The Waag Society is an institute for art, science and technology located in Amsterdam. It brings together users, designers, programmers, artists and scientists from various disciplines to collaborate on projects using an approach called "users as designers". The Waag Society operates several labs and facilities such as a FabLab for digital fabrication. It has worked on many open data and mobile application projects in Amsterdam around themes like education, mobility and urban planning. The goal is to empower users and citizens through open sharing of data and technologies.
This document discusses the benefits of opening cultural data. It notes that public money should yield public data, and that opening data allows for transparency, collaboration, combining of data, learning new things, and innovation. Several examples are provided of apps and tools created by combining open cultural and other types of data, such as environmental and transportation apps. Benefits include creating recommendations and predicting train occupancy. The document promotes opening cultural data to enable new insights and applications.
This document summarizes the plans for a new data hub facility called DATA HUB. It will provide co-working space, programs and services to help companies maximize the value of their data through opportunities like product creation, process improvement and analytics. The facility aims to connect companies with data and opportunities through events, skills training, advising and special interest projects matching enterprises with startups. It will be located in Waterloo's Data District near other innovation assets and offer connectivity, meeting spaces and programming to support collaboration.
This document provides information on Frank Kresin and his work as Research Director at Waag. It summarizes Kresin's areas of focus which include linking arts, science, technology and society; human-centered product development; and facilitating innovation processes. It also lists some of the activities and services provided by Waag such as workshops, prototypes, and an academy program.
OnsBlok presentation at Thingscon Salon, Eindhoven, July 8 2016Peter van Waart
?
The document discusses the OnsBlok project, which aims to empower citizens to create smart devices themselves using ready-made components. It poses the question of why citizens cannot make their own smart things, just as they can bake cakes or assemble furniture, if provided with basic connected blocks and sensor plugins. The project is part of Creating 010, a research center at Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences that uses participatory and transdisciplinary approaches to design for smart and inclusive cities.
Thingscon Salon 4 - DATAStudio Klaas KuitenbrouwerThingsConAMS
?
The document discusses the DATAStudio project in Eindhoven that aims to reformulate the relationship between citizens and the municipality. It explores how to relate the narratives of smart cities and participation through discussions with experts and using data to understand realities in Woensel-Noord. The DATAStudio collects a variety of data through projects with citizens, schools and researchers to identify important issues and inform meaningful citizen-centric design for a smart society. It also discusses tensions between seamless technology processes and transparency for users.
Open Data Aha! Renfrewshire Open Data 'Enlightenment' eventMark Braggins
?
This document summarizes Mark Braggins' presentation on open data initiatives from across the UK and internationally. It provides examples of open data stories and projects from various local governments and communities in England, including Devon, Bath, Bristol, Cambridgeshire, Hampshire, London, Leeds, Manchester, and Trafford. It also briefly describes some international open data efforts, including a global weather visualization, a precision agriculture initiative, Chicago's predictive food safety model, and open data camps. Common traits of successful open data programs are sharing data, having local champions, and telling stories.
Big data is driving changes in leadership approaches. Leaders must envision how to make their organizations more customer-centric by using data and innovation networks. They also need to enable big data operations by establishing the right technology and organizational structures. Further, leaders must empower all employees to take action based on data insights. Finally, leaders must energize their organizations to become big data driven by constantly advocating changes and using data to reward performance.
Open data as an enabler of citizen engagementAndy Powell
?
Bath:Hacked is a community interest company that aims to promote open data and civic engagement in Bath. It operates a city data store and hosts regular hack events to bring data and community members together to build services. The goals are to facilitate citizen engagement with the local council, improve data quality through demand-led initiatives, increase citizen data literacy, and support free and commercial services using public data. The organization has enabled many websites, maps, and apps to be created using public data on issues like parking availability. While successful in engaging some citizens, questions remain about broadening engagement and ensuring the long-term sustainability of both data and community initiatives.
