking of trying out a NoSQL document database, there are many good options available to Microsoft-oriented developers. In this session, we’ll compare some of the more popular databases, including: CosmosDb, Couchbase, MongoDb, CouchDb, and RavenDb. We’ll look at the strengths and weaknesses of each system. Querying, scaling, usability, speed, deployment, support and flexibility will all be covered. This session will include a discussion about when NoSQL is right for your project and give you an idea of which technology to pursue for your use case.
The document summarizes the history and current state of the MySQL database server ecosystem. It discusses the origins and development of MySQL, MariaDB, Percona Server, and other related projects. It also describes some of the key features and innovations in recent versions of these database servers. The ecosystem is very active with contributions from many organizations and the future remains promising with ongoing work.
Time-series data, or data being associated with its respective time of occurrence, is everywhere. From the obvious cases, such as metrics, observability, IoT data, all the way to logs, invoicing, or payment records. While storing some of these in relational databases is standard practice, people often reach for specific time-series databases when volume gets high. But imagine if you could have all of them in the same database: PostgreSQL.
This document summarizes a presentation about Percona XtraDB Cluster (PXC), a high availability solution for MySQL. It introduces PXC and how it uses synchronous replication and a Galera library to provide scalability and redundancy. A simple demonstration of PXC is provided. The presenter is identified as Javier Tomás Zon, a platform reliable engineer at Percona with over 12 years of system administration experience, including 8 years working with MySQL.
OpenStack Swift is an open source, scalable object storage system for storing unstructured data. It was initially developed by Rackspace in 2010 and is now developed by many contributors including Rackspace, HP, eNovance, and Swiftstack. OpenStack Swift uses a REST API and has features like static website hosting, quotas, geo-replication, and automatic object expiration. It sees production use by companies like Wikipedia, Rackspace, and Disney for storing large amounts of unstructured data.
This document summarizes a microservices meetup hosted by @mosa_siru. Key points include:
1. @mosa_siru is an engineer at DeNA and CTO of Gunosy.
2. The meetup covered Gunosy's architecture with over 45 GitHub repositories, 30 stacks, 10 Go APIs, and 10 Python batch processes using AWS services like Kinesis, Lambda, SQS and API Gateway.
3. Challenges discussed were managing 30 microservices, ensuring API latency below 50ms across availability zones, and handling 10 requests per second with nginx load balancing across 20 servers.
This document discusses a Yahoo Hack Day event on February 8, 2017 where the author worked on an iOS app called ScrollingFollowView. It lists the tools used including GitLab, Sketch, Carthage, Kingfisher, and Realm. It also mentions planning 24 hours of work over 3 days and sharing the author's GitHub and Twitter accounts.
The document summarizes a meetup discussing deep learning and Docker. It covered Yuta Kashino introducing BakFoo and his background in astrophysics and Python. The meetup discussed recent advances in AI like AlphaGo, generative adversarial networks, and neural style transfer. It provided an overview of Chainer and arXiv papers. The meetup demonstrated Chainer 1.3, NVIDIA drivers, and Docker for deep learning. It showed running a TensorFlow tutorial using nvidia-docker and provided Dockerfile examples and links to resources.
A decade ago, the database was assumed to be a solved problem. Relational databases (PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite to name a few) were dominating the database market and hierarchical databases (LDAP, DNS) where regarded as niche solutions. The NoSQL revolution surely changed the concept of what a database can be. At the same time, the popularity of mobile devices exploded. This talk will dive into how data structures are persisted and queried on mobile devices today, and try to revive the old question: is the database really a solved problem?
This document discusses and compares Neptune and JanusGraph graph databases. It provides an overview of Neptune's features like multi-AZ deployment and storage in S3. It also describes how to access Neptune using Gremlin and SPARQL query languages. The document then introduces JanusGraph and notes some key differences when using Gremlin APIs with Neptune versus JanusGraph. It shares the results of a performance test loading Amazon product graph data into both systems. Finally, it discusses options for loading and querying data between Neptune, Athena, Kinesis and other AWS services.
Cloud, Security and opensource 2012-12-28 at SSULINE株式会社
This document discusses cloud computing and open source technologies. It defines cloud computing and the common service models of Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS), Platform as a Service (PaaS), and Software as a Service (SaaS). It then provides examples of commercial and open source implementations for each service model, highlighting technologies like OpenStack, CloudStack, Eucalyptus, OpenShift, and CloudFoundry. The document also discusses security considerations for each service model and the use of open source in cloud computing.
