Presentation on Open Data in Practice to Irish Computer Society/Institute of Public Administration Public SEctor IT Conference 2012 in IPA, Dublin on 24th October, 2012
Lecture on Open Data and its potential for Participatory Design & Governance given as part of Seminar on Adaptive Governance in School of Architecture, University of Limerick on 25th February, 2013
This document discusses open data initiatives in Ireland and examples of apps and projects created using open government data. It provides information on Fingal County's open data portal containing 170 datasets, Dublin Region Innovation Network's data store of over 250 datasets, and publicdata.eu. Examples are given of apps created for competitions as well as crowdsourcing and sensor web projects. Attendees are encouraged to get involved in the open data community in Ireland through groups like Open Data Ireland.
The document discusses open data initiatives in Fingal County, Ireland. It describes how Fingal has published over 170 datasets on topics like transportation, housing, and planning on its open data portal. It also highlights apps that have been created using Fingal's open data, such as apps for traffic conditions, local deals, and trip planning. Additionally, it outlines Fingal's open data competition that resulted in 23 apps and several ideas for new apps.
Lecture on Open Data and how it can support Government 2.0 and new approaches to the design of Public Space given to the Idea Transition Lab at the Science Gallery, Dublin on 30th January, 2012
Presentation on Open Data in Practice to Irish Computer Society/Institute of Public Administration Public SEctor IT Conference 2012 in IPA, Dublin on 24th October, 2012
Lecture on Open Data and its potential for Participatory Design & Governance given as part of Seminar on Adaptive Governance in School of Architecture, University of Limerick on 25th February, 2013
This document discusses open data initiatives in Ireland and examples of apps and projects created using open government data. It provides information on Fingal County's open data portal containing 170 datasets, Dublin Region Innovation Network's data store of over 250 datasets, and publicdata.eu. Examples are given of apps created for competitions as well as crowdsourcing and sensor web projects. Attendees are encouraged to get involved in the open data community in Ireland through groups like Open Data Ireland.
The document discusses open data initiatives in Fingal County, Ireland. It describes how Fingal has published over 170 datasets on topics like transportation, housing, and planning on its open data portal. It also highlights apps that have been created using Fingal's open data, such as apps for traffic conditions, local deals, and trip planning. Additionally, it outlines Fingal's open data competition that resulted in 23 apps and several ideas for new apps.
Lecture on Open Data and how it can support Government 2.0 and new approaches to the design of Public Space given to the Idea Transition Lab at the Science Gallery, Dublin on 30th January, 2012
Open government data - the three legged stoolLaurence Millar
The document discusses open government data and proposes a "three-legged stool" approach with supply of data, demand for data, and tools to utilize the data. It advocates making government data openly available and reusable to increase public and economic value. Specific examples are given of types of government data that could be opened up like environmental, transportation, and research data. The benefits mentioned include improving data quality, allowing the public to access data they funded, and enabling innovative uses of data beyond what government agencies can achieve.
Lecture on Open Data and its relationship to Civic Governance and Sustainable Place-based Spatial Planning and Development given as part of Seminar on Design and Civic Governance in School of Architecture, University of Limerick on 10th October, 2011
This document discusses open data in Ireland, focusing on Fingal County Council's open data program. It provides an overview of Fingal's open data portal and the datasets available. It also discusses the Dublin region's open data collaboration through Dublinked and Ireland's national eGovernment plan to promote open data sharing. Both challenges and opportunities of open data are examined, with opportunities including data sharing, economic applications, and community innovation.
Open Data - Can our Data be of More Benefit to the CitizenFingal Open Data
The document discusses how government data can benefit citizens through open data initiatives. It provides examples of open data projects in Ireland, the EU, and worldwide. Fingal County Council in Ireland has launched its own open data portal and app competitions to encourage developers to use the council's open datasets and create applications for residents. The document outlines challenges of open data efforts but emphasizes the benefits of transparency, participation, and economic opportunities through making public data openly available.
The document discusses the shift to open data and government 2.0 with more transparent, inclusive and user-driven communication. It provides examples of open data portals around the world and in Ireland. It also discusses linked open data and potential applications for open data in areas like transportation, budgets and quality of life indicators. Finally, it addresses challenges around engaging developers and citizens with open data and measuring the success of open data initiatives.
This document summarizes a presentation on open data given on June 22, 2012 in Trieste, Italy. It discusses key principles of open data including being complete, primary, timely, accessible, machine readable, non-discriminatory, using open standards and licenses. It outlines relevant EU directives and notes the potential economic impact of open data in billions of Euros per year. It identifies barriers like fragmentation and lack of use and proposes solutions like networks, community building, and looking beyond apps to uses like business intelligence, ambient displays, physical products, policy implementation and quality of services.
Potential and Impact of Open Data in EuropeePSI Platform
This document summarizes a presentation on open data given on June 22, 2012 in Trieste, Italy. The presentation covered the following key points in 3 sentences:
It defined what constitutes open data according to established principles of being complete, primary, timely, accessible, machine readable, non-discriminatory, using open standards and licenses. It discussed how open data can generate economic value for the EU estimated in the billions of Euros per year based on studies from countries like Spain, Denmark and the Netherlands. It outlined the transition to open data that is underway through directives, strategies and initiatives from the EU and member states to make public sector information more open and reusable to create
Aaron Krull has loved music since childhood and still plays bass guitar. He worked as a cashier and cook in high school and has experience in theater, having played roles such as Oberon in A Midsummer Night's Dream. Krull studied at the University of Memphis and worked at St. Jude assisting with studies and interviews. He applied to Full Sail University Online to combine his love of entertainment with his ability to learn quickly. Krull's knowledge of Excel and accounting improved at Full Sail, and he learned how to evaluate foreign markets. He is still employed at Kumon and always ready for new opportunities.