Kati Price ¨C Head of Digital Media and Publishing (Victoria and Albert Museum)
How do museums and other cultural organizations identify exactly how big their digital teams should be, how they should be structured, and where they should sit in the organization? And how do they define and measure digital success?
In this session we examine how GLAM organizations are re-configuring their digital teams to define and drive success, and identify the patterns that are beginning to emerge.
Google Glass, Wearable Technology and the Future of MuseumsNeal Stimler
?
"Google Glass, Wearable Technology and the Future of Museums" presentation for Museums and the Web 2014 in Baltimore, Maryland. Talk given on Friday, April 4, 2014 at 1:30-2:30 pm in Baltimore B, Renaissance Harbor Hotel.
Doing us the Power of Good? Ethics, sustainability, and continuing GLAM relia...Museums Computer Group
?
Jon Pratty ¨C PhD Candidate (University of Sussex)
This session will surface academic research about ethics and political philosophy that will begin to make sense of current debates about whether GLAMs should have websites, social media sites, or both.
It will explore historic examples of how innovative platforms quickly become obsolete, indicating how we could possibly go forwards making better digital strategies within GLAMs that will be better value for money, and which will have longer lasting legacy value.
This document discusses crowdfunding as a way to fund civic projects through Spacehive's online platform. It allows communities to propose projects, raise funds from supporters, and complete projects with assistance for legal/verification processes. Crowdfunding has already raised over ?1.2 billion in the UK and been used successfully for civic projects abroad and in Wales. Spacehive partners with organizations to provide matching funds and wants to help more towns engage communities and fund projects in light of limited public funds but demand for improvements.
IoTMeetupGuildford#2: Tool4 us IOT - Alexander Gluhak (Intel)MicheleNati
?
The document discusses the potential for the Internet of Things (IoT) and argues that it should be developed as a public good to benefit all of society, not just private companies. It notes that the IoT will merge the real world with the digital world and provide new intelligence and efficiencies. However, it warns that companies like Google and Intel may try to exploit user data for their own business gains if they control the IoT. Instead, the document advocates for a quadruple helix approach involving government, industry, academia, and citizens to co-create an open IoT platform that empowers users and ensures fair and inclusive participation.
This document summarizes Apps for Ghent, an initiative to promote the use of open data from the city of Ghent to create mobile applications. It describes early efforts in 2011 to gather and release neutral datasets with limited developer engagement. Subsequent events focused on building expertise and connecting data owners and developers. A data portal was created at data.gent.be and partnerships formed to support Ghent's vision as a smart city. Lessons learned include the need for data expertise and ensuring data is in open formats and contexts. The initiative now aims to expand involvement of students and professionals and structure ongoing dialogue between stakeholders.
This are the slides I am going to use today in a round table talk about Open Data city programs with Eindhoven and Ghent. Event: Smart City Event Amsteredam 13-14 May
OakX:Data+The Power of Storytelling Steve Spiker/Urban Strategies CouncilOak X
?
This document discusses how data can be used to tell stories. It describes Urban Strategies Council, a social impact organization that uses data analysis to address community needs. The organization cleans, analyzes, and geocodes data from various sources to add value and perform research. It then communicates results and collects additional data to evaluate impact. While data alone lacks context and meaning, telling stories with data by providing geographic and temporal context can convey meaning and insights to audiences. The presentation provides examples of how mapping foreclosure data over time in specific neighborhoods can reveal stories about families and communities. It also describes the InfoAlamedaCounty platform for publishing and sharing data-driven research and stories.
The document discusses the concept of a digital city and what constitutes one. Key factors include technological infrastructure, education, jobs, and citizen services. A digital city would provide dashboards for citizens with information on local events, resources, regulations, and more. It would involve collaboration between government, businesses, non-profits, and citizens. The goal is to create digital jobs through multimedia projects that train workers and are hosted on open servers. This could be a self-sustaining model that spurs entrepreneurship and job growth in the digital economy.
