This document discusses IPTV (Internet Protocol Television) and related technologies. It provides an overview of IPTV, describing how it delivers television content over an IP network infrastructure. It also lists various industry standards organizations, companies, and technologies involved in IPTV, including codecs like H.264, providers of IP set-top boxes, and network equipment vendors developing solutions for IPTV delivery. Finally, it mentions some news and research regarding IPTV adoption forecasts, upcoming services, and testing of IPTV networks.
report on communication medium in modern tvHarsh Mehta
The document discusses various communication mediums used in modern television, including direct broadcast satellite (DBS) TV, Internet Protocol television (IPTV), and video compression techniques. DBS TV involves transmitting television signals directly from a broadcaster to viewers using satellites. IPTV delivers television content over the internet using internet protocol. Video compression standards like MPEG-1, MPEG-2, and MPEG-4 allow more channels to be delivered by removing redundant video data and using less bandwidth. The document also examines technologies like multiple access, digital signal processing, and triple play services that enable delivery of television, telephony and internet over a single network connection.
This document summarizes two modern communication mediums: Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) television and Internet Protocol Television (IP-TV). It describes how DBS uses satellites to deliver digitally compressed TV programs to viewers worldwide. It also explains the components of a DBS system, including programming sources, broadcast centers, satellites, dishes, and receivers. For IP-TV, it defines it as digital television services delivered via internet and outlines the technologies used like broadband and digital subscriber lines. It provides examples of content and services offered by IP-TV like video on demand, interactive TV, and voice calls.
The document discusses the transition from analog to digital television and the benefits this brings such as improved picture and sound quality, increased channel capacity, and more flexible access across different devices. It also covers digital compression technologies like MPEG that make digital TV transmission over broadcast and broadband networks possible. Finally, it discusses new opportunities for interactive and on-demand services with IPTV and convergence of TV with the internet.
TopStyle Help & <b>Tutorial</b>tutorialsruby
This document provides a table of contents for the TopStyle Pro Help & Tutorial, which teaches how to use the TopStyle software for editing style sheets and HTML/XHTML documents. It lists over 50 sections that provide explanations and instructions for features like creating and opening files, editing styles, working with colors, previews, validation, site management, reports and customizing the software. The document was created by Giampaolo Bellavite from the online help provided with TopStyle version 3.11.
This document provides a help and tutorial for TopStyle Pro version 3.11. It covers getting started with TopStyle, editing style sheets and HTML/XHTML, working with colors, previews, validation, site management, reports, mappings, customization, and third-party integration. It also includes appendices on CSS basics and tips, TopStyle tips and tricks, style sheet resources, keyboard shortcuts, and regular expressions.
This document discusses IPTV (Internet Protocol Television) and related technologies. It provides an overview of IPTV, describing how it delivers television content over an IP network infrastructure. It also lists various industry standards organizations, companies, and technologies involved in IPTV, including codecs like H.264, providers of IP set-top boxes, and network equipment vendors developing solutions for IPTV delivery. Finally, it mentions some news and research regarding IPTV adoption forecasts, upcoming services, and testing of IPTV networks.
report on communication medium in modern tvHarsh Mehta
The document discusses various communication mediums used in modern television, including direct broadcast satellite (DBS) TV, Internet Protocol television (IPTV), and video compression techniques. DBS TV involves transmitting television signals directly from a broadcaster to viewers using satellites. IPTV delivers television content over the internet using internet protocol. Video compression standards like MPEG-1, MPEG-2, and MPEG-4 allow more channels to be delivered by removing redundant video data and using less bandwidth. The document also examines technologies like multiple access, digital signal processing, and triple play services that enable delivery of television, telephony and internet over a single network connection.
This document summarizes two modern communication mediums: Direct Broadcast Satellite (DBS) television and Internet Protocol Television (IP-TV). It describes how DBS uses satellites to deliver digitally compressed TV programs to viewers worldwide. It also explains the components of a DBS system, including programming sources, broadcast centers, satellites, dishes, and receivers. For IP-TV, it defines it as digital television services delivered via internet and outlines the technologies used like broadband and digital subscriber lines. It provides examples of content and services offered by IP-TV like video on demand, interactive TV, and voice calls.