EDF2013: Invited Talk Dominic Byrne: Irish Open Data Reuse ExemplarsEuropean Data Forum
Invited talk of Dominic Byrne, Fingal County Council, Assistant Head of Information Technology, at the European Data Forum 2013, 9 April 2013 in Dublin, Ireland: Irish Open Data Reuse Exemplars
1) Fingal County Council in Ireland publishes over 170 datasets from 12 categories on its open data portal at http://data.fingal.ie to encourage reuse.
2) The Dublin Region Innovation Network publishes over 250 datasets from 13 organizations on its Dublin Datastore at http://dublinked.ie.
3) Apps4Fingal was a competition that resulted in 22 apps being created using Fingal's open data, including Discover Fingal, mypp.ie, Hit The Road, ParkYa, and FixYourStreet.
This document contains a list of links from Andy Wolber on managing technology changes and resources for how different generations use technology. It includes links to articles on managing technology, digital literacy training, the technology gap in the workplace, and using social media and bookmarking tools. The links provide information on how technology is adopted by different age groups and strategies for organizations to address changes.
The document discusses different levels of integrating data with the web to maximize its utility. It outlines three stages of web integration: 1) publishing raw data online, organizing and licensing it; 2) making the data web accessible using open formats and APIs; 3) fully integrating data with the web by identifying things and linking them together using identifiers and relationships. The highest level of integration is Linked Data, which publishes both the data and data model using RDF to create a web of interconnected data that increases utility for both people and machines.
Email evolved from simple online messaging between computers to a widely used communication tool. It was invented in the 1960s on ARPANET, an early network connecting computers at universities. As the internet became commercially available in the 1990s, email access expanded and web-based email services emerged, popularizing personal email use. Today, email remains one of the most widely used applications worldwide, with billions of users communicating daily through personal and business accounts on desktops and mobile devices.
The document discusses open government data and defines it as public data that is available in open formats, machine readable, and accessible. It provides examples of open data initiatives in the EU, US, UK, and Ireland. Open data can increase government transparency, public participation and collaboration. It also enables economic opportunities and applications. The document promotes Fingal County Council's open data portal which makes over 65 datasets available under an open license. It outlines possible applications that could be built using Fingal's open data and next steps to encourage its use and expand open data availability.
This document discusses how informatics and social media are impacting the automotive industry. It describes how cars are becoming more connected through the collection of vast amounts of data from sensors in vehicles and from drivers' online activities. This data is analyzed to personalize marketing and customer experiences. Examples are given of how Mercedes-Benz uses customers' social media interactions to provide perks and how vehicle camera data could enable new augmented reality experiences through devices like Google Glass. The trend is moving towards fully integrated data collection across a person's devices and activities to optimize their interactions with their vehicle.
The document summarizes evaluations of the Widget Store from various pilots in different countries. It discusses feedback received from teachers, technical issues encountered, and changes made to the Widget Store based on the evaluations. The evaluations found that the Widget Store provided an effective service and was usable when internet access was reliable. However, use outside of pilot sessions was limited, and attitudes towards adoption need further understanding. Future actions proposed include additional pilots in different contexts to better understand adoption dynamics and positioning the Widget Store for educational managers in addition to teachers.
Open government data - the three legged stoolLaurence Millar
The document discusses open government data and proposes a "three-legged stool" approach with supply of data, demand for data, and tools to utilize the data. It advocates making government data openly available and reusable to increase public and economic value. Specific examples are given of types of government data that could be opened up like environmental, transportation, and research data. The benefits mentioned include improving data quality, allowing the public to access data they funded, and enabling innovative uses of data beyond what government agencies can achieve.
Lecture on Open Data and its relationship to Civic Governance and Sustainable Place-based Spatial Planning and Development given as part of Seminar on Design and Civic Governance in School of Architecture, University of Limerick on 10th October, 2011
This document discusses open data in Ireland, focusing on Fingal County Council's open data program. It provides an overview of Fingal's open data portal and the datasets available. It also discusses the Dublin region's open data collaboration through Dublinked and Ireland's national eGovernment plan to promote open data sharing. Both challenges and opportunities of open data are examined, with opportunities including data sharing, economic applications, and community innovation.
Open Data - Can our Data be of More Benefit to the CitizenFingal Open Data
The document discusses how government data can benefit citizens through open data initiatives. It provides examples of open data projects in Ireland, the EU, and worldwide. Fingal County Council in Ireland has launched its own open data portal and app competitions to encourage developers to use the council's open datasets and create applications for residents. The document outlines challenges of open data efforts but emphasizes the benefits of transparency, participation, and economic opportunities through making public data openly available.
The document discusses the shift to open data and government 2.0 with more transparent, inclusive and user-driven communication. It provides examples of open data portals around the world and in Ireland. It also discusses linked open data and potential applications for open data in areas like transportation, budgets and quality of life indicators. Finally, it addresses challenges around engaging developers and citizens with open data and measuring the success of open data initiatives.
This document summarizes a presentation on open data given on June 22, 2012 in Trieste, Italy. It discusses key principles of open data including being complete, primary, timely, accessible, machine readable, non-discriminatory, using open standards and licenses. It outlines relevant EU directives and notes the potential economic impact of open data in billions of Euros per year. It identifies barriers like fragmentation and lack of use and proposes solutions like networks, community building, and looking beyond apps to uses like business intelligence, ambient displays, physical products, policy implementation and quality of services.