The document discusses the potential of 3D internet as a future business opportunity. It provides examples of Oulu, Finland's leadership in ICT innovation including the first open source 3D internet platform. Oulu has strong R&D investment and collaborations between universities, research organizations and companies. The 3D Internet Alliance was formed to foster cooperation and help realize the business potential of 3D applications and virtual worlds through networking between industry and research.
Community Infopoint - proof of concept pilot resultsGARY COYLE
?
Tower Hamlets Council conducted a 12-week pilot program launching interactive kiosks in four local locations to empower communities and understand local needs. Over 9,900 interactions occurred, and surveys found high usage and satisfaction rates, with requests for access to local job postings and social services. Analysis identified additional potential community locations and stakeholders interested in expanding the program.
Digital City Project & the psychology of jobs of the futureMarc Canter
?
The document discusses how jobs are changing and will increasingly be project-based, virtual, and independent. It outlines new types of digital jobs like event planning, video editing, and social media marketing. These jobs will value skills like self-motivation, creativity, and accountability. The document proposes creating a "Digital City" through open source software and standards, citizen dashboards, multimedia projects to train workers, and digital bureaus to produce content and offer internships. The goal is a virtuous cycle providing jobs, training, and engaging digital experiences for citizens.
This document discusses open data strategies in Amsterdam. It notes that while civil servants recognize the importance of open data, many do not understand specific government open data initiatives or their own role in delivering open data. It also discusses challenges that local governments face with open data, including legacy IT systems and a lack of understanding around open data. The document then outlines some strategies that have helped stimulate open data programs in Amsterdam, including EU projects that created civic apps, hackathons, and toolkits. It notes positive effects these projects have had, like increasing awareness, setting the local open data agenda, and introducing concepts like "commons" and open source tools. Overall, the document advocates for external financing and networking for open data agents and producing user
This document discusses open data strategies in Amsterdam. It notes that while civil servants recognize the importance of open data, many do not understand specific government open data initiatives or benefits. It also notes that open data is controversial for local governments due to legacy ICT focus and vendor interpretation issues. The document then outlines current open data catalysts and tools in Amsterdam, including EU projects involving code for Europe, open cities repositories, and city SDKs. It discusses how EU projects have helped stimulate Amsterdam's open data program and impact through awareness raising, funding, and introducing open source and standards concepts. The document advocates for strong open data lobbying, capturing opportunities through Horizon 2020 and Eurocities, and encouraging cities to develop open data ecosystems and move toward open
The document discusses open data and app development. It defines open data as freely available non-personal data like statistics and reports published by the government. The UK government opened a data repository and required departments to publish data to increase transparency, reform the public sector, and provide economic and social benefits. This enabled developers to create apps using public data on topics like traffic accidents, schools, health services, and crime rates. The presentation encourages businesses to release their data, developers to build apps, users to demand apps, and all to advocate for more open data policies.
Open Data Aha! Renfrewshire Open Data 'Enlightenment' eventMark Braggins
?
This document summarizes Mark Braggins' presentation on open data initiatives from across the UK and internationally. It provides examples of open data stories and projects from various local governments and communities in England, including Devon, Bath, Bristol, Cambridgeshire, Hampshire, London, Leeds, Manchester, and Trafford. It also briefly describes some international open data efforts, including a global weather visualization, a precision agriculture initiative, Chicago's predictive food safety model, and open data camps. Common traits of successful open data programs are sharing data, having local champions, and telling stories.
Big data is driving changes in leadership approaches. Leaders must envision how to make their organizations more customer-centric by using data and innovation networks. They also need to enable big data operations by establishing the right technology and organizational structures. Further, leaders must empower all employees to take action based on data insights. Finally, leaders must energize their organizations to become big data driven by constantly advocating changes and using data to reward performance.
Open data as an enabler of citizen engagementAndy Powell
?
