Android is an open source software platform for mobile devices based on the Linux operating system. It was initially developed by Android Inc, which was later acquired by Google. The Open Handset Alliance was formed to further develop and promote Android. Android uses the Dalvik virtual machine and is built with security, performance and low battery usage in mind. Developers can create Android applications using Java and specific Android libraries, which can then access device capabilities and interact with other applications through intents and content providers.
The document discusses strategies for Italian companies in the current business environment. It notes that the "New Normal" is complicated and changing, requiring companies to reinvent themselves every 3-5 years. It promotes Cisco collaboration solutions like Cisco Jabber that allow unified communication across devices. The Cisco Business Edition 6000 is presented as a smart solution for Italian businesses, providing call control, voicemail, instant messaging, video conferencing and other collaboration applications for up to 1000 users on a single virtualized server.
Tizen Overview and Architecture - Seokjae Jeong (Samsung) - Korea Linux Forum...
The document discusses Tizen's application framework which provides capabilities for launching applications via actions, URIs and MIME types, managing the life cycle and system events of applications, installing and uninstalling applications, and maintaining a history of launched applications. It also notes that the framework allows launching different types of applications such as moving from a web application to a native application.
Travelers 360 degree health assessment of microservices on the pivotal platform
Is your system healthy? Are SLOs being met? What are the top performance constraints? What are the high-priority implementation concerns? Is the architecture a right fit? Are the teams leveraging the capabilities of the platform? What are the pain points with platform services? It can be challenging to find root cause among problem symptoms in distributed systems. Just as in real life, it's important for microservices to undergo regular health checks.
In this talk, we'll provide a systems-based approach to execute an app health check along 10 different dimensions: monitoring and metrics, failure mode analysis, technical debt, emergency response, performance optimization, change management, microservices rationalization, platform as a product, balanced team, and path to production. We'll explain how to address issues uncovered during a health check and provide recommendations on how to build a sustainable Day 2 app-ops reliability engineering practice.
The Eclipse Foundation conducted a survey of 1,717 IoT developers in 2019. The survey found that two-thirds of respondents currently work on or will work on IoT projects in the next 18 months. AWS, Azure and GCP were the top IoT cloud platforms, while C, C++, Java, JavaScript and Python were the most used programming languages. MQTT was still the dominant communication protocol. The Eclipse IDE was also the leading development environment for building IoT applications.
Cloud Native Java Innovation at the Eclipse Foundation
Hosted by the Eclipse Foundation, Jakarta EE is the home of open source, cloud native Java innovation. Working together, the world’s Java ecosystem leaders, including Fujitsu, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, Red Hat, SAP, and Tomitribe, are advancing Java EE and Jakarta EE to support moving mission-critical applications and workloads to the cloud. This presentation provides an overview of the various cloud native Java initiatives within the Eclipse community.
Building cloud native microservices with project Helidon
Helidon is a set of Java libraries for building cloud-native microservices. It includes Helidon SE, which provides a lightweight microservices framework, and Helidon MP, which implements the MicroProfile specifications. The presentation covered what Helidon is, its open source nature, components of Helidon SE and MP, performance benchmarks, and roadmap plans including upcoming support for MicroProfile 3.0, Hibernate, HTTP/2 and more.
This document discusses why robotics needs open source communities. It provides examples of how open source communities helped Bosch and MQTT gain visibility and recognition. Being an open source citizen means feeding, respecting, embracing, and engaging your community. Open source foundations like Eclipse can help by providing infrastructure, governance, and community development support. The Eclipse Foundation is launching an industrial robotics working group to further this area.
The document discusses the growing adoption of open source software. It outlines the four core freedoms that define open source and free software. It discusses perspectives from developers and organizations on why they contribute to open source. It notes that over 90% of companies rely on open source components and that open source is driving innovation. Foundations like Eclipse play an important role in supporting open source collaboration and governance.
For 15 years, the Eclipse Foundation has provided our global community of developers and organizations with a mature, scalable and business-friendly platform and environment for open source software collaboration and innovation. We provide the governance, processes, and infrastructure that fuel the commercial success of our members. Learn more at http://eclipse.org
Eclipse MicroProfile: Accelerating Cloud-Native Application Development with ...
An overview of the business value that the Eclipse MicroProfile project can bring to an organization that is faced with the challenges of evolving into a world where containers, microservices, cloud, open source, and enterprise Java intersect.
This document provides an overview of the Eclipse Foundation, including its history and current focus areas. It discusses how the Eclipse Foundation was launched in 2001 as an open source project led by IBM, before becoming an independent non-profit in 2004. It then summarizes the Foundation's growth in members, projects, committers and lines of code. The rest of the document outlines the Foundation's current focus on areas like Java, IoT, automation and cloud native computing, and provides examples of projects in these areas like Eclipse Che and Eclipse Kuksa.
Cloud Native Java Community Day | EclipseCon Europe 2019
Cloud Native Java session, Community Day at EclipseCon Europe 2019.
Presented by Community Day Organizers: Heiko Rupp, Jan Westerkamp, Tanja Obradovic, Susan Iwai, Shabnam Mayel
Leveraging the Open IoT Ecosystem to Accelerate Product Strategy
The document discusses leveraging open source technologies to accelerate product strategies for Internet of Things (IoT) projects. It advocates embracing open IoT standards to access a larger ecosystem, using open hardware to lower barriers to entry, and participating in open source software projects to build larger ecosystems and lower costs. The Eclipse Foundation is presented as a resource for open IoT projects through its IoT working group and projects that provide open protocols, frameworks, and tools to connect, manage and develop IoT solutions.
"Open Source as a enabler for industry collaborations and innovation!" by Gaë...
Track | the Future of Open Source Business
Gaël Blondelle, Chief Membership Officer, Eclipse Foundation