The document discusses options for using C# and .NET for free or at low cost. It explores using free Express editions of Visual Studio, Mono on Linux, and Xamarin for cross-platform mobile development. It also discusses open source .NET application servers and the importance of keeping both new and existing .NET developers by improving cross-platform support and keeping the framework up to date.
The document discusses managed vs unmanaged blockchain and provides examples of managed blockchain platforms on AWS and Azure. It notes that managed blockchain handles infrastructure maintenance and upgrades, allowing users to focus on blockchain development and applications. The presenter's contact information and areas of research are also listed.
The document summarizes the status of the Drupal configuration management initiative. It discusses that there was a code sprint in Denver to work on centralized configuration storage in a standard format to replace variables and improve security. It also discusses plans to move the entity.inc file to a module to introduce a CRUD API for entities. Content staging using UUIDs and the new entity API was also mentioned as an area of focus. The next steps outlined continuing work on UUIDs, updating sandbox code from discussions, and moving initiatives into real-world implementations while continuing discussions.
How to make a iOS 8 touch framework - MOPCON 2014Kai-Yuan Cheng
The document provides information on how to create an iOS 8 touch framework. It discusses what a framework is, the different types of iOS extensions, and how to structure an extension framework. It also provides examples of custom keyboard extensions and considerations for designing extension frameworks, such as supporting different devices and sharing data between the containing app and extension.
hbstudy is a 1,000-person meetup group in Japan focused on sharing knowledge about open source software and technologies. The group holds regular meetups where members give lightning talks on various technical topics. Recent meetups have covered Linux, web development, databases, virtualization, cloud computing and more. The meetups have grown steadily in popularity since starting in 2009, now regularly attracting over 100 attendees.
If you are thinking of trying out a NoSQL document database, there are many good options available to Microsoft-oriented developers. In this session, we’ll compare some of the more popular databases, including: CosmosDb, Couchbase, MongoDb, CouchDb, and RavenDb. We’ll look at the strengths and weaknesses of each system. Querying, scaling, usability, speed, deployment, support and flexibility will all be covered. This session will include a discussion about when NoSQL is right for your project and give you an idea of which technology to pursue for your use case.
This document summarizes a presentation about building a simple web application using Sinatra. It discusses using Sinatra and related gems like Capistrano for deployment and Ridgepole for migrations. It also compares the performance of the Sinatra app to Rails, finding the Sinatra app was faster. The presentation provided details on the Sinatra app called IMASquare that was built for a coding competition.
MySQL is a unique adult (now 21 years old) in many ways. It supports plugins. It supports storage engines. It is also owned by Oracle, thus birthing two branches of the popular opensource database: Percona Server and MariaDB Server. It also once spawned a fork: Drizzle. Lately a consortium of web scale users (think a chunk of the top 10 sites out there) have spawned WebScaleSQL.
You're a busy DBA having to maintain a mix of this. Or you're a CIO planning to choose one branch. How do you go about picking? Supporting multiple databases? Find out more in this talk. Also covered is a deep-dive into what feature differences exist between MySQL/Percona Server/MariaDB/WebScaleSQL, how distributions package the various databases differently. Within the hour, you'll be informed about the past, the present, and hopefully be knowledgeable enough to know what to pick in the future.
Note, there will also be coverage of the various trees around WebScaleSQL, like the Facebook tree, the Alibaba tree as well as the Twitter tree.
This was a short 25 minute talk, but we go into a bit of a history of MySQL, how the branches and forks appeared, what's sticking around today (branch? Percona Server. Fork? MariaDB Server). What should you use? Think about what you need today and what the roadmap holds.
The document discusses machine learning and AI projects from mofmof inc. It mentions tools and frameworks like Ruby, Rails, Python, scikit-learn, TensorFlow, and links to courses on Coursera. It also lists several projects including Peers, Bot My-ope, and links to code on GitHub for projects like Get Wild and image classification samples using TensorFlow.
5 Popular Choices for NoSQL on a Microsoft Platform - Tulsa - July 2018Matthew Groves
If you are thinking of trying out a NoSQL document database, there are many good options available to Microsoft-oriented developers. In this session, we’ll compare some of the more popular databases, including: CosmosDb, Couchbase, MongoDb, CouchDb, and RavenDb. We’ll look at the strengths and weaknesses of each system. Querying, scaling, usability, speed, deployment, support and flexibility will all be covered. This session will include a discussion about when NoSQL is right for your project and give you an idea of which technology to pursue for your use case.
The document summarizes the history and current state of the MySQL database server ecosystem. It discusses the origins and development of MySQL, MariaDB, Percona Server, and other related projects. It also describes some of the key features and innovations in recent versions of these database servers. The ecosystem is very active with contributions from many organizations and the future remains promising with ongoing work.