Bath:Hacked is a community interest company that aims to promote open data and civic engagement in Bath. It operates a city data store and hosts regular hack events to bring data and community members together to build services. The goals are to facilitate citizen engagement with the local council, improve data quality through demand-led initiatives, increase citizen data literacy, and support free and commercial services using public data. The organization has enabled many websites, maps, and apps to be created using public data on issues like parking availability. While successful in engaging some citizens, questions remain about broadening engagement and ensuring the long-term sustainability of both data and community initiatives.
Kati Price ¨C Head of Digital Media and Publishing (Victoria and Albert Museum)
How do museums and other cultural organizations identify exactly how big their digital teams should be, how they should be structured, and where they should sit in the organization? And how do they define and measure digital success?
In this session we examine how GLAM organizations are re-configuring their digital teams to define and drive success, and identify the patterns that are beginning to emerge.
Google Glass, Wearable Technology and the Future of MuseumsNeal Stimler
?
"Google Glass, Wearable Technology and the Future of Museums" presentation for Museums and the Web 2014 in Baltimore, Maryland. Talk given on Friday, April 4, 2014 at 1:30-2:30 pm in Baltimore B, Renaissance Harbor Hotel.
Doing us the Power of Good? Ethics, sustainability, and continuing GLAM relia...Museums Computer Group
?
Jon Pratty ¨C PhD Candidate (University of Sussex)
This session will surface academic research about ethics and political philosophy that will begin to make sense of current debates about whether GLAMs should have websites, social media sites, or both.
It will explore historic examples of how innovative platforms quickly become obsolete, indicating how we could possibly go forwards making better digital strategies within GLAMs that will be better value for money, and which will have longer lasting legacy value.
This document discusses crowdfunding as a way to fund civic projects through Spacehive's online platform. It allows communities to propose projects, raise funds from supporters, and complete projects with assistance for legal/verification processes. Crowdfunding has already raised over ?1.2 billion in the UK and been used successfully for civic projects abroad and in Wales. Spacehive partners with organizations to provide matching funds and wants to help more towns engage communities and fund projects in light of limited public funds but demand for improvements.
IoTMeetupGuildford#2: Tool4 us IOT - Alexander Gluhak (Intel)MicheleNati
?
The document discusses the potential for the Internet of Things (IoT) and argues that it should be developed as a public good to benefit all of society, not just private companies. It notes that the IoT will merge the real world with the digital world and provide new intelligence and efficiencies. However, it warns that companies like Google and Intel may try to exploit user data for their own business gains if they control the IoT. Instead, the document advocates for a quadruple helix approach involving government, industry, academia, and citizens to co-create an open IoT platform that empowers users and ensures fair and inclusive participation.
This document summarizes Apps for Ghent, an initiative to promote the use of open data from the city of Ghent to create mobile applications. It describes early efforts in 2011 to gather and release neutral datasets with limited developer engagement. Subsequent events focused on building expertise and connecting data owners and developers. A data portal was created at data.gent.be and partnerships formed to support Ghent's vision as a smart city. Lessons learned include the need for data expertise and ensuring data is in open formats and contexts. The initiative now aims to expand involvement of students and professionals and structure ongoing dialogue between stakeholders.
This are the slides I am going to use today in a round table talk about Open Data city programs with Eindhoven and Ghent. Event: Smart City Event Amsteredam 13-14 May
OakX:Data+The Power of Storytelling Steve Spiker/Urban Strategies CouncilOak X
?
This document discusses how data can be used to tell stories. It describes Urban Strategies Council, a social impact organization that uses data analysis to address community needs. The organization cleans, analyzes, and geocodes data from various sources to add value and perform research. It then communicates results and collects additional data to evaluate impact. While data alone lacks context and meaning, telling stories with data by providing geographic and temporal context can convey meaning and insights to audiences. The presentation provides examples of how mapping foreclosure data over time in specific neighborhoods can reveal stories about families and communities. It also describes the InfoAlamedaCounty platform for publishing and sharing data-driven research and stories.