Potential and Impact of Open Data in EuropeePSI Platform
This document summarizes a presentation on open data given on June 22, 2012 in Trieste, Italy. The presentation covered the following key points in 3 sentences:
It defined what constitutes open data according to established principles of being complete, primary, timely, accessible, machine readable, non-discriminatory, using open standards and licenses. It discussed how open data can generate economic value for the EU estimated in the billions of Euros per year based on studies from countries like Spain, Denmark and the Netherlands. It outlined the transition to open data that is underway through directives, strategies and initiatives from the EU and member states to make public sector information more open and reusable to create
Aaron Krull has loved music since childhood and still plays bass guitar. He worked as a cashier and cook in high school and has experience in theater, having played roles such as Oberon in A Midsummer Night's Dream. Krull studied at the University of Memphis and worked at St. Jude assisting with studies and interviews. He applied to Full Sail University Online to combine his love of entertainment with his ability to learn quickly. Krull's knowledge of Excel and accounting improved at Full Sail, and he learned how to evaluate foreign markets. He is still employed at Kumon and always ready for new opportunities.
EDF2013: Invited Talk Dominic Byrne: Irish Open Data Reuse ExemplarsEuropean Data Forum
Invited talk of Dominic Byrne, Fingal County Council, Assistant Head of Information Technology, at the European Data Forum 2013, 9 April 2013 in Dublin, Ireland: Irish Open Data Reuse Exemplars
1) Fingal County Council in Ireland publishes over 170 datasets from 12 categories on its open data portal at http://data.fingal.ie to encourage reuse.
2) The Dublin Region Innovation Network publishes over 250 datasets from 13 organizations on its Dublin Datastore at http://dublinked.ie.
3) Apps4Fingal was a competition that resulted in 22 apps being created using Fingal's open data, including Discover Fingal, mypp.ie, Hit The Road, ParkYa, and FixYourStreet.
This document contains a list of links from Andy Wolber on managing technology changes and resources for how different generations use technology. It includes links to articles on managing technology, digital literacy training, the technology gap in the workplace, and using social media and bookmarking tools. The links provide information on how technology is adopted by different age groups and strategies for organizations to address changes.
The document discusses different levels of integrating data with the web to maximize its utility. It outlines three stages of web integration: 1) publishing raw data online, organizing and licensing it; 2) making the data web accessible using open formats and APIs; 3) fully integrating data with the web by identifying things and linking them together using identifiers and relationships. The highest level of integration is Linked Data, which publishes both the data and data model using RDF to create a web of interconnected data that increases utility for both people and machines.
Email evolved from simple online messaging between computers to a widely used communication tool. It was invented in the 1960s on ARPANET, an early network connecting computers at universities. As the internet became commercially available in the 1990s, email access expanded and web-based email services emerged, popularizing personal email use. Today, email remains one of the most widely used applications worldwide, with billions of users communicating daily through personal and business accounts on desktops and mobile devices.
The document discusses open government data and defines it as public data that is available in open formats, machine readable, and accessible. It provides examples of open data initiatives in the EU, US, UK, and Ireland. Open data can increase government transparency, public participation and collaboration. It also enables economic opportunities and applications. The document promotes Fingal County Council's open data portal which makes over 65 datasets available under an open license. It outlines possible applications that could be built using Fingal's open data and next steps to encourage its use and expand open data availability.
This document discusses how informatics and social media are impacting the automotive industry. It describes how cars are becoming more connected through the collection of vast amounts of data from sensors in vehicles and from drivers' online activities. This data is analyzed to personalize marketing and customer experiences. Examples are given of how Mercedes-Benz uses customers' social media interactions to provide perks and how vehicle camera data could enable new augmented reality experiences through devices like Google Glass. The trend is moving towards fully integrated data collection across a person's devices and activities to optimize their interactions with their vehicle.
The document summarizes evaluations of the Widget Store from various pilots in different countries. It discusses feedback received from teachers, technical issues encountered, and changes made to the Widget Store based on the evaluations. The evaluations found that the Widget Store provided an effective service and was usable when internet access was reliable. However, use outside of pilot sessions was limited, and attitudes towards adoption need further understanding. Future actions proposed include additional pilots in different contexts to better understand adoption dynamics and positioning the Widget Store for educational managers in addition to teachers.
Namhee Kwon is a Korean artist born in 1971 who currently lives and works in Paris. She earned an MFA from Hongik University in Seoul in 1997 and an MA from Goldsmiths, University of London in 2002. Kwon is interested in representing literary and poetic impressions of everyday life visually through minimalist works incorporating text, signs, symbols, and everyday objects. Recent works have incorporated neon and LED lights to describe internal senses and transform spaces. Her ongoing "Quiet World" project since 2002 questions the meaning of silence, stillness, and emptiness in contemporary society.
The document discusses the results of a study on the effects of a new drug on memory and cognitive function in older adults. The double-blind study involved 100 participants aged 65-80 who were given either the drug or a placebo daily for 6 months. Researchers found that those who received the drug performed significantly better on memory and problem-solving tests at the end of the study compared to those who received the placebo.
La actividad de clase pide a los estudiantes que hagan una presentación sobre las ventajas y desventajas del uso de las TIC en la educación, que suban la presentación a SlideShare, y que entreguen la dirección de la página al docente en un pedazo de hoja.
O documento discute a importância do comprometimento entre indivíduos e organizações, definido como a relação entre a estrutura formal e informal da organização. Quando esta relação é direcionada aos objetivos pessoais e organizacionais, surgirá naturalmente um comprometimento mútuo.
Interpretacion de la norma ISO 9001:2008Hector Javier
Segundo modulo de la especializacion en Sistemas integrados de Gestion, dictado por la Ing.Irma Anco en el Instituto de Gestion de la Calidad en la FIIS - UNI.
