Defining and using open data according to the open knowledge definition and the science commons protocol. Slides from my presentation of this topic at the Defrag Conference 2009 in Denver, Colorado.
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Opening Keynote: A short history of the Higgs ...datacite
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
Fame, Fortune, and Exploitation: The Fascinating History of Patents and Paten...Tahoe Silicon Mountain
Tahoe Silicon Mountain, a network of technology professionals who live and work in the Tahoe-Truckee area, is pleased to welcome Dick Schulze to present: “Fame, Fortune, and Exploitation: The Fascinating History of Patents and Patent Trolls.”
For at least as long as there has been a Patent Office, there have been inventors who seek to exploit their patents to maximum advantage. This talk will examine the fascinating history of how patents have shaped modern technology (and brought fame and fortune to their owners) and how we can apply these lessons to new ventures in the future.
Dick Schulze, with Holland & Hart’s Intellectual Property Group, has wide experience in all aspects of high-tech patenting and was a supervising attorney for 20 years in the corporate legal departments of Hewlett-Packard and its successor Agilent Technologies.
You can learn more about Schulze here: https://www.hollandhart.com/hrschulze#overview
The meeting will be on Monday, March 13th, 6-8 pm at Pizza on the Hill, in Tahoe Donner at 11509 Northwoods Blvd., Truckee. A $5 fee includes pizza and salad. Before and after the presentation, there will be time for networking with other technology professionals who live and work in the Tahoe-Truckee region.
The event will also be livestreamed and available online as it happens on YouTube: bit.ly/YouTubeTSM
This month’s event is sponsored by New Leaders, Clear Capital and Holland & Hart LLP.
You can find us on LinkedIn and Facebook and at TahoeSiliconMountain.com or sign up for email meeting announcements here: http://bit.ly/TSMEmail
This document summarizes several important events in the evolution of technology throughout history:
1) In 1877, Berliner filed a patent for the microphone, improving telephone quality and long-distance calling.
2) In 1953, the black box flight recorder was invented in Australia to investigate plane crashes, though initially rejected for privacy reasons.
3) In 1955, the Whirlwind computer was developed, able to process data and display graphics in real time using thousands of vacuum tubes.
The document discusses open data and its benefits. It provides examples of how open data has helped increase gold production and prevent accidents. Open data refers to data that is publicly available, accessible, and free to use. When data is openly available it can be used by many to make new discoveries and innovations. The document argues that data should be open when it is factual information, concerns public works, or was created using public funds. Linked open data connects related data on the semantic web to lower barriers between datasets. Examples of open data projects mentioned are DBpedia, OpenStreetMap, and GeoNames. Ensuring data is truly open involves using public domain or Creative Commons licenses.
An introduction to open data and linked data, with a focus on available public data sources in Norway. These are the slides accompanying the presentation I held on these topics at the Appworks conference in Oslo, Norway the 19th of October 2010.
Tross all publisiteten har få utviklere erfaring med bruk og publisering av åpne data. Foredraget gir deg praktisk innføring i teori og praksis du trenger for å bruke åpne data på egenhånd.
Dette foredraget ble holdt først på Software konferansen den 13.februar 2013.
Denne lyntalen ble først holdt på Smidig-konferansen den 11.mai 2012. Video av foredraget er tilgjengelig her: https://vimeo.com/album/2599865/video/53161063
Alle prosjekter må i større eller mindre grad håndtere risiko knyttet til de forskjellige aktivitetene i prosjektet. Dette gjøres tradisjonelt gjennom omfattende avtaleverk, faste rutiner og et strengt oppfølgingsregime. Smidige metodikker har brutt opp de tradisjonelle regimene for kravspesifisering, kundedeltakelse og ferdigstilling av leveranser, men har så langt hatt begrenset fokus på håndtering av risiko utover delmåloppnåelse. Resultatet er at man i mange prosjekter fortsatt bruker tradisjonelle former for risikohåndtering, noe som ofte går på tvers av den smidigheten man ønsker.