The document discusses the concept of a digital city and what constitutes one. Key factors include technological infrastructure, education, jobs, and citizen services. A digital city would provide dashboards for citizens with information on local events, resources, regulations, and more. It would involve collaboration between government, businesses, non-profits, and citizens. The goal is to create digital jobs through multimedia projects that train workers and are hosted on open servers. This could be a self-sustaining model that spurs entrepreneurship and job growth in the digital economy.
The document discusses the potential of 3D internet as a future business opportunity. It provides examples of Oulu, Finland's leadership in ICT innovation including the first open source 3D internet platform. Oulu has strong R&D investment and collaborations between universities, research organizations and companies. The 3D Internet Alliance was formed to foster cooperation and help realize the business potential of 3D applications and virtual worlds through networking between industry and research.
Community Infopoint - proof of concept pilot resultsGARY COYLE
?
Tower Hamlets Council conducted a 12-week pilot program launching interactive kiosks in four local locations to empower communities and understand local needs. Over 9,900 interactions occurred, and surveys found high usage and satisfaction rates, with requests for access to local job postings and social services. Analysis identified additional potential community locations and stakeholders interested in expanding the program.
Digital City Project & the psychology of jobs of the futureMarc Canter
?
The document discusses how jobs are changing and will increasingly be project-based, virtual, and independent. It outlines new types of digital jobs like event planning, video editing, and social media marketing. These jobs will value skills like self-motivation, creativity, and accountability. The document proposes creating a "Digital City" through open source software and standards, citizen dashboards, multimedia projects to train workers, and digital bureaus to produce content and offer internships. The goal is a virtuous cycle providing jobs, training, and engaging digital experiences for citizens.
This document discusses open data strategies in Amsterdam. It notes that while civil servants recognize the importance of open data, many do not understand specific government open data initiatives or their own role in delivering open data. It also discusses challenges that local governments face with open data, including legacy IT systems and a lack of understanding around open data. The document then outlines some strategies that have helped stimulate open data programs in Amsterdam, including EU projects that created civic apps, hackathons, and toolkits. It notes positive effects these projects have had, like increasing awareness, setting the local open data agenda, and introducing concepts like "commons" and open source tools. Overall, the document advocates for external financing and networking for open data agents and producing user
This document discusses open data strategies in Amsterdam. It notes that while civil servants recognize the importance of open data, many do not understand specific government open data initiatives or benefits. It also notes that open data is controversial for local governments due to legacy ICT focus and vendor interpretation issues. The document then outlines current open data catalysts and tools in Amsterdam, including EU projects involving code for Europe, open cities repositories, and city SDKs. It discusses how EU projects have helped stimulate Amsterdam's open data program and impact through awareness raising, funding, and introducing open source and standards concepts. The document advocates for strong open data lobbying, capturing opportunities through Horizon 2020 and Eurocities, and encouraging cities to develop open data ecosystems and move toward open
The document discusses open data and app development. It defines open data as freely available non-personal data like statistics and reports published by the government. The UK government opened a data repository and required departments to publish data to increase transparency, reform the public sector, and provide economic and social benefits. This enabled developers to create apps using public data on topics like traffic accidents, schools, health services, and crime rates. The presentation encourages businesses to release their data, developers to build apps, users to demand apps, and all to advocate for more open data policies.
Open Data: opportunities and challenges for business and governmentDan Herbert
?
This document discusses open data and its opportunities and challenges for government and business. It defines open data as data that is freely available to everyone without restrictions. The lecture notes describe some of the open data available from sources like data.gov.uk and the opportunities this data creates for accountability, value for money analysis, and new applications and services. However, open data also poses challenges for governments around controlling the narrative and for businesses whose current models rely on restricted access to data.
Webinar - How to Use Data Visualization Tools to Show ImpactTechSoup
?