This presentation discusses the key differences between vision and mission statements. A vision defines an organization's long-term goals and strategic direction, focusing on its desired future state. In contrast, a mission defines an organization's fundamental purpose and short-term objectives for why it exists. The presentation also outlines common methodologies for strategic planning, including situational analysis, goals, objectives, and targets. It provides examples of how vision statements should inspire and guide an organization towards its future, while mission statements concentrate on its present purpose.
The document discusses open data from Fingal County Council's perspective. It provides details on Fingal's open data portal including the 170 datasets across 12 categories and apps created through an open data app competition. It also discusses Dublin region's open data network, examples of data reuse, and steps for government agencies to publish open data including assigning responsibility, releasing data without restrictions, and engaging communities.
Taoiseachs Public Service Excellence Awards 2012Fingal Open Data
Presentation on Fingal Open Data given at the Taoiseach's Public Service Excellence Awards in Dublin Castle on 21st June 2012 on the occasion of Fingal Open Data receiving a Public Service Excellence Award
Lecture on Open Data and its potential for Participatory Design & Governance given as part of Seminar on Adaptive Governance in School of Architecture, University of Limerick on 21st October, 2013
This document discusses open data initiatives in Ireland and provides examples of apps and projects that have utilized open data. It lists websites and resources for open data in Fingal, Dublin, and all of Ireland. Examples mentioned include apps created through an Apps4Fingal competition, urban monitoring tools, a parking app called Parkya, a local community data site for Drimnagh, and data visualization projects for election counts and government spending. The document is from a presentation on open data stories and was shared under a Creative Commons license.
Government 2.0 - Open and Participatory GovernmentFingal Open Data
The document discusses open and participatory government through open data initiatives and technologies that enable civic participation and transparency. It provides examples of how Fingal County Council in Ireland publishes over 200 open datasets, hosts hackathons to build apps using open data, and works with other agencies to release APIs and datasets that can be used for civic purposes. The goal is to use open data and technologies to engage citizens and make government more transparent, participatory, and innovative.
Digital technology is changing the way we live our lives in areas such as banking, entertainment, education and tourism. This technology also has the capacity to transform civic society – including democratic participation, citizen journalism and supporting local communities. National and Local Governments around the world are opening up the data that they hold for reuse by others. The reuse of Open Government Data facilitates transparency, participation, collaboration and economic development.
The aim of Code for Ireland is to bring together people from local communities, software developers and people working in government in order to develop apps and services that solve community problems and also to enable open government. The first Code for Ireland chapter has been established in Dublin and in the coming years additional chapters will be established in other Irish cities and towns.
Presentation given at the launch of the Fingal Open Data Apps4Fingal competition in Fingal County Hall, Swords, Co. Dublin, Ireland on 9th November, 2011
The presentation includes an overview of Open Data and an explanation of Apps4Fingal.
For more information see http://data.fingal.ie/apps4fingal
This document promotes Science Hack Day Dublin 2012 and highlights opportunities for creating applications using open data. It lists several public data sources from Dublin and other cities that could be used for hack projects, including datasets on transportation, environment and government services. Examples are given of existing applications that visualize open data or crowdsource information. The document also describes an "Apps4Fingal" competition for creating apps using data from Fingal County Council.
Overview of Open Data; Why it’s important; Fingal Open Data experience; Examples of businesses/services utilising Open Data; What needs to happen next.
Presentation to "Open Data 18 Hour Challenge" in NDRC, Digital Hub, Dublin, Ireland on 4th July, 2011
The document discusses opportunities for open data in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. It first provides examples of weather and meteorological data already available from Taiwan's Central Weather Bureau. It then notes that Taiwan is a highly saturated data economy with widespread technology access. Some challenges mentioned include privacy issues. The document closes by suggesting opportunities around civic networks, new data layers, and mobile-first approaches. Civic hacking groups like "Code for X" are proposed as a way to engage the community around open data initiatives.
1) Evidence informed activism uses data and statistics to shape deliberations and actions on social issues. Counting and quantifying things can reveal relationships and normal behaviors.
2) When issues are better understood through data, bureaucracies and decision makers are better able to take informed actions. Several examples were given of using data to inform campaigns and policies around homelessness, transportation, and other issues.
3) Scholar activists are encouraged to conduct research that supports community groups and activists. Data can be assembled in different ways and used to build understanding, but some resist over-classification or feel data is being misused. Overall evidence and data-based deliberations and actions were advocated for various social issues.
Data Visualization and Mapping using JavascriptMack Hardy
The document summarizes Mack Hardy's presentation on data visualization at NetTuesday Vancouver. It provides examples of different tools that can be used to visualize data, such as Excel, Google Charts, maps, timelines, cartograms, and interactive visualizations using D3 and Raphael. It also discusses ethics and best practices around publishing open data. The presentation emphasized using visualization and storytelling to communicate patterns in data and provide context.
The document is an infographic about the history and evolution of the internet from its beginnings in the 1990s to present day. It highlights some of the key events and developments including the creation of major websites and technologies. These include the launch of Wikipedia in 2001, eBay and Facebook in the mid-2000s, and Google in the late 1990s. It also outlines how the internet has shifted from individual to public control and from limited to open and mobile access over the past few decades.
Ähnlich wie Ireland's Public Data Opportunity (17)
Fingal County Council has digitized many of its local government services to put citizens at the center. It has created an online planning system, digitized libraries, implemented digital council meetings and customer services systems, and developed a data hub and open data portal. Fingal has also collaborated with other local authorities on national digital initiatives and tools to share data and better serve citizens.