The document discusses the transition from analog to digital television and the benefits this brings such as improved picture and sound quality, increased channel capacity, and more flexible access across different devices. It also covers digital compression technologies like MPEG that make digital TV transmission over broadcast and broadband networks possible. Finally, it discusses new opportunities for interactive and on-demand services with IPTV and convergence of TV with the internet.
TopStyle Help & <b>Tutorial</b>tutorialsruby
This document provides a table of contents for the TopStyle Pro Help & Tutorial, which teaches how to use the TopStyle software for editing style sheets and HTML/XHTML documents. It lists over 50 sections that provide explanations and instructions for features like creating and opening files, editing styles, working with colors, previews, validation, site management, reports and customizing the software. The document was created by Giampaolo Bellavite from the online help provided with TopStyle version 3.11.
This document provides a help and tutorial for TopStyle Pro version 3.11. It covers getting started with TopStyle, editing style sheets and HTML/XHTML, working with colors, previews, validation, site management, reports, mappings, customization, and third-party integration. It also includes appendices on CSS basics and tips, TopStyle tips and tricks, style sheet resources, keyboard shortcuts, and regular expressions.
The Art Institute of Atlanta IMD 210 Fundamentals of Scripting <b>...</b>tutorialsruby
This document provides the course outline for IMD 210 Fundamentals of Scripting Languages at The Art Institute of Atlanta during the Spring 2005 quarter. The course focuses on integrating programming concepts with interface design using scripting languages like JavaScript and CSS. It will cover topics like DOM, CSS layout, JavaScript variables, conditionals, and events. Students will complete 4 assignments including redesigning existing websites, and there will be weekly quizzes, a midterm, and final exam. The course is worth 4 credits and meets once a week for class and lab.
This document provides the course outline for IMD 210 Fundamentals of Scripting Languages at The Art Institute of Atlanta during the Spring 2005 quarter. The course focuses on integrating programming concepts with interface design using scripting languages like JavaScript and CSS. It will cover topics like DOM, CSS layout, JavaScript variables, conditionals, and events. Students will complete 4 assignments including redesigning existing websites, and there will be weekly quizzes, a midterm, and final exam. The course is worth 4 credits and meets once a week for class and lab.
The group aims to bridge gaps between peer-to-peer database architectures and scaling multimedia information retrieval. They develop a probabilistic multimedia database system with abstraction layers for applications and researchers. They also research challenges of peer-to-peer networks for distributed data management. Both lines are supported by the MonetDB platform to exploit custom hardware and adaptive query optimization. The goal is a modular solution linking theoretical optimal solutions to application demands under resource limitations.
Standardization and Knowledge Transfer – INS0tutorialsruby
The group aims to bridge gaps between peer-to-peer database architectures and scaling multimedia information retrieval. They develop a probabilistic multimedia database system with abstraction layers and a flexible model. They also research challenges of peer-to-peer networks for distributed data management. Both lines are supported by the MonetDB platform to exploit custom hardware and adaptive query optimization. The goal is a modular solution linking theoretical optimal solutions to application demands under resource limitations.
This document provides an introduction to converting HTML documents to XHTML, including the basic syntax changes needed like making all tags lowercase and closing all tags. It provides examples of correct XHTML markup for different tags. It also explains the new DOCTYPE declaration and shows a sample well-formed XHTML document incorporating all the discussed changes. Resources for learning more about XHTML are listed at the end.
This document provides an introduction to converting HTML documents to XHTML, including the basic syntax changes needed like making all tags lowercase and closing all tags. It provides examples of correct XHTML markup for different tags. It also explains the new DOCTYPE declaration and shows a sample well-formed XHTML document incorporating all the discussed changes. Resources for learning more about XHTML are listed at the end.