ImpactMapper is a data visualization platform that helps nonprofits, donors, and social investors track social impact data and share results. It allows users to turn text-based reports and data into visual trends and stories. ImpactMapper features include customizable surveys across languages, automatic visualization of survey responses, and a story repository for communications. The platform can be used for monitoring projects and grantees, evaluations, strategic planning, research, and networking different organizations working on collective goals. Several large foundations are currently using ImpactMapper to advance their measurement and transparency in funding social change.
Data data everywhere and not a byte to eat...Tim Willoughby
?
Presentation by Tim Willoughby at the Fujitsu Innovation Gathering 2013 conference at Croke Park in Dublin. Paper title - Data Data Everywhere but not a Byte to eat - The big issues are - lots of Data, lots of talk, not many solutions coming up, meet many people with the same issues. Local Government are working on Open Data, Linked Open Data, Semantic Web, Smart Cities, relying on Universities (DERI) for solutions to the bigger issues. A lot of incremental innovation is ongoing.
The document describes the Smart Citizen Kit project by Waag, an institute that explores emergent technologies and opens them for societal use. The project involves distributing sensor kits to citizens of Amsterdam to collect environmental data and engage residents in understanding and influencing the workings of their city. An initial pilot with 100 kits provided insights that will inform expanding the project to 500 kits and citizens, with the goal of creating a testbed for businesses and developing new data analysis and visualization tools.
Chris Anderson¡¯s book "Free: The Future of a Radical Price" picks up where his bestseller, "Long Tail," left off. In it, he argues that the digital age is exerting an inexorable downward pressure on the prices of all things ¡°made of ideas¡± and that $0.00 is the future of business. Thought leadership and knowledge ¨C products and service made of ideas ¨C are quintessential elements of the association brand. What does this controversial thesis mean for the business model of associations?
This presentation from the April 2010 DigitalNow conference, lays out the underlying assumptions of Free and Anderson¡¯s taxonomy of ¡°freeconomics,¡± looking at present day examples in each category, both in the for-profit and association market space, and considering the contrary view from Malcom Gladwell, among others.
How can we get smarter about open data?Reading Room
?
This document discusses how cultural organizations can better utilize open data. It recommends that organizations flag themselves online to be more discoverable, understand what data is and their own needs, and take small steps towards an information strategy. Relational thinking about how different pieces of data connect is important. While some organizations see data as only for digital purposes, having quality foundational information publicly available is important for audiences. The document outlines a project in Kent, UK where cultural organizations came together to share data in order to create a larger pool of cultural data and new digital services.
Joey Coleman - Building an Open Data Ecosystem for all to access#DevTO
?
How do we build open data so it is accessible to all citizens and not just those with specialized skills such as information management or coding? In Hamilton, municipal open data is being implemented because of advocacy among neighbourhood associations and community groups, not solely from the developer community, with the goal of ensuring all citizens can use open data. It¡¯s a unique partnership ¨C what does it mean for open data, open government, and civic engagement? Join this discussion as we explore the question.
Digital Social Innovation and the Impact of Data Analytics Cybera Inc.
?
Digital technologies and data analytics are enabling new forms of digital social innovation. Non-profit organizations can benefit from these approaches. For example, Crisis Text Line uses data analytics to help volunteers provide support to those in crisis via text. A DataThon project for Commuter Challenge Calgary analyzed transportation data to understand commuting behaviors. Another DataThon project for Distress Centre Calgary analyzed call data to gain insights that can help the organization better support those in distress. Data analytics has the potential to positively impact social issues when applied by non-profits and through initiatives like DataKind and Data for Good.
Workshop session given at the Institutional Web Management Workshop 2012 (IWMW 2012) event held at the University of Edinburgh on 18th - 20th June 2012.
Smart CitySDK at Apps for Smart CitiesGregor Abbas
?
The document describes Smart CitySDK, a pan-European project that aims to create a common ecosystem and application platform for smart cities. It involves collecting needs from cities, developers, and citizens to develop common services around participation, mobility, and tourism. Lead pilots will take place in Helsinki, Amsterdam, and Lisbon, with the goal of replicating the pilots in other cities. The final version of the Smart CitySDK services is planned for 2014.