Presentation on Fingal's Open Data Journey and the challenges in releasing data given as part of Open Data Seminar for Public Bodies in Department of Public Expenditure and Reform on 11th February, 2015
Open Government & Public Services - Local GovernmentFingal Open Data
Presentation on Open Government in Local Government as part of the Open Government & Public Services session at the Open Government Partnership European Meeting 2014 in Dublin Castle, Dublin 2 on 9th May, 2014
Presentation on The Story of Open Data in Fingal and the challenges Public Sector Bodies face in releasing data given as part of Seminar on Open data and evidence informed decision making in NUI Maynooth on 13th November, 2013
The document summarizes two Olympic-themed events taking place in Fingal, Ireland on June 5th and 6th, 2012. On the 5th, 1500 local school children and community members will participate in a 2km Olympic Dream Run from the Deerpark Hotel to Olympic House in Howth. On the 6th, Cillian Kirwan from St. Fintans High School will be the first person in Ireland to carry the Olympic Torch when it arrives at Olympic House in Howth at 8am, where he will meet President Michael D. Higgins and other VIPs. Spectators should arrive from 6:30-7am to watch along Harbour Road, which will be closed for the event.
Greater Blanchardstown Initiative - examination of urban permeability in the ...Fingal Open Data
A presentation on the Greater Blanchardstown Initiative (examination of urban permeability in the Greater Blanchardstown Area) given at the Compass Informatics Annual Conference in Dublin on 25th June, 2009
Let's Integrate MuleSoft RPA, COMPOSER, APM with AWS IDP along with Slackshyamraj55
Discover the seamless integration of RPA (Robotic Process Automation), COMPOSER, and APM with AWS IDP enhanced with Slack notifications. Explore how these technologies converge to streamline workflows, optimize performance, and ensure secure access, all while leveraging the power of AWS IDP and real-time communication via Slack notifications.
OpenID AuthZEN Interop Read Out - AuthorizationDavid Brossard
During Identiverse 2024 and EIC 2024, members of the OpenID AuthZEN WG got together and demoed their authorization endpoints conforming to the AuthZEN API
HCL Notes und Domino Lizenzkostenreduzierung in der Welt von DLAUpanagenda
Webinar Recording: https://www.panagenda.com/webinars/hcl-notes-und-domino-lizenzkostenreduzierung-in-der-welt-von-dlau/
DLAU und die Lizenzen nach dem CCB- und CCX-Modell sind für viele in der HCL-Community seit letztem Jahr ein heißes Thema. Als Notes- oder Domino-Kunde haben Sie vielleicht mit unerwartet hohen Benutzerzahlen und Lizenzgebühren zu kämpfen. Sie fragen sich vielleicht, wie diese neue Art der Lizenzierung funktioniert und welchen Nutzen sie Ihnen bringt. Vor allem wollen Sie sicherlich Ihr Budget einhalten und Kosten sparen, wo immer möglich. Das verstehen wir und wir möchten Ihnen dabei helfen!
Wir erklären Ihnen, wie Sie häufige Konfigurationsprobleme lösen können, die dazu führen können, dass mehr Benutzer gezählt werden als nötig, und wie Sie überflüssige oder ungenutzte Konten identifizieren und entfernen können, um Geld zu sparen. Es gibt auch einige Ansätze, die zu unnötigen Ausgaben führen können, z. B. wenn ein Personendokument anstelle eines Mail-Ins für geteilte Mailboxen verwendet wird. Wir zeigen Ihnen solche Fälle und deren Lösungen. Und natürlich erklären wir Ihnen das neue Lizenzmodell.
Nehmen Sie an diesem Webinar teil, bei dem HCL-Ambassador Marc Thomas und Gastredner Franz Walder Ihnen diese neue Welt näherbringen. Es vermittelt Ihnen die Tools und das Know-how, um den Überblick zu bewahren. Sie werden in der Lage sein, Ihre Kosten durch eine optimierte Domino-Konfiguration zu reduzieren und auch in Zukunft gering zu halten.
Diese Themen werden behandelt
- Reduzierung der Lizenzkosten durch Auffinden und Beheben von Fehlkonfigurationen und überflüssigen Konten
- Wie funktionieren CCB- und CCX-Lizenzen wirklich?
- Verstehen des DLAU-Tools und wie man es am besten nutzt
- Tipps für häufige Problembereiche, wie z. B. Team-Postfächer, Funktions-/Testbenutzer usw.
- Praxisbeispiele und Best Practices zum sofortigen Umsetzen
TrustArc Webinar - 2024 Global Privacy SurveyTrustArc
How does your privacy program stack up against your peers? What challenges are privacy teams tackling and prioritizing in 2024?
In the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey, we asked over 1,800 global privacy professionals and business executives to share their perspectives on the current state of privacy inside and outside of their organizations. This year’s report focused on emerging areas of importance for privacy and compliance professionals, including considerations and implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies, building brand trust, and different approaches for achieving higher privacy competence scores.
See how organizational priorities and strategic approaches to data security and privacy are evolving around the globe.
This webinar will review:
- The top 10 privacy insights from the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey
- The top challenges for privacy leaders, practitioners, and organizations in 2024
- Key themes to consider in developing and maintaining your privacy program
In his public lecture, Christian Timmerer provides insights into the fascinating history of video streaming, starting from its humble beginnings before YouTube to the groundbreaking technologies that now dominate platforms like Netflix and ORF ON. Timmerer also presents provocative contributions of his own that have significantly influenced the industry. He concludes by looking at future challenges and invites the audience to join in a discussion.
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.
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.
Cosa hanno in comune un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ?Speck&Tech
ABSTRACT: A prima vista, un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ potrebbero avere in comune il fatto di essere entrambi blocchi di costruzione, o dipendenze di progetti creativi e software. La realtà è che un mattoncino Lego e il caso della backdoor XZ hanno molto di più di tutto ciò in comune.