XHTML is a markup language that provides structure and semantics to web pages. It is based on XML and is more strict than HTML. XHTML pages must have a document type definition, html and head tags, and a body where the visible content goes. Common XHTML tags include paragraphs, lists, links, images, and divisions to logically separate content. While XHTML provides structure, CSS is used to style pages and control visual presentation by defining rules for tags. CSS rules are defined in external style sheets to keep presentation separate from structure and content.
XHTML is a markup language that provides structure and semantics to web pages. It is based on XML and is more strict than HTML. XHTML pages must have a document type definition, html and head tags, and a body where the visible content goes. Common XHTML tags include paragraphs, lists, links, images, and divisions to logically separate content. While XHTML provides structure, CSS is used to style pages and control visual presentation through rules that target specific XHTML elements.
This document discusses how to create and use external cascading style sheets (CSS) in Dreamweaver. It provides steps to:
1. Open the CSS Styles tab in Dreamweaver and create a new external CSS stylesheet using a sample text style.
2. Save the stylesheet and link it to a new HTML page to style elements like headings, text sizes, and boxes.
3. Edit existing styles by selecting a tag in the CSS Styles panel and modifying properties directly, or by clicking the tag and using the pencil icon to edit in a window. This allows customizing styles globally across all linked pages.
This document provides an overview of how to create and use cascading style sheets (CSS) in Dreamweaver. It describes the different types of style sheets, including external and internal style sheets. It outlines the steps to create an external style sheet in Dreamweaver using the CSS Styles panel and provides instructions for linking the external style sheet to an HTML page. The document demonstrates how to experiment with predefined styles and how to edit, add, and delete styles in the CSS stylesheet.
This document appears to be a weekly update from an intro to computer science course. It includes summaries of classmates' demographics, comfort levels, and prior experience. It also discusses time spent on problem sets and recommends upcoming courses in CS51 and CS61. Finally, it recommends reading on TCP/IP, HTTP, XHTML, CSS, PHP, SQL and using the bulletin board for questions.
This document appears to be a weekly update from an intro to computer science course. It includes summaries of classmates' demographics, comfort levels, and prior experience. It also discusses time spent on problem sets and recommends upcoming courses in CS51 and CS61. Finally, it recommends reading on topics like TCP/IP, HTTP, XHTML, CSS, PHP, SQL and using bulletin boards, and includes images related to these topics.
The document discusses how to use Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) with Corvid Servlet Runtime templates to control formatting and layout. CSS allows separating design from content, making templates simpler and easier to maintain. It also enables adapting appearance for different devices. The document provides examples of using CSS classes to style template elements and explains how to set up a demo system using the included CSS and templates.
The document discusses how to use Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) with Corvid Servlet Runtime templates to control formatting and layout. CSS allows separating design from content, making templates simpler and easier to maintain. It also enables customization of appearance for different devices. The document provides examples of how to apply CSS classes and rules to Corvid template elements to control fonts, colors, positioning and more.
The document provides an introduction to CSS and how it works with HTML to control the presentation and styling of web page content. It explains basic CSS concepts like selectors, properties and values, and how CSS rules are used to target specific HTML elements and style them. Examples are given of common CSS properties and selectors and how they can be used to style elements and format the layout of web pages.
The document introduces CSS and how it works with HTML to separate content from presentation, allowing the styling of web pages through rules that target HTML elements. It explains CSS syntax and various selectors like type, class, ID, and descendant selectors. Examples are provided of how CSS can be used to style properties like color, font, padding, and layout of elements on a page.
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) allow users to define how HTML elements are presented on a page. CSS enables changing the appearance and layout of an entire website by editing just one CSS file. CSS uses selectors to apply styles to HTML elements via properties and values. Styles can be defined internally in HTML or externally in CSS files. CSS can control text formatting, colors, spacing, positioning and more to achieve visual consistency across web pages.
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) allow users to define how HTML elements are presented on a page. CSS enables changing the appearance and layout of an entire website by editing just one CSS file. CSS uses selectors to apply styles to HTML elements via properties and values. Styles can be defined internally in HTML or externally in CSS files. CSS can control text formatting, colors, spacing, positioning and more to achieve visual consistency across web pages.