Vanuit het SURFnet Kennisnet Innovatieprogramma hebben we een technology scouting uitgevoerd naar het Semantisch Web. In deze presentatie komen de bevindingen hieruit naar voren.
A Framework for Model-Driven Digital Twin EngineeringDaniel Lehner
?
ºÝºÝߣs from my PhD Defense at Johannes Kepler University, held on Janurary 10, 2025.
The full thesis is available here: https://epub.jku.at/urn/urn:nbn:at:at-ubl:1-83896
UiPath Agentic Automation Capabilities and OpportunitiesDianaGray10
?
Learn what UiPath Agentic Automation capabilities are and how you can empower your agents with dynamic decision making. In this session we will cover these topics:
What do we mean by Agents
Components of Agents
Agentic Automation capabilities
What Agentic automation delivers and AI Tools
Identifying Agent opportunities
? If you have any questions or feedback, please refer to the "Women in Automation 2025" dedicated Forum thread. You can find there extra details and updates.
UiPath Document Understanding - Generative AI and Active learning capabilitiesDianaGray10
?
This session focus on Generative AI features and Active learning modern experience with Document understanding.
Topics Covered:
Overview of Document Understanding
How Generative Annotation works?
What is Generative Classification?
How to use Generative Extraction activities?
What is Generative Validation?
How Active learning modern experience accelerate model training?
Q/A
? If you have any questions or feedback, please refer to the "Women in Automation 2025" dedicated Forum thread. You can find there extra details and updates.
Inside Freshworks' Migration from Cassandra to ScyllaDB by Premkumar PatturajScyllaDB
?
Freshworks migrated from Cassandra to ScyllaDB to handle growing audit log data efficiently. Cassandra required frequent scaling, complex repairs, and had non-linear scaling. ScyllaDB reduced costs with fewer machines and improved operations. Using Zero Downtime Migration (ZDM), they bulk-migrated data, performed dual writes, and validated consistency.
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Brave is a free Chromium browser developed for Win Downloads, macOS and Linux systems that allows users to browse the internet in a safer, faster and more secure way than its competition. Designed with security in mind, Brave automatically blocks ads and trackers which also makes it faster,
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Wondershare Dr.Fone Crack is a comprehensive mobile phone management and recovery software designed to help users recover lost data, repair system issues, and manage mobile devices. It supports both Android and iOS platforms, offering a wide range of features aimed at restoring files, repairing software problems, and backing up or transferring data.
Formal Methods: Whence and Whither? [Martin Fr?nzle Festkolloquium, 2025]Jonathan Bowen
?
Alan Turing arguably wrote the first paper on formal methods 75 years ago. Since then, there have been claims and counterclaims about formal methods. Tool development has been slow but aided by Moore¡¯s Law with the increasing power of computers. Although formal methods are not widespread in practical usage at a heavyweight level, their influence as crept into software engineering practice to the extent that they are no longer necessarily called formal methods in their use. In addition, in areas where safety and security are important, with the increasing use of computers in such applications, formal methods are a viable way to improve the reliability of such software-based systems. Their use in hardware where a mistake can be very costly is also important. This talk explores the journey of formal methods to the present day and speculates on future directions.
How Discord Indexes Trillions of Messages: Scaling Search Infrastructure by V...ScyllaDB
?
This talk shares how Discord scaled their message search infrastructure using Rust, Kubernetes, and a multi-cluster Elasticsearch architecture to achieve better performance, operability, and reliability, while also enabling new search features for Discord users.
FinTech - US Annual Funding Report - 2024.pptxTracxn
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US FinTech 2024, offering a comprehensive analysis of key trends, funding activities, and top-performing sectors that shaped the FinTech ecosystem in the US 2024. The report delivers detailed data and insights into the region's funding landscape and other developments. We believe this report will provide you with valuable insights to understand the evolving market dynamics.
