TMPA-2015: Multi-Platform Approach to Reverse Debugging of Virtual MachinesIosif Itkin
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Multi-Platform Approach to Reverse Debugging of Virtual Machines
Pavel Dovgalyuk, Maria Klimushenkova, Denis Dmitriev and Vladimir Makarov, Novgorod State University
12 - 14 November 2015
Tools and Methods of Program Analysis in St. Petersburg
The speech will cover the process of making a highly detailed vector art, where each detail is in the right place. It will touch on the issues of miniaturization, optimization and animation, repeated use of content and fast generation of large content volumes. In addition, some peculiarities of work according to the artist programmer pattern will get discussed.
The speech will cover the process of making a highly detailed vector art, where each detail is in the right place. It will touch on the issues of miniaturization, optimization and animation, repeated use of content and fast generation of large content volumes. In addition, some peculiarities of work according to the artist programmer pattern will get discussed.
There are a lot of things in multi-threading world, which we, as engineers, have to consider while developing applications. During Golang Odesa #TechTalks we will talk about three main problems data races, race conditions, and deadlocks. Also, we will discuss how to avoid fantom bugs and do not shoot yourself in the foot while developing Golang applications
About speaker:
Oleksandr Karlov is Golang Team Lead at Lohika. Currently, Oleksandr is working on SLO project, which helps engineers to control reliability of their services. Before that he worked on CDN and statistics platform.
The document describes string comparison techniques using matrix algebra and seaweed matrices. It introduces the concept of semi-local string comparison, which involves comparing a whole string to substrings of another string. The key idea is representing string comparison matrices implicitly using seaweed matrices, which represent unit-Monge matrices. This allows developing algebraic techniques for efficiently multiplying such matrices using the algebra of braids and the seaweed monoid. These multiplication techniques can then be applied to problems like dynamic programming string comparison and comparing compressed strings.
The document provides an overview of the KNIME analytics platform and its capabilities. It discusses:
- KNIME's origins, offices, codebase, and application areas including pharma, healthcare, finance, retail, and more.
- The key components of the KNIME platform including data access, transformation, analysis, visualization, and deployment capabilities.
- Integrations with tools like R, Weka, databases, and file formats.
- Community contributions expanding KNIME's functionality in areas like bioinformatics, chemistry, image processing, and more.
This document summarizes recent advances in cancer immunotherapy from the perspective of systems biology. It discusses how checkpoint blockade immunotherapy works by addressing the second co-inhibitory checkpoint signal needed for T cell activation. Computational methods are now able to identify tumor-specific neoantigens that can be targeted by immunotherapy. Mouse model studies showed that certain tumors are naturally rejected due to expression of a mutant antigen recognized by T cells, and that antigen-specific T cells are present before immunotherapy treatment. The high mutational load in melanoma makes it particularly responsive to checkpoint blockade. Early work in the 19th century by William Coley observed tumor regression following bacterial infection, which led to development of a toxin mixture that resembled modern vaccine formulations. Members of
This document summarizes genetic analyses of complex human phenotypes. It describes whole genome sequencing of individuals from bipolar disorder families and finding an association between genetic variation in a chromosome 6 region and amygdala volume. It also discusses rare variant sequencing of metabolic syndrome-related genes in Finnish cohorts, identifying new signals beyond existing GWAS hits. Additionally, it outlines exome and targeted sequencing of Tourette syndrome pedigrees, with a genome-wide significant result in a long non-coding RNA gene linked to the trait.
This document provides an overview of the ENCODE project and how its data can be accessed through the UCSC Genome Browser. It discusses the different types of ENCODE data available, including mapping data, gene annotations, expression data, regulatory information, and genetic variation. It also explains how to find, view, and download ENCODE tracks from the Genome Browser and where to get more information about ENCODE. The overall goal of the ENCODE project is to identify all functional elements in the human genome.