This document provides instructions on using JavaScript to allow website visitors to select different cascading style sheets (CSS) and have their preference remembered via cookies. It discusses linking different types of style sheets, detecting browsers and objects, creating and reading cookies, and programming functions to get the current active style sheet and toggle between them when pages load and unload. Code snippets are provided to implement these functions to enable style sheet selection and remember the user's preference on future page visits.
This document provides instructions on using JavaScript to allow website visitors to select different cascading style sheets (CSS) and have their preference remembered via cookies. It discusses linking different types of style sheets, detecting browsers and objects, creating and reading cookies, and programming functions to get the current active style sheet and toggle between them when pages load and unload. Code snippets are provided to implement these functions to enable style sheet selection and remember the user's preference on future page visits.
Programming Foundation Models with DSPy - Meetup SlidesZilliz
Prompting language models is hard, while programming language models is easy. In this talk, I will discuss the state-of-the-art framework DSPy for programming foundation models with its powerful optimizers and runtime constraint system.
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?
The Art Institute of Atlanta IMD 210 Fundamentals of Scripting <b>...</b>tutorialsruby
This document provides the course outline for IMD 210 Fundamentals of Scripting Languages at The Art Institute of Atlanta during the Spring 2005 quarter. The course focuses on integrating programming concepts with interface design using scripting languages like JavaScript and CSS. It will cover topics like DOM, CSS layout, JavaScript variables, conditionals, and events. Students will complete 4 assignments including redesigning existing websites, and there will be weekly quizzes, a midterm, and final exam. The course is worth 4 credits and meets once a week for class and lab.
This document provides the course outline for IMD 210 Fundamentals of Scripting Languages at The Art Institute of Atlanta during the Spring 2005 quarter. The course focuses on integrating programming concepts with interface design using scripting languages like JavaScript and CSS. It will cover topics like DOM, CSS layout, JavaScript variables, conditionals, and events. Students will complete 4 assignments including redesigning existing websites, and there will be weekly quizzes, a midterm, and final exam. The course is worth 4 credits and meets once a week for class and lab.
The group aims to bridge gaps between peer-to-peer database architectures and scaling multimedia information retrieval. They develop a probabilistic multimedia database system with abstraction layers for applications and researchers. They also research challenges of peer-to-peer networks for distributed data management. Both lines are supported by the MonetDB platform to exploit custom hardware and adaptive query optimization. The goal is a modular solution linking theoretical optimal solutions to application demands under resource limitations.
Standardization and Knowledge Transfer – INS0tutorialsruby
The group aims to bridge gaps between peer-to-peer database architectures and scaling multimedia information retrieval. They develop a probabilistic multimedia database system with abstraction layers and a flexible model. They also research challenges of peer-to-peer networks for distributed data management. Both lines are supported by the MonetDB platform to exploit custom hardware and adaptive query optimization. The goal is a modular solution linking theoretical optimal solutions to application demands under resource limitations.
This document provides an introduction to converting HTML documents to XHTML, including the basic syntax changes needed like making all tags lowercase and closing all tags. It provides examples of correct XHTML markup for different tags. It also explains the new DOCTYPE declaration and shows a sample well-formed XHTML document incorporating all the discussed changes. Resources for learning more about XHTML are listed at the end.
This document provides an introduction to converting HTML documents to XHTML, including the basic syntax changes needed like making all tags lowercase and closing all tags. It provides examples of correct XHTML markup for different tags. It also explains the new DOCTYPE declaration and shows a sample well-formed XHTML document incorporating all the discussed changes. Resources for learning more about XHTML are listed at the end.
XHTML is a markup language that provides structure and semantics to web pages. It is based on XML and is more strict than HTML. XHTML pages must have a document type definition, html and head tags, and a body where the visible content goes. Common XHTML tags include paragraphs, lists, links, images, and divisions to logically separate content. While XHTML provides structure, CSS is used to style pages and control visual presentation by defining rules for tags. CSS rules are defined in external style sheets to keep presentation separate from structure and content.