Unlock AI Creativity: Image Generation with DALL¡¤EExpeed Software
?
Discover the power of AI image generation with DALL¡¤E, an advanced AI model that transforms text prompts into stunning, high-quality visuals. This presentation explores how artificial intelligence is revolutionizing digital creativity, from graphic design to content creation and marketing. Learn about the technology behind DALL¡¤E, its real-world applications, and how businesses can leverage AI-generated art for innovation. Whether you're a designer, developer, or marketer, this guide will help you unlock new creative possibilities with AI-driven image synthesis.
Fl studio crack version 12.9 Free Downloadkherorpacca127
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https://ncracked.com/7961-2/
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The ultimate guide to FL Studio 12.9 Crack, the revolutionary digital audio workstation that empowers musicians and producers of all levels. This software has become a cornerstone in the music industry, offering unparalleled creative capabilities, cutting-edge features, and an intuitive workflow.
With FL Studio 12.9 Crack, you gain access to a vast arsenal of instruments, effects, and plugins, seamlessly integrated into a user-friendly interface. Its signature Piano Roll Editor provides an exceptional level of musical expression, while the advanced automation features empower you to create complex and dynamic compositions.
The Future of Repair: Transparent and Incremental by Botond De?nesScyllaDB
?
Regularly run repairs are essential to keep clusters healthy, yet having a good repair schedule is more challenging than it should be. Repairs often take a long time, preventing running them often. This has an impact on data consistency and also limits the usefulness of the new repair based tombstone garbage collection. We want to address these challenges by making repairs incremental and allowing for automatic repair scheduling, without relying on external tools.
Backstage Software Templates for Java DevelopersMarkus Eisele
?
As a Java developer you might have a hard time accepting the limitations that you feel being introduced into your development cycles. Let's look at the positives and learn everything important to know to turn Backstag's software templates into a helpful tool you can use to elevate the platform experience for all developers.
30B Images and Counting: Scaling Canva's Content-Understanding Pipelines by K...ScyllaDB
?
Scaling content understanding for billions of images is no easy feat. This talk dives into building extreme label classification models, balancing accuracy & speed, and optimizing ML pipelines for scale. You'll learn new ways to tackle real-time performance challenges in massive data environments.
Gojek Clone is a versatile multi-service super app that offers ride-hailing, food delivery, payment services, and more, providing a seamless experience for users and businesses alike on a single platform.
Lecture Transparant Governance The Hague University
1. ? Gregor Abbas
? Project Manager
? Waag Society
? Institute for Art, Science and Technology
? Education, Healthcare, Culture, Society
? Future Internet
1
2. Outline
? What is Open Data?
? How do you use Open Data?
? How do you create value with Open Data?
? Examples
2
6. What is Open Data?
Free
Open Data
Private Public
Premium
6
7. What is Open Data?
? Research
? Government
? Companies
? Foundations
? Tourism
? ...
7
8. How do you use it?
? Value for...
? Supplier
? Consumer
? End-user
8
9. How do you use it?
? Value for suppliers
? Lower costs collecting data
? Outsourcing (public) services
Cost
? Higher efficiency through participation
? Less fraude
? ...
? New services
? Transparant government / organization
Value
? Envolved citizens / consumers / ...
? Social cohesion
9
10. How do you use it?
? Value for consumer (developer)
? Publish
? Aggregate
? Enrich
? Advise
10
11. How do you use it?
? Value for end-users
? Practical Information
? Decission making
? Entertainment
? Social Belonging
? Reporting / Participation
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12. How do you create value?
? Value of the data is in the usage
? Feedback loop
? http://www.wired.com/magazine/2011/06/ff_feedbackloop/all/
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13. How do you create value?
? City of New York
? Hurricane Irene
? Rachel Sterne - Chief Digital
? Data on evacuation zones
? Social media
? www.youtube.com/watch?v=NGyCLMwIld0
? What if...
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