I sportsdykking har man gått fra å måtte planlegge for og sikre mot alle potensielle farer som kunne oppstå på forhånd, til å benytte nyere og bedre utstyr som gir sanntids-feedback på viktige parametere slik at man kan følge med og korrigere dykkeplanen også underveis. Man har altså på mange måter gått fra det som tilsvarer tradisjonell risikohåndtering og til å håndtere risiko på en smidig måte med kontinuerlig feedback og korrigeringer.
I denne lyntalen ser vi nærmere på hvordan risikohåndtering i sportsdykking er basert på generelle prinsipper som også kan gi bedre risikohåndtering i smidige prosjekter.
Historisk har de fleste åpne samfunn i realiteten vært ganske lukkede, noe som i stor grad skyldes praktiske forhold hvor informasjon fantes på papir og var kostbart å distribuere. Med internett er disse begrensningene forsvunnet, men store deler av offentlig sektor opptrer fortsatt som om informasjonsformidling er dyrt og arbeidskrevende.
Det er i dag mange både innenfor og utenfor det offentlige som ønsker å endre på dette, men det kan være vanskelig å finne ut hva man kan gjøre og hvor man kan få hjelp. Dette foredraget omhandler de muligheter og rettigheter vi som borgere av Norge har til data og informasjon og hvilke miljøer og grupper som arbeider med saker knyttet til åpenhet og datatilgang hvor man kan få hjelp og støtte.
Dette foredraget ble først holdt på konferansen GoOpen den 23. april 2012 og senere i forkortet utgave på JavaZone den 8. september 2012. Video av sistnevnte kan sees på: https://vimeo.com/album/2599865/video/49384337 eller http://video.javazone.no/talk/49384337
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Opening Keynote: A short history of the Higgs ...datacite
2013 DataCite Summer Meeting - Making Research better
DataCite. Co-sponsored by CODATA.
Thursday, 19 September 2013 at 13:00 - Friday, 20 September 2013 at 12:30
Washington, DC. National Academy of Sciences
http://datacite.eventbrite.co.uk/
Fame, Fortune, and Exploitation: The Fascinating History of Patents and Paten...Tahoe Silicon Mountain
Tahoe Silicon Mountain, a network of technology professionals who live and work in the Tahoe-Truckee area, is pleased to welcome Dick Schulze to present: “Fame, Fortune, and Exploitation: The Fascinating History of Patents and Patent Trolls.”
For at least as long as there has been a Patent Office, there have been inventors who seek to exploit their patents to maximum advantage. This talk will examine the fascinating history of how patents have shaped modern technology (and brought fame and fortune to their owners) and how we can apply these lessons to new ventures in the future.
Dick Schulze, with Holland & Hart’s Intellectual Property Group, has wide experience in all aspects of high-tech patenting and was a supervising attorney for 20 years in the corporate legal departments of Hewlett-Packard and its successor Agilent Technologies.
You can learn more about Schulze here: https://www.hollandhart.com/hrschulze#overview
The meeting will be on Monday, March 13th, 6-8 pm at Pizza on the Hill, in Tahoe Donner at 11509 Northwoods Blvd., Truckee. A $5 fee includes pizza and salad. Before and after the presentation, there will be time for networking with other technology professionals who live and work in the Tahoe-Truckee region.
The event will also be livestreamed and available online as it happens on YouTube: bit.ly/YouTubeTSM
This month’s event is sponsored by New Leaders, Clear Capital and Holland & Hart LLP.
You can find us on LinkedIn and Facebook and at TahoeSiliconMountain.com or sign up for email meeting announcements here: http://bit.ly/TSMEmail
This document summarizes several important events in the evolution of technology throughout history:
1) In 1877, Berliner filed a patent for the microphone, improving telephone quality and long-distance calling.