XHTML is a markup language that provides structure and semantics to web pages. It is based on XML and is more strict than HTML. XHTML pages must have a document type definition, html and head tags, and a body where the visible content goes. Common XHTML tags include paragraphs, lists, links, images, and divisions to logically separate content. While XHTML provides structure, CSS is used to style pages and control visual presentation through rules that target specific XHTML elements.
This document discusses how to create and use external cascading style sheets (CSS) in Dreamweaver. It provides steps to:
1. Open the CSS Styles tab in Dreamweaver and create a new external CSS stylesheet using a sample text style.
2. Save the stylesheet and link it to a new HTML page to style elements like headings, text sizes, and boxes.
3. Edit existing styles by selecting a tag in the CSS Styles panel and modifying properties directly, or by clicking the tag and using the pencil icon to edit in a window. This allows customizing styles globally across all linked pages.
This document provides an overview of how to create and use cascading style sheets (CSS) in Dreamweaver. It describes the different types of style sheets, including external and internal style sheets. It outlines the steps to create an external style sheet in Dreamweaver using the CSS Styles panel and provides instructions for linking the external style sheet to an HTML page. The document demonstrates how to experiment with predefined styles and how to edit, add, and delete styles in the CSS stylesheet.
This document appears to be a weekly update from an intro to computer science course. It includes summaries of classmates' demographics, comfort levels, and prior experience. It also discusses time spent on problem sets and recommends upcoming courses in CS51 and CS61. Finally, it recommends reading on TCP/IP, HTTP, XHTML, CSS, PHP, SQL and using the bulletin board for questions.
This document appears to be a weekly update from an intro to computer science course. It includes summaries of classmates' demographics, comfort levels, and prior experience. It also discusses time spent on problem sets and recommends upcoming courses in CS51 and CS61. Finally, it recommends reading on topics like TCP/IP, HTTP, XHTML, CSS, PHP, SQL and using bulletin boards, and includes images related to these topics.
The document discusses how to use Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) with Corvid Servlet Runtime templates to control formatting and layout. CSS allows separating design from content, making templates simpler and easier to maintain. It also enables adapting appearance for different devices. The document provides examples of using CSS classes to style template elements and explains how to set up a demo system using the included CSS and templates.
The document discusses how to use Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) with Corvid Servlet Runtime templates to control formatting and layout. CSS allows separating design from content, making templates simpler and easier to maintain. It also enables customization of appearance for different devices. The document provides examples of how to apply CSS classes and rules to Corvid template elements to control fonts, colors, positioning and more.
The document provides an introduction to CSS and how it works with HTML to control the presentation and styling of web page content. It explains basic CSS concepts like selectors, properties and values, and how CSS rules are used to target specific HTML elements and style them. Examples are given of common CSS properties and selectors and how they can be used to style elements and format the layout of web pages.
The document introduces CSS and how it works with HTML to separate content from presentation, allowing the styling of web pages through rules that target HTML elements. It explains CSS syntax and various selectors like type, class, ID, and descendant selectors. Examples are provided of how CSS can be used to style properties like color, font, padding, and layout of elements on a page.
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) allow users to define how HTML elements are presented on a page. CSS enables changing the appearance and layout of an entire website by editing just one CSS file. CSS uses selectors to apply styles to HTML elements via properties and values. Styles can be defined internally in HTML or externally in CSS files. CSS can control text formatting, colors, spacing, positioning and more to achieve visual consistency across web pages.
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) allow users to define how HTML elements are presented on a page. CSS enables changing the appearance and layout of an entire website by editing just one CSS file. CSS uses selectors to apply styles to HTML elements via properties and values. Styles can be defined internally in HTML or externally in CSS files. CSS can control text formatting, colors, spacing, positioning and more to achieve visual consistency across web pages.
This document provides instructions on using JavaScript to allow website visitors to select different cascading style sheets (CSS) and have their preference remembered via cookies. It discusses linking different types of style sheets, detecting browsers and objects, creating and reading cookies, and programming functions to get the current active style sheet and toggle between them when pages load and unload. Code snippets are provided to implement these functions to enable style sheet selection and remember the user's preference on future page visits.