Partecipate alla presentazione per immergervi in una storia di interoperabilità, standard e formati aperti, per poi discutere del ruolo importante che i contributori hanno in una comunità open source sostenibile.
BIO: Sostenitrice del software libero e dei formati standard e aperti. È stata un membro attivo dei progetti Fedora e openSUSE e ha co-fondato l'Associazione LibreItalia dove è stata coinvolta in diversi eventi, migrazioni e formazione relativi a LibreOffice. In precedenza ha lavorato a migrazioni e corsi di formazione su LibreOffice per diverse amministrazioni pubbliche e privati. Da gennaio 2020 lavora in SUSE come Software Release Engineer per Uyuni e SUSE Manager e quando non segue la sua passione per i computer e per Geeko coltiva la sua curiosità per l'astronomia (da cui deriva il suo nickname deneb_alpha).
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.
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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.
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25. eGovernment Plan
• Public Sector to publish Open Data
• Inter Agency Data Sharing
• Integration of Administrative Data
• Data Sharing Clearing House
• Review Data Sharing Legislation
• Implementation Plans
• Centralised Portal (Public Service Reform Plan)
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Hinweis der Redaktion
Today I am going to talk about Ireland’s Public Data Opportunity including Big Public Data The benefits of making information available and accessible Encouraging public participation in key decisions Building trust between citizens and government Economic opportunities The challenges in opening up data for reuse
The Public Sector holds large volumes of data which have the potential to realise much greater value if re-used by others Much of the data held by the public sector could be considered Big Data i.e. Big Volume, Big Velocity, Big Variety
The public sector holds large volumes of traffic related data. This includes data relating to roads, speed limits, signs, traffic lights, traffic cameras. It also includes traffic camera feeds and traffic count feeds which are both Big Volume and Big Velocity.
National Weather Agencies collect large volumes of weather data
National Mapping agencies produce large volumes of mapping data
Water data includes data about the network itself as well as water flow data feeds - Big Volume and Big Velocity.
Public Transport agencies hold route, stops and timetable data. They also now collect data feeds of vehicle location and continuously calculate expected arrival times by stop – big volume and big velocity.
The public sector collects data relating to energy usage for various public buildings as do other sectors for their premises. Energy production, distribution and consumption data is generally held by the semi-state or private sector – Big Volume and Big Velocity. This data will need to become available in open formats in an appropriate manner if we are to address sustainable energy
How do we get our hands on this data
The 2003 EU Reuse of Public Sector Information Directive was designed to allow European companies to exploit the potential of Public Sector Data and to contribute to economic growth and job creation.
An EU study estimated the direct PSI re-use market at €27Bn in 2008 The direct and indirect economic benefits was in the order of €140Bn in 2008 If PSI policies were open with access for free or marginal cost, direct re-use value would increase by €40Bn With easier access, direct and indirect benefits in 2008 could have been in the order of €200Bn Vickery Study, 2011 http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/policy/psi/docs/pdfs/report/psi_final_version_formatted.docx
In the United States, Barak Obama promised Open Government during his election campaign. This website, data.gov was created in 2009 to share US Government data. This is the seen as the main catalyst that has driven the Open Data movement The site now contains 4,717 datasets
In the United Kingdom, Tim Berners-Lee persuaded Prime Minister Gordon Brown that the UK should pursue an Open Data policy. This website, data.gov.uk was created in 2010 to share UK Government data. David Cameron’s Government has continued this policy The site now contains 8,751 datasets
Open Data is … Public data Which is not subject to data protection or other limitations Open Formats Available in non-proprietary formats e.g. CSV, XML, KML, RDF, open APIs Machine Readable In a format that computers can process Accessible Available to the widest range of people for the widest range of uses
In the 3 years since the launch of data.gov, Open Data sites have sprung up around the world, mainly in Canada, USA, Europe, Australia and New Zealand 2010 – UK Government, London, United Nations, World Bank
Fingal is located to the north of Dublin City Dublin Airport is located in Fingal Map illustrates population density in the County 273,051 citizens 3 rd largest Local Authority Fastest growing & Youngest county Population is concentrated in the South and East of the County 3 main population centres of Blanchardstown, Swords and Balbriggan North-West is rural farmland
In November 2010, Fingal County Council launched Fingal Open Data – the first Open Data website in the country It provides public access to source data from Council systems. It built on previous work led by the Council on inter-agency data sharing
There are currently 170 datasets organised into 12 categories Detailed information is provided about each dataset, including description, date published and available formats.