Time-series data, or data being associated with its respective time of occurrence, is everywhere. From the obvious cases, such as metrics, observability, IoT data, all the way to logs, invoicing, or payment records. While storing some of these in relational databases is standard practice, people often reach for specific time-series databases when volume gets high. But imagine if you could have all of them in the same database: PostgreSQL.
This document summarizes a presentation about Percona XtraDB Cluster (PXC), a high availability solution for MySQL. It introduces PXC and how it uses synchronous replication and a Galera library to provide scalability and redundancy. A simple demonstration of PXC is provided. The presenter is identified as Javier Tomás Zon, a platform reliable engineer at Percona with over 12 years of system administration experience, including 8 years working with MySQL.
OpenStack Swift is an open source, scalable object storage system for storing unstructured data. It was initially developed by Rackspace in 2010 and is now developed by many contributors including Rackspace, HP, eNovance, and Swiftstack. OpenStack Swift uses a REST API and has features like static website hosting, quotas, geo-replication, and automatic object expiration. It sees production use by companies like Wikipedia, Rackspace, and Disney for storing large amounts of unstructured data.
This document summarizes a microservices meetup hosted by @mosa_siru. Key points include:
1. @mosa_siru is an engineer at DeNA and CTO of Gunosy.
2. The meetup covered Gunosy's architecture with over 45 GitHub repositories, 30 stacks, 10 Go APIs, and 10 Python batch processes using AWS services like Kinesis, Lambda, SQS and API Gateway.
3. Challenges discussed were managing 30 microservices, ensuring API latency below 50ms across availability zones, and handling 10 requests per second with nginx load balancing across 20 servers.
This document discusses a Yahoo Hack Day event on February 8, 2017 where the author worked on an iOS app called ScrollingFollowView. It lists the tools used including GitLab, Sketch, Carthage, Kingfisher, and Realm. It also mentions planning 24 hours of work over 3 days and sharing the author's GitHub and Twitter accounts.
The document summarizes a meetup discussing deep learning and Docker. It covered Yuta Kashino introducing BakFoo and his background in astrophysics and Python. The meetup discussed recent advances in AI like AlphaGo, generative adversarial networks, and neural style transfer. It provided an overview of Chainer and arXiv papers. The meetup demonstrated Chainer 1.3, NVIDIA drivers, and Docker for deep learning. It showed running a TensorFlow tutorial using nvidia-docker and provided Dockerfile examples and links to resources.
A decade ago, the database was assumed to be a solved problem. Relational databases (PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite to name a few) were dominating the database market and hierarchical databases (LDAP, DNS) where regarded as niche solutions. The NoSQL revolution surely changed the concept of what a database can be. At the same time, the popularity of mobile devices exploded. This talk will dive into how data structures are persisted and queried on mobile devices today, and try to revive the old question: is the database really a solved problem?
This document discusses and compares Neptune and JanusGraph graph databases. It provides an overview of Neptune's features like multi-AZ deployment and storage in S3. It also describes how to access Neptune using Gremlin and SPARQL query languages. The document then introduces JanusGraph and notes some key differences when using Gremlin APIs with Neptune versus JanusGraph. It shares the results of a performance test loading Amazon product graph data into both systems. Finally, it discusses options for loading and querying data between Neptune, Athena, Kinesis and other AWS services.
This document discusses lessons learned from building and growing a software startup. It describes how the company quickly built their initial product but ran into scaling issues. It outlines the technical infrastructure changes they made to improve stability, such as moving to the cloud, adding Redis, Resque, and MongoDB. The document also provides recommendations on performance testing, libraries, tools, and localization. Overall it advocates for just starting to build the product now rather than overplanning.
This document discusses Project RedDwarf, an OpenStack project that provides managed MySQL database services. It originated in 2011 at Rackspace and HP to build value-added services on top of OpenStack. RedDwarf uses Nova for provisioning and other OpenStack components. It provides a public API for managing MySQL instances and is used in production at both Rackspace and HP Cloud. Future plans include additional integration with OpenStack and language bindings.
Review of history of JavaScript, what Veracode does and does not support, a little game of Pokemon or JavaScript library and finally learning the basics of JavaScript and TamperMonkey to change webapps.
The document discusses various topics related to web development including Java principles, Spring frameworks, PHP, high-load web applications, mobile backend as a service (mBaas), web frameworks, Java web development frameworks like JSF and GWT, rendering on the server-side vs client-side, distribution of work between designers and developers, web browsers and their support for HTML5 and CSS3, programming languages, GUI frameworks, AngularJS, testing tools like JUnit, and build tools like Maven, Ant, and Ivy.