This document provides instructions on using JavaScript to allow website visitors to select different cascading style sheets (CSS) and have their preference remembered via cookies. It discusses linking different types of style sheets, detecting browsers and objects, creating and reading cookies, and programming functions to get the current active style sheet and toggle between them when pages load and unload. Code snippets are provided to implement these functions to enable style sheet selection and remember the user's preference on future page visits.
Programming Foundation Models with DSPy - Meetup SlidesZilliz
Prompting language models is hard, while programming language models is easy. In this talk, I will discuss the state-of-the-art framework DSPy for programming foundation models with its powerful optimizers and runtime constraint system.
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?
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.
[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.
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!
AppSec PNW: Android and iOS Application Security with MobSFAjin Abraham
Mobile Security Framework - MobSF is a free and open source automated mobile application security testing environment designed to help security engineers, researchers, developers, and penetration testers to identify security vulnerabilities, malicious behaviours and privacy concerns in mobile applications using static and dynamic analysis. It supports all the popular mobile application binaries and source code formats built for Android and iOS devices. In addition to automated security assessment, it also offers an interactive testing environment to build and execute scenario based test/fuzz cases against the application.
This talk covers:
Using MobSF for static analysis of mobile applications.
Interactive dynamic security assessment of Android and iOS applications.
Solving Mobile app CTF challenges.
Reverse engineering and runtime analysis of Mobile malware.
How to shift left and integrate MobSF/mobsfscan SAST and DAST in your build pipeline.
"Frontline Battles with DDoS: Best practices and Lessons Learned", Igor IvaniukFwdays
At this talk we will discuss DDoS protection tools and best practices, discuss network architectures and what AWS has to offer. Also, we will look into one of the largest DDoS attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure that happened in February 2022. We'll see, what techniques helped to keep the web resources available for Ukrainians and how AWS improved DDoS protection for all customers based on Ukraine experience
Driving Business Innovation: Latest Generative AI Advancements & Success StorySafe Software
Are you ready to revolutionize how you handle data? Join us for a webinar where we’ll bring you up to speed with the latest advancements in Generative AI technology and discover how leveraging FME with tools from giants like Google Gemini, Amazon, and Microsoft OpenAI can supercharge your workflow efficiency.
During the hour, we’ll take you through:
Guest Speaker Segment with Hannah Barrington: Dive into the world of dynamic real estate marketing with Hannah, the Marketing Manager at Workspace Group. Hear firsthand how their team generates engaging descriptions for thousands of office units by integrating diverse data sources—from PDF floorplans to web pages—using FME transformers, like OpenAIVisionConnector and AnthropicVisionConnector. This use case will show you how GenAI can streamline content creation for marketing across the board.
Ollama Use Case: Learn how Scenario Specialist Dmitri Bagh has utilized Ollama within FME to input data, create custom models, and enhance security protocols. This segment will include demos to illustrate the full capabilities of FME in AI-driven processes.
Custom AI Models: Discover how to leverage FME to build personalized AI models using your data. Whether it’s populating a model with local data for added security or integrating public AI tools, find out how FME facilitates a versatile and secure approach to AI.
We’ll wrap up with a live Q&A session where you can engage with our experts on your specific use cases, and learn more about optimizing your data workflows with AI.
This webinar is ideal for professionals seeking to harness the power of AI within their data management systems while ensuring high levels of customization and security. Whether you're a novice or an expert, gain actionable insights and strategies to elevate your data processes. Join us to see how FME and AI can revolutionize how you work with data!
Main news related to the CCS TSI 2023 (2023/1695)Jakub Marek
An English 🇬🇧 translation of a presentation to the speech I gave about the main changes brought by CCS TSI 2023 at the biggest Czech conference on Communications and signalling systems on Railways, which was held in Clarion Hotel Olomouc from 7th to 9th November 2023 (konferenceszt.cz). Attended by around 500 participants and 200 on-line followers.