2) In 1953, the black box flight recorder was invented in Australia to investigate plane crashes, though initially rejected for privacy reasons.
3) In 1955, the Whirlwind computer was developed, able to process data and display graphics in real time using thousands of vacuum tubes.
The document discusses open data and its benefits. It provides examples of how open data has helped increase gold production and prevent accidents. Open data refers to data that is publicly available, accessible, and free to use. When data is openly available it can be used by many to make new discoveries and innovations. The document argues that data should be open when it is factual information, concerns public works, or was created using public funds. Linked open data connects related data on the semantic web to lower barriers between datasets. Examples of open data projects mentioned are DBpedia, OpenStreetMap, and GeoNames. Ensuring data is truly open involves using public domain or Creative Commons licenses.
An introduction to open data and linked data, with a focus on available public data sources in Norway. These are the slides accompanying the presentation I held on these topics at the Appworks conference in Oslo, Norway the 19th of October 2010.
Tross all publisiteten har få utviklere erfaring med bruk og publisering av åpne data. Foredraget gir deg praktisk innføring i teori og praksis du trenger for å bruke åpne data på egenhånd.
Dette foredraget ble holdt først på Software konferansen den 13.februar 2013.
Denne lyntalen ble først holdt på Smidig-konferansen den 11.mai 2012. Video av foredraget er tilgjengelig her: https://vimeo.com/album/2599865/video/53161063
Alle prosjekter må i større eller mindre grad håndtere risiko knyttet til de forskjellige aktivitetene i prosjektet. Dette gjøres tradisjonelt gjennom omfattende avtaleverk, faste rutiner og et strengt oppfølgingsregime. Smidige metodikker har brutt opp de tradisjonelle regimene for kravspesifisering, kundedeltakelse og ferdigstilling av leveranser, men har så langt hatt begrenset fokus på håndtering av risiko utover delmåloppnåelse. Resultatet er at man i mange prosjekter fortsatt bruker tradisjonelle former for risikohåndtering, noe som ofte går på tvers av den smidigheten man ønsker.
I sportsdykking har man gått fra å måtte planlegge for og sikre mot alle potensielle farer som kunne oppstå på forhånd, til å benytte nyere og bedre utstyr som gir sanntids-feedback på viktige parametere slik at man kan følge med og korrigere dykkeplanen også underveis. Man har altså på mange måter gått fra det som tilsvarer tradisjonell risikohåndtering og til å håndtere risiko på en smidig måte med kontinuerlig feedback og korrigeringer.
I denne lyntalen ser vi nærmere på hvordan risikohåndtering i sportsdykking er basert på generelle prinsipper som også kan gi bedre risikohåndtering i smidige prosjekter.
Historisk har de fleste åpne samfunn i realiteten vært ganske lukkede, noe som i stor grad skyldes praktiske forhold hvor informasjon fantes på papir og var kostbart å distribuere. Med internett er disse begrensningene forsvunnet, men store deler av offentlig sektor opptrer fortsatt som om informasjonsformidling er dyrt og arbeidskrevende.
Det er i dag mange både innenfor og utenfor det offentlige som ønsker å endre på dette, men det kan være vanskelig å finne ut hva man kan gjøre og hvor man kan få hjelp. Dette foredraget omhandler de muligheter og rettigheter vi som borgere av Norge har til data og informasjon og hvilke miljøer og grupper som arbeider med saker knyttet til åpenhet og datatilgang hvor man kan få hjelp og støtte.
Dette foredraget ble først holdt på konferansen GoOpen den 23. april 2012 og senere i forkortet utgave på JavaZone den 8. september 2012. Video av sistnevnte kan sees på: https://vimeo.com/album/2599865/video/49384337 eller http://video.javazone.no/talk/49384337
This document discusses open data and its benefits. It provides examples of how making geological data open led a mining company to increase production tenfold. Open data is defined as data that is freely available, accessible, usable and modifiable by anyone for any purpose. The document argues that public and government data, as well as data created with public funds, should be open. It provides current opportunities for open data in Norway and describes platforms like DBpedia and OpenStreetMap that make data openly accessible on the web.