The site has a Featured Apps section to showcase uses that Fingal Open Data has been put to
In October 2011, the 4 Dublin Authorities and NUI Maynooth laucnhed the Dublinked website Dublinked is a Network for Sharing Data to facilitate innovation in the urban environment through collaboration between private, public and research partners with the Dublin city region as a proving ground The aim is to enable innovators to collaborate on tackling challenges facing the Dublin city region using public sector data as the basis. www.dublinked.ie
There are currently over 250 datasets datasets in the Datastore Data from 4 Dublin Councils and OSI data in research zone (thanks to OSI for being the first) National datasets (Hazardous & Transfrontier Waste Shipments; National Public Transport Nodes; NIAH) Regional Datasets Themes focussed for first release of data were Land Use, Transport & Environmental Zones – Open and Research (Members) – O & M Data criteria for Members zone – Legal issues, Technical (e.g. streaming/live data (samples); binary (Traffic)), Commercial (high-value) Formats – open & non-proprietary where possible; can be onerous to convert – working towards this goal; go ugly early; respond to feedback Metadata for each dataset – Dublinked ‘lite’ standard developed in partnership with Dept. Environment, NUI Galway, Dept. Marine & Natural Resources; compliant with international standards
Apps Showcase
Past Events Planning Technology Spatial Data Visualisation Open Innovation Future Events Public Sector Transport
The next event will be held on 22 nd November in the Science Gallery concentrating on the publishing of data by public bodies
The Irish eGovernment Plan was published in April 2012 The Plan includes Requirement for Public Sector agencies to publish Open Data Data contained in Published Reports must also be published in Open data formats Agencies must carry out audits of data holdings Inter-Agency Data Sharing Integration of Administrative Data Data Sharing Clearing House Review of Data Sharing Legislation The Public Service Reform Plan also includes Centralised Open Data Portal
The eGovernment Action plan contains 3 specific actions relating to Open Data All public bodies will publish Open Data Data published in reports should also be published in parallel in open formats Public bodies will identify data holdings and release by default
What are the benefits of making Public Information available and accessible
In order to encourage the reuse of data published on Fingal Open Data and Dublinked, Fingal County Council organised the Apps4Fingal competition The competition ran from 9 th November 2011 to 9 th January 2012 There was a prize fund of €11,500 thanks to the generosity of our sponsors
23 Apps were submitted 36 Ideas were entered
The Apps4Fingal section of Fingal Open Data contains all the information about the competition including details of and links to the competition entries, rules, judging criteria and the shortlisted entries
What are the potantial benefits of Open Data? Transparency To Open up Government and enable the Public to see the underlying information. What is the actual evidence-based reality as opposed to the perceived reality Participation To increase citizen engagement with Government. If Government and Citizens are to cooperate, then Government can’t be the only ones with the information Collaboration In addition to Citizen-Government collaboration outlined earlier, also - To enable the combination of data from different public sector agencies To enable other sectors to collaborate with Government. Economic Opportunities Public sector data can be used as the basis for online services, mobile applications, analytics, etc.
Building Trust
The Department of Public Expenditure and Reform publishes details of Government Budgets and Spending
This website shows how Government Expenditure can be made more accessible through visualisation. In this case it’s the German Federal Budget The coloured blocks provide a visual representation of the comparative sizes of different Government Departments expenditure. You can drill down to see the components of a Departments expenditure and compare expenditure from year to year.
Openly Local collates information from UK Local Authorities and presents it in a standardised manner
KildareStreet.com is a website which takes a feed of Oireachtas proceedings and presents them in a user-friendly website Unfortunately the site has not been updated since September 18 th due to a change in technology used by the Oireachtas
mypp.ie won the Enterprise Category of Apps4Fingal Mypp.ie is a Web App which uses Planning Application data from all 4 Dublin local authorities. These are displayed on a map allowing users to easily check planning applications in an area. Features include a notification service, a 3D interactive house showing what works need planning permission, a professional directory and planning-related news feed. Planning applications are colour coded by status and more info can be displayed. mypp.ie has gone on to develop the service further, now incorporating data from 12 local authorities
Participation
Fingal Day Tripper won the Student Category of Apps4Fingal Fingal Day Tripper is a Web App that allows day trippers to select the type of activities they prefer, as well as if they would like to stop for a coffee. They can also specify whether they are travelling with children or disabled passengers. The app will then suggest a day trip in the local area, showing locations of interest on the map. It also provides the option of getting the route and driving directions for the trip and details of each attraction.
Fingal Traffic View won the Community Category of Apps4Fingal Fingal Traffic View is an Android Mobile App which provides information about traffic cameras, parking zones, disabled parking, train stations and Garda safety zones. These are displayed on a map and users can also view images from the traffic cameras. The App also incorporates a live feed of twitter accounts related to Dublin Traffic.
Discover Fingal won the Overall & Tourism Categories of Apps4Fingal Discover Fingal is a Mobile Web App in which users are encouraged to discover historical and cultural sites in Fingal through a Find and Reward Facebook App and Mobile Website. Detailed information is provided about each site. If a user checks into three cultural sites they are rewarded with a voucher for a free cup of tea or coffee which can be redeemed at Skerries Mills.
KidsMaps takes the playground data from the Fingal Open Data site, but also includes playground data sourced from most of the Local Authorities in Ireland. This is a great example of how Apps based on Open Data can be scalable.