The original Czech 🇨🇿 version of the presentation can be found here: https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/hlavni-novinky-souvisejici-s-ccs-tsi-2023-2023-1695/269688092 .
The videorecording (in Czech) from the presentation is available here: https://youtu.be/WzjJWm4IyPk?si=SImb06tuXGb30BEH .
In the realm of cybersecurity, offensive security practices act as a critical shield. By simulating real-world attacks in a controlled environment, these techniques expose vulnerabilities before malicious actors can exploit them. This proactive approach allows manufacturers to identify and fix weaknesses, significantly enhancing system security.
This presentation delves into the development of a system designed to mimic Galileo's Open Service signal using software-defined radio (SDR) technology. We'll begin with a foundational overview of both Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) and the intricacies of digital signal processing.
The presentation culminates in a live demonstration. We'll showcase the manipulation of Galileo's Open Service pilot signal, simulating an attack on various software and hardware systems. This practical demonstration serves to highlight the potential consequences of unaddressed vulnerabilities, emphasizing the importance of offensive security practices in safeguarding critical infrastructure.
"Choosing proper type of scaling", Olena SyrotaFwdays
Imagine an IoT processing system that is already quite mature and production-ready and for which client coverage is growing and scaling and performance aspects are life and death questions. The system has Redis, MongoDB, and stream processing based on ksqldb. In this talk, firstly, we will analyze scaling approaches and then select the proper ones for our system.
Generating privacy-protected synthetic data using Secludy and MilvusZilliz
During this demo, the founders of Secludy will demonstrate how their system utilizes Milvus to store and manipulate embeddings for generating privacy-protected synthetic data. Their approach not only maintains the confidentiality of the original data but also enhances the utility and scalability of LLMs under privacy constraints. Attendees, including machine learning engineers, data scientists, and data managers, will witness first-hand how Secludy's integration with Milvus empowers organizations to harness the power of LLMs securely and efficiently.
Ivanti’s Patch Tuesday breakdown goes beyond patching your applications and brings you the intelligence and guidance needed to prioritize where to focus your attention first. Catch early analysis on our Ivanti blog, then join industry expert Chris Goettl for the Patch Tuesday Webinar Event. There we’ll do a deep dive into each of the bulletins and give guidance on the risks associated with the newly-identified vulnerabilities.
How to Interpret Trends in the Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart.pdfChart Kalyan
A Mix Chart displays historical data of numbers in a graphical or tabular form. The Kalyan Rajdhani Mix Chart specifically shows the results of a sequence of numbers over different periods.
Fueling AI with Great Data with Airbyte WebinarZilliz
This talk will focus on how to collect data from a variety of sources, leveraging this data for RAG and other GenAI use cases, and finally charting your course to productionalization.
1. HELPFUL WEB DEVELOPING TOOLS
Tutorials:
World Wide Web Consortium (W3) HTML tutorial:
http://www.w3schools.com/htmL/
In depth HTML lessons: http://www.htmltutorials.ca/lesson1.htm#HTMLL
Basic Web design:
http://www.yourhtmlsource.com/myfirstsite/basicwebdesign.html
Additional tutorials, validation tools, styles:
http://www.pibweb.com/designrec.html
Free (What You See Is What You Get) WYSIWYG HTML Editors:
List of HTML editors (free and free trials):
http://www.buildwebsite4u.com/resources/html-editors.shtml
Text editors:
Notepad (included in Windows--Start>All Programs>Accessories--)
Notepad++ source code editor (like Notepad on steroids – Windows users,
download the npp.5.3.1.Installer.exe file):
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=95717&package_i
d=102072#
Web Tools:
File Transfer Protocol (FTP) programs:
FileZilla (Windows, Mac, Linux) : http://filezilla-project.org/
WinSCP (Windows): http://winscp.net/eng/index.php
FireFTP (Web-based extension for Firefox, cross-platform):
http://www.linux.com/feature/114363
Web color codes: http://www.webmonkey.com/reference/Color_Charts
Cascading Stylesheets (CSS) Tutorial and Guide:
http://www.webmonkey.com/tutorial/tag/visual_design