A short introduction to the world of open data and the opportunities it creates. The slides are from my presentation at the GoOpen 2009 conference in Oslo, Norway.
Multiplying the impact of online instruction - "The Obviousness of Open Policy"Jane Park
This is the talk I gave to SUNY instructional designers at http://slnsolsummit2012.edublogs.org. It is a remix of Cable Green's talk, "The Obviousness of Open Policy" at http://www.slideshare.net/cgreen/sloan-the-obviousness-of-open-policy.
The document summarizes Mike Linksvayer's presentation at a 2007 media web meetup about Creative Commons and enabling reasonable copyright through legal and technical tools. Some key points include:
- Creative Commons provides six mainstream licenses to enable a "some rights reserved" copyright model for content like free/open source software does for code.
- Rights description through open licenses can encourage sharing while rights management and DRM often focus more on restrictions and compliance over user experience.
- Major music industry players are beginning to embrace more open models as the web has shifted to more participatory culture compared to 20th century content models.
The document summarizes an open data challenge run by Goldcorp Challenge to find gold deposits. It discusses:
1) Goldcorp provided access to geological data from its mine and asked solvers to identify gold deposits. 110 sites were identified, with 50% being new discoveries and 80% producing gold.
2) A total of 8 million ounces of gold were found through the challenge.
3) The company's value increased from $100 million to $9 billion after the challenge.
Automatic mining of data from materials science literaturepetermurrayrust
The literature on materials science (batteries, etc.) contains huge amounts of scientific facts, but not in easily accessible form. our AMI program has been developed to automatically:
scrape , clean, annotate and display/publish
data for re-use in science.
Examples will be given from electrochemistry, magnetism and other fields . The general principles and (open) tech are applicable to many other disciplines.
Creative Commons Aotearoa NZ Open Access Week 2013MattMcGregor
This document discusses open access to publicly funded research. It begins by noting that while the internet enables greater distribution of research, most publicly funded research cannot currently be accessed or reused by the public. It then introduces open access as a way to justify public funding of research by making it openly available. The document goes on to define open access in terms of access, technical formats, and copyright/licensing. It emphasizes that open licensing is important to allow legal reuse and sharing of research beyond just access. Finally, it provides an overview of Creative Commons licenses as a pragmatic solution that allows reuse while retaining author copyright.
Glam Wiki What Libraries And Archives Can DoJessicacoates
Copyright and open content presentation given at the GLAM-Wiki event (http://wikimedia.org.au/wiki/GLAM) bringing together representatives of Australian galleries, libraries, archives and museums with members of the Wikimedia community. 6-7 August, Canberra, Australia.
This document contains information about Graham Steel, including his affiliation with Open Knowledge and ContentMine. It lists his Twitter and email contact information and provides links to resources about open science, open data repositories, and open notebook science. The document aims to share information about Graham Steel's work in open knowledge and science.
Creative Commons for Hutt City LibraryMattMcGregor
A quick overview of copyright and Creative Commons licensing for staff at Hutt City Library. The presentation includes open GLAM recommendations, and case studies of the National Library of New Zealand and Te Papa.
The document discusses the history of big data in the energy industry. It describes how early well logging in 1927 and the first seismograph in 1921 helped advance oil exploration by providing more data about subsurface conditions. Over time, technology improvements like 2D and 3D seismic imaging generated exponentially larger datasets. Today's datasets can exceed 100 terabytes from sources like coil seismic surveys. Advanced data collection and reservoir modeling are needed to optimize extraction from unconventional resources and maximize recovery rates from existing wells. Data now impacts the entire oil and gas value chain and will continue shaping the future of the energy industry.
Presentation Open Science for Bio-Hackers with an introduction into Open Science with applications for the DIY bio-hackers community.