Essentials of Automations: Exploring Attributes & Automation ParametersSafe Software
Building automations in FME Flow can save time, money, and help businesses scale by eliminating data silos and providing data to stakeholders in real-time. One essential component to orchestrating complex automations is the use of attributes & automation parameters (both formerly known as “keys”). In fact, it’s unlikely you’ll ever build an Automation without using these components, but what exactly are they?
Attributes & automation parameters enable the automation author to pass data values from one automation component to the next. During this webinar, our FME Flow Specialists will cover leveraging the three types of these output attributes & parameters in FME Flow: Event, Custom, and Automation. As a bonus, they’ll also be making use of the Split-Merge Block functionality.
You’ll leave this webinar with a better understanding of how to maximize the potential of automations by making use of attributes & automation parameters, with the ultimate goal of setting your enterprise integration workflows up on autopilot.
Skybuffer SAM4U tool for SAP license adoptionTatiana Kojar
Manage and optimize your license adoption and consumption with SAM4U, an SAP free customer software asset management tool.
SAM4U, an SAP complimentary software asset management tool for customers, delivers a detailed and well-structured overview of license inventory and usage with a user-friendly interface. We offer a hosted, cost-effective, and performance-optimized SAM4U setup in the Skybuffer Cloud environment. You retain ownership of the system and data, while we manage the ABAP 7.58 infrastructure, ensuring fixed Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and exceptional services through the SAP Fiori interface.
Connector Corner: Seamlessly power UiPath Apps, GenAI with prebuilt connectorsDianaGray10
Join us to learn how UiPath Apps can directly and easily interact with prebuilt connectors via Integration Service--including Salesforce, ServiceNow, Open GenAI, and more.
The best part is you can achieve this without building a custom workflow! Say goodbye to the hassle of using separate automations to call APIs. By seamlessly integrating within App Studio, you can now easily streamline your workflow, while gaining direct access to our Connector Catalog of popular applications.
We’ll discuss and demo the benefits of UiPath Apps and connectors including:
Creating a compelling user experience for any software, without the limitations of APIs.
Accelerating the app creation process, saving time and effort
Enjoying high-performance CRUD (create, read, update, delete) operations, for
seamless data management.
Speakers:
Russell Alfeche, Technology Leader, RPA at qBotic and UiPath MVP
Charlie Greenberg, host
Your One-Stop Shop for Python Success: Top 10 US Python Development Providersakankshawande
Simplify your search for a reliable Python development partner! This list presents the top 10 trusted US providers offering comprehensive Python development services, ensuring your project's success from conception to completion.
zkStudyClub - LatticeFold: A Lattice-based Folding Scheme and its Application...Alex Pruden
Folding is a recent technique for building efficient recursive SNARKs. Several elegant folding protocols have been proposed, such as Nova, Supernova, Hypernova, Protostar, and others. However, all of them rely on an additively homomorphic commitment scheme based on discrete log, and are therefore not post-quantum secure. In this work we present LatticeFold, the first lattice-based folding protocol based on the Module SIS problem. This folding protocol naturally leads to an efficient recursive lattice-based SNARK and an efficient PCD scheme. LatticeFold supports folding low-degree relations, such as R1CS, as well as high-degree relations, such as CCS. The key challenge is to construct a secure folding protocol that works with the Ajtai commitment scheme. The difficulty, is ensuring that extracted witnesses are low norm through many rounds of folding. We present a novel technique using the sumcheck protocol to ensure that extracted witnesses are always low norm no matter how many rounds of folding are used. Our evaluation of the final proof system suggests that it is as performant as Hypernova, while providing post-quantum security.
Paper Link: https://eprint.iacr.org/2024/257
The Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) invited Taylor Paschal, Knowledge & Information Management Consultant at Enterprise Knowledge, to speak at a Knowledge Management Lunch and Learn hosted on June 12, 2024. All Office of Administration staff were invited to attend and received professional development credit for participating in the voluntary event.
The objectives of the Lunch and Learn presentation were to:
- Review what KM ‘is’ and ‘isn’t’
- Understand the value of KM and the benefits of engaging
- Define and reflect on your “what’s in it for me?”
- Share actionable ways you can participate in Knowledge - - Capture & Transfer
Have you ever been confused by the myriad of choices offered by AWS for hosting a website or an API?
Lambda, Elastic Beanstalk, Lightsail, Amplify, S3 (and more!) can each host websites + APIs. But which one should we choose?
Which one is cheapest? Which one is fastest? Which one will scale to meet our needs?