FixYourStreet is an open transparent tool for reporting problems to Local Government It also has an Open Data dimension, as the data is exposed through an API for developers to write programs that consume the data behind the site – location, details and resolution of Reported issues
FixMyArea is a commercial website which utilises the FixYourStreet interface to submit reports to those Local Authorities using the system
FixMyStreet is a voluntary website which utilises the FixYourStreet interface to submit reports to those Local Authorities using the system
Other possible reuse could include Visualisation, Analytics, etc HeyGov! is an example of the type of development that could be done with FixYourStreet data
In New York City, FixYourStreet type technology is being used to suggest new services The Bike Racks website enables citizens to identify a location where they believe bike racks should be provided, to include a photo of the location and to outline their reasons for the suggested location Other citizens can vote on the suggestions Citizens can also check whether their suggested location meets Bike Rack Location Guidelines to see racks provided sooner
In North Sydney Council, Australia citizens can participate in determining budget priorities The citizen can choose to increase, decrease or not alter spending under the budget headings Their selections are totalled interactively so that they can see whether they are over or under budget and if over budget what the implications are for rates Citizens inputs are compiled into a report which feeds into the Councils decision-making process
In Melbourne, Australia the draft City Development Plan is published as a Wiki and the public can directly edit the Plan There is also a discussion page relating to each section of the plan where suggestions can be outlined or changes justified All versions are retained to enable comparison between versions of the Plan Once the public consultation phase is complete, the Council deliberates on the contributions to organise, refine and incorporate ideas in the most practical way
Economic Opportunities
Discover Fingal won the Overall & Tourism Categories of Apps4Fingal Startup company App built using the LearningHunt platform for creation of guided tours NDRC funding and mentoring
mypp.ie won the Enterprise Category of Apps4Fingal Startup company Building Eye – visualising Building and Planning data Currently targeting US and UK markets NDRC Launchpad programme
Startup company – Hit The Road NDRC Launchpad programme Uses Public Transport data
FixMyArea complementing the RateMyArea service
JustPark came second in the Irish 18 Hour Open Data Challenge in 2011 (NDRC, FCC, DCC, Microsoft & IIA) Product has been developed since and has been rebranded as ParkYa Enterprise Ireland support and IT Blanchardstown incubation cebtre
The Property Services Regulatory Authority has started publishing the Address, Price and Date of Sale of all residential properties sold in Ireland since 1 st January 2010 A member of the public downloaded this data and used Google Fusion Tables to map the properties
myhome.ie has taken the data and incorporated it into a prototype system which shows mapped properties for sale alongside sold properties
Dublin City Council has published traffic journey times from its TRIPS system via Dublinked Visualisation above Potential reuse opportunities
Dublin City Council and National Transport Authority have implemented Real Time Passenger Information for Dublin Bus Cork buses in pilot Integrated Bus, Luas and Irish Rail on the way API on the way
CSO collect large volumes of Census data Previously difficult to access Small Area Population website makes it easier to access Demographics for each of 3,409 Electoral Divisions
Census 2011 data is also available at the new Small Area level of geoography 18,488 Small Areas Hugely valuable and mineable dataset if released en bloc Usage restrictions at present (non-commercial)
Although we have come a long way and, critically, Open Data is now Government policy, there are still a number of challenges in releasing Open Data in Ireland
It is taking time for public bodies to release data Each Public Body should assign responsibility for Open Data to a named individual – which is most likely to be the person responsible for FOI and PSI It works best if the CEO, Secretary General, County Manager etc. supports the initiative
Public bodies should start releasing data Possibly use Dublinked to try it out No need to build a website – add a page to the website Support from Senior Management within releasing organisations is essential Should align with Organisational Objectives – Fingal : Tourism, Age Friendly County UK Government policy to release data; however, Local Government is finding it difficult – additional work with reducing resources Use it as an opportunity to create an Internal Data Catalogue for Information Management Align with INSPIRE directive requirements – single data catalogue/store for both
We also need to examine whether usage restrictions can be removed from data already released Do you have a PSI page on your website covering website content? Is any of your content covered by a restrictive licence? Does it really need to be? CSO, EPA, Heritage, Marine, Finance, HSE There are also opportunities for Open Academic Data, Open Scientific Data, Open Bibliographic Data, etc And why not Open Business Data? Open Product Catalogues; Airline Flights and Fares; etc. Enel, Italy’s largest power company, has released Open Data Nike have employed Ward Cunningham, inventor of the Wiki, to work on Open Data
The different departments and agencies of the Public Sector have a need to access the data holdings of other agencies In most cases it is a laborious and time-consuming task to obtain data from other arms of the public sector Even within Public Sector agencies and departments it can be difficult to obtain data from other sections Adopting a data-sharing approach with catalogues and data stores within the public sector could bring great efficiencies in this area Then it is simply a matter of categorising the access permissions and releasing relevant data publicly
We need to agree standards for data formats, service vocabularies, data catalogues We need to measure the quality of the data and records within the data and publish these quality measures We also need to ensure that once we publish Open Data, we continue to do so on an on-going basis We However, this should not prevent us from starting to publish Open Data Standards can be applied retrospectively Potential users of the data would prefer that the data be released in the first instance (just not in PDF) Go ugly, early
U.K. Department of Transport made NAPTAN bus stop dataset available to OpenStreetMap OpenStreetMap volunteers check, edit and verify the data via the NOVAM viewer Improved data quality of public dataset Potential for the same approach to be used here with Government datasets
While datasets should be published, we also need to look at publishing data as web services e.g. JSON
The Public Service Reform Plan includes an objective for a national public sector data sharing portal
We need to move to a model of publishing by default We need to ask “why shouldn’t we publish the data”, rather than “why should we publish”
Ideally, in the future as Open data matures, the public sector should move to a model of building its own online services on top of its own Open Data Then, if there are any problems with the Open Data feed, it will affect the public body in the same way as those reusing the data
There is often a fear that the data will be misinterpreted or that the quality is too poor to release Use Metadata & release briefing notes to counter misinterpretation There may be a possibility to use it as an opportunity for improvement through crowdsourcing (UK bus stops) There can also be a reluctance to opening up the decision-making process We’ve always done it this way, the legislation doesn’t allow for Innovation requires that we question why we do the things we do and the way we do it Legislation needn’t be a barrier – so long as it doesn’t say that we can’t do it We in the public sector need to Let Go a bit
You can help by getting involved
This is the website for the Irish Open Data community
This is the Google Group for the Irish Open Data community – sign up to keep up to date
These are the contact details for Fingal Open Data and Dublinked – email or follow on Twitter
To conclude I have outlined the opportunities available in public sector data Availability of public data will increase dramatically over the next 3 years Government wants to encourage others to make use of this data If you are interested, get in touch Fingal Open Data is available at data.fingal.ie Follow us on Twitter at fingalopendata
In line with the theme, this presentation is licenced for sharing under a Creative Commons licence It is available for viewing and downloading on slideshare Thank you.