Event: openscienceASAP meets Bricobio Biolab Montréal - Open Science for Bio-Hackers Google Hangout.
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxCb0GfEXIU
Blog: http://openscienceasap.org/stream/2015/03/23/video-open-science-for-bio-hackers/
The document discusses the history and future of open data. It describes the first wave of open data which involved isolated data releases and data catalogues focused on transparency. The second wave saw more focus on data processes, frameworks, and operational data but also brought privacy issues. The future of open data involves greater infrastructure and initiatives like midata that help individuals access and use personal data. The talk was presented at an open innovation workshop in London.
Public Domain Awareness Project (Wikimedia and CC) slideshowDiane Peters
This document outlines an agenda for a session discussing challenges to supporting a robust public domain. It will include speakers giving introductions, then breaking into four discussion groups on legal issues, GLAM institutions, re-users, and technology. The goal is to identify needs, current efforts, and gaps to develop a work plan in three phases: understanding the ecosystem, publishing a design and work plan, and implementing solutions and ensuring long-term sustainability. Participants will discuss dependencies and potential legal and technical solutions to help GLAM institutions and re-users navigate copyright and the public domain.
Open Data and Sharing Science - Graham Steel, ContentmineRepository Fringe
This document contains information about Graham Steel, including his work with open knowledge and science groups in Scotland. It lists his blog and social media profiles, as well as links to resources on open data repositories, open notebook science, and content mining. The document promotes open sharing of research outputs and information.
1. The document discusses the gap between increasing broadband access and the need for true broadband connections of 1-10 gigabits per second to support new applications.
2. Calit2 is working on various projects to explore using persistent high-speed optical connections for applications in science, medicine, entertainment and emergency response.
3. Examples are given of using very high resolution displays and streaming for digital cinema, global scientific collaborations, and interactive exploration of massive genomic and brain imaging datasets.
A open science presentation focusing on the benefits to be gained and basic practices to follow. This was given on behalf of FOSTER at the Open Science Boos(t)camp event at KU Leuven on 24th October 2014.
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.
Salesforce Integration for Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions A...Jeffrey Haguewood
Sidekick Solutions uses Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions Apricot) and automation solutions to integrate data for business workflows.
We believe integration and automation are essential to user experience and the promise of efficient work through technology. Automation is the critical ingredient to realizing that full vision. We develop integration products and services for Bonterra Case Management software to support the deployment of automations for a variety of use cases.
This video focuses on integration of Salesforce with Bonterra Impact Management.
Interested in deploying an integration with Salesforce for Bonterra Impact Management? Contact us at sales@sidekicksolutionsllc.com to discuss next steps.
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Ähnlich wie Finding real gold with open data (Defrag 2009)
This document discusses open data and its benefits. It provides examples of how making geological data open led a mining company to increase production tenfold. Open data is defined as data that is freely available, accessible, usable and modifiable by anyone for any purpose. The document argues that public and government data, as well as data created with public funds, should be open. It provides current opportunities for open data in Norway and describes platforms like DBpedia and OpenStreetMap that make data openly accessible on the web.
A short introduction to the world of open data and the opportunities it creates. The slides are from my presentation at the GoOpen 2009 conference in Oslo, Norway.
Multiplying the impact of online instruction - "The Obviousness of Open Policy"Jane Park
This is the talk I gave to SUNY instructional designers at http://slnsolsummit2012.edublogs.org. It is a remix of Cable Green's talk, "The Obviousness of Open Policy" at http://www.slideshare.net/cgreen/sloan-the-obviousness-of-open-policy.
The document summarizes Mike Linksvayer's presentation at a 2007 media web meetup about Creative Commons and enabling reasonable copyright through legal and technical tools. Some key points include:
- Creative Commons provides six mainstream licenses to enable a "some rights reserved" copyright model for content like free/open source software does for code.
- Rights description through open licenses can encourage sharing while rights management and DRM often focus more on restrictions and compliance over user experience.
- Major music industry players are beginning to embrace more open models as the web has shifted to more participatory culture compared to 20th century content models.
The document summarizes an open data challenge run by Goldcorp Challenge to find gold deposits. It discusses:
1) Goldcorp provided access to geological data from its mine and asked solvers to identify gold deposits. 110 sites were identified, with 50% being new discoveries and 80% producing gold.
2) A total of 8 million ounces of gold were found through the challenge.
3) The company's value increased from $100 million to $9 billion after the challenge.
Automatic mining of data from materials science literaturepetermurrayrust
The literature on materials science (batteries, etc.) contains huge amounts of scientific facts, but not in easily accessible form. our AMI program has been developed to automatically:
scrape , clean, annotate and display/publish
data for re-use in science.
Examples will be given from electrochemistry, magnetism and other fields . The general principles and (open) tech are applicable to many other disciplines.
Creative Commons Aotearoa NZ Open Access Week 2013MattMcGregor
This document discusses open access to publicly funded research. It begins by noting that while the internet enables greater distribution of research, most publicly funded research cannot currently be accessed or reused by the public. It then introduces open access as a way to justify public funding of research by making it openly available. The document goes on to define open access in terms of access, technical formats, and copyright/licensing. It emphasizes that open licensing is important to allow legal reuse and sharing of research beyond just access. Finally, it provides an overview of Creative Commons licenses as a pragmatic solution that allows reuse while retaining author copyright.
Glam Wiki What Libraries And Archives Can DoJessicacoates
Copyright and open content presentation given at the GLAM-Wiki event (http://wikimedia.org.au/wiki/GLAM) bringing together representatives of Australian galleries, libraries, archives and museums with members of the Wikimedia community. 6-7 August, Canberra, Australia.
This document contains information about Graham Steel, including his affiliation with Open Knowledge and ContentMine. It lists his Twitter and email contact information and provides links to resources about open science, open data repositories, and open notebook science. The document aims to share information about Graham Steel's work in open knowledge and science.
Creative Commons for Hutt City LibraryMattMcGregor
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The document discusses the history of big data in the energy industry. It describes how early well logging in 1927 and the first seismograph in 1921 helped advance oil exploration by providing more data about subsurface conditions. Over time, technology improvements like 2D and 3D seismic imaging generated exponentially larger datasets. Today's datasets can exceed 100 terabytes from sources like coil seismic surveys. Advanced data collection and reservoir modeling are needed to optimize extraction from unconventional resources and maximize recovery rates from existing wells. Data now impacts the entire oil and gas value chain and will continue shaping the future of the energy industry.
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The document discusses the history and future of open data. It describes the first wave of open data which involved isolated data releases and data catalogues focused on transparency. The second wave saw more focus on data processes, frameworks, and operational data but also brought privacy issues. The future of open data involves greater infrastructure and initiatives like midata that help individuals access and use personal data. The talk was presented at an open innovation workshop in London.
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This document outlines an agenda for a session discussing challenges to supporting a robust public domain. It will include speakers giving introductions, then breaking into four discussion groups on legal issues, GLAM institutions, re-users, and technology. The goal is to identify needs, current efforts, and gaps to develop a work plan in three phases: understanding the ecosystem, publishing a design and work plan, and implementing solutions and ensuring long-term sustainability. Participants will discuss dependencies and potential legal and technical solutions to help GLAM institutions and re-users navigate copyright and the public domain.
Open Data and Sharing Science - Graham Steel, ContentmineRepository Fringe
This document contains information about Graham Steel, including his work with open knowledge and science groups in Scotland. It lists his blog and social media profiles, as well as links to resources on open data repositories, open notebook science, and content mining. The document promotes open sharing of research outputs and information.
1. The document discusses the gap between increasing broadband access and the need for true broadband connections of 1-10 gigabits per second to support new applications.
2. Calit2 is working on various projects to explore using persistent high-speed optical connections for applications in science, medicine, entertainment and emergency response.
3. Examples are given of using very high resolution displays and streaming for digital cinema, global scientific collaborations, and interactive exploration of massive genomic and brain imaging datasets.
A open science presentation focusing on the benefits to be gained and basic practices to follow. This was given on behalf of FOSTER at the Open Science Boos(t)camp event at KU Leuven on 24th October 2014.
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* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
Perfect for developers, AI enthusiasts, and tech leaders. Learn how to leverage MongoDB Atlas to deliver highly relevant, context-aware search results, transforming your data retrieval process. Stay ahead in tech innovation and maximize the potential of your applications.
#MongoDB #VectorSearch #AI #SemanticSearch #TechInnovation #DataScience #LLM #MachineLearning #SearchTechnology
Introduction of Cybersecurity with OSS at Code Europe 2024Hiroshi SHIBATA
I develop the Ruby programming language, RubyGems, and Bundler, which are package managers for Ruby. Today, I will introduce how to enhance the security of your application using open-source software (OSS) examples from Ruby and RubyGems.
The first topic is CVE (Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures). I have published CVEs many times. But what exactly is a CVE? I'll provide a basic understanding of CVEs and explain how to detect and handle vulnerabilities in OSS.
Next, let's discuss package managers. Package managers play a critical role in the OSS ecosystem. I'll explain how to manage library dependencies in your application.
I'll share insights into how the Ruby and RubyGems core team works to keep our ecosystem safe. By the end of this talk, you'll have a better understanding of how to safeguard your code.
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.
Programming Foundation Models with DSPy - Meetup Slides
Finding real gold with open data (Defrag 2009)
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2. http://slideshare.net/sveinmagnus1 Open Data - a goldmine Business Analyst of Digital Innovationat Objectware AS Master of Science in communicationstechand entrepreneurship Photo by BullionVault @ Flickr, CC BY-ND
8. Any code will be acceptable, any data won’t3 Open Data - a goldmine Graphic by OpenSourceInitiative, CC BY
9. Open data – real gold Canadian GoldCorp Inc. was near collapse in the late 90’ies. It’s Red Lake mine showed reduced output after 50 years of production Then something previously unheard of happened: Inspired by the crowd-sourcing of Linux and Open Source, Rob McEwen announced The GoldCorp Challenge: a competition to find new gold in the mine. The full geological dataset from Red Lake was made available to contestants. 4 Open Data - a goldmine Photo by Rickz @ Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND
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11. 80% of the targets submitted yielded substantial quantities of new gold
13. Production at Red Lake increased tenfold while mining costs dropped to 1/6th of their previous levels.Photo by BullionVault @ Flickr, CC BY-ND
14. What is Open Data? Open Knowledge Definition(http://www.opendefinition.org/) Open data/content/information must: Be Available and Accessible at Reproduction Cost “As a Whole” Permit Free Redistribution Permit Reuse Under Same Terms Be Absent of Technological Restrictions Be Attributed as Required Keep Source Integrity Not Discriminate Access From Persons or Groups Not Discriminate Against Fields of Endeavor Be Distributed with only the Original License Must Not Be Licensed Specific to a Package Must Not by License Restrict the Distribution of Other Works 6 Open Data - a goldmine Graphic by ronin691 @ Flickr, CC BY-SA
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17. The rate of discovery often accelerates with better access to data.8 Open Data - a goldmine Photo by Victor.Correa Flickr, CC BY-NC-SA
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20. January 19th 2004 she ran aground and capsized. 18 people died in the accident.
21. The use of outdated maps by both the crew and the Norwegian pilotage authorities contributed to the wreck.10 Open Data - a goldmine Photos by Smit International / Scanpix
22. 11 Open Data - a goldmine Ifyou love something… Set it free! Photo by keltanen @ Flickr, CC BY-NC