Join me in this session as we dive into each AWS hosting service to determine which one is best for your scenario and explain why!
Northern Engraving | Modern Metal Trim, Nameplates and Appliance PanelsNorthern Engraving
What began over 115 years ago as a supplier of precision gauges to the automotive industry has evolved into being an industry leader in the manufacture of product branding, automotive cockpit trim and decorative appliance trim. Value-added services include in-house Design, Engineering, Program Management, Test Lab and Tool Shops.
Discover top-tier mobile app development services, offering innovative solutions for iOS and Android. Enhance your business with custom, user-friendly mobile applications.
How information systems are built or acquired puts information, which is what they should be about, in a secondary place. Our language adapted accordingly, and we no longer talk about information systems but applications. Applications evolved in a way to break data into diverse fragments, tightly coupled with applications and expensive to integrate. The result is technical debt, which is re-paid by taking even bigger "loans", resulting in an ever-increasing technical debt. Software engineering and procurement practices work in sync with market forces to maintain this trend. This talk demonstrates how natural this situation is. The question is: can something be done to reverse the trend?
Must Know Postgres Extension for DBA and Developer during MigrationMydbops
Mydbops Opensource Database Meetup 16
Topic: Must-Know PostgreSQL Extensions for Developers and DBAs During Migration
Speaker: Deepak Mahto, Founder of DataCloudGaze Consulting
Date & Time: 8th June | 10 AM - 1 PM IST
Venue: Bangalore International Centre, Bangalore
Abstract: Discover how PostgreSQL extensions can be your secret weapon! This talk explores how key extensions enhance database capabilities and streamline the migration process for users moving from other relational databases like Oracle.
Key Takeaways:
* Learn about crucial extensions like oracle_fdw, pgtt, and pg_audit that ease migration complexities.
* Gain valuable strategies for implementing these extensions in PostgreSQL to achieve license freedom.
* Discover how these key extensions can empower both developers and DBAs during the migration process.
* Don't miss this chance to gain practical knowledge from an industry expert and stay updated on the latest open-source database trends.
Mydbops Managed Services specializes in taking the pain out of database management while optimizing performance. Since 2015, we have been providing top-notch support and assistance for the top three open-source databases: MySQL, MongoDB, and PostgreSQL.
Our team offers a wide range of services, including assistance, support, consulting, 24/7 operations, and expertise in all relevant technologies. We help organizations improve their database's performance, scalability, efficiency, and availability.
Contact us: info@mydbops.com
Visit: https://www.mydbops.com/
Follow us on LinkedIn: https://in.linkedin.com/company/mydbops
For more details and updates, please follow up the below links.
Meetup Page : https://www.meetup.com/mydbops-databa...
Twitter: https://twitter.com/mydbopsofficial
Blogs: https://www.mydbops.com/blog/
Facebook(Meta): https://www.facebook.com/mydbops/
Session 1 - Intro to Robotic Process Automation.pdfUiPathCommunity
👉 Check out our full 'Africa Series - Automation Student Developers (EN)' page to register for the full program:
https://bit.ly/Automation_Student_Kickstart
In this session, we shall introduce you to the world of automation, the UiPath Platform, and guide you on how to install and setup UiPath Studio on your Windows PC.
📕 Detailed agenda:
What is RPA? Benefits of RPA?
RPA Applications
The UiPath End-to-End Automation Platform
UiPath Studio CE Installation and Setup
💻 Extra training through UiPath Academy:
Introduction to Automation
UiPath Business Automation Platform
Explore automation development with UiPath Studio
👉 Register here for our upcoming Session 2 on June 20: Introduction to UiPath Studio Fundamentals: https://community.uipath.com/events/details/uipath-lagos-presents-session-2-introduction-to-uipath-studio-fundamentals/
Northern Engraving | Nameplate Manufacturing Process - 2024Northern Engraving
Manufacturing custom quality metal nameplates and badges involves several standard operations. Processes include sheet prep, lithography, screening, coating, punch press and inspection. All decoration is completed in the flat sheet with adhesive and tooling operations following. The possibilities for creating unique durable nameplates are endless. How will you create your brand identity? We can help!
[OReilly Superstream] Occupy the Space: A grassroots guide to engineering (an...Jason Yip
The typical problem in product engineering is not bad strategy, so much as “no strategy”. This leads to confusion, lack of motivation, and incoherent action. The next time you look for a strategy and find an empty space, instead of waiting for it to be filled, I will show you how to fill it in yourself. If you’re wrong, it forces a correction. If you’re right, it helps create focus. I’ll share how I’ve approached this in the past, both what works and lessons for what didn’t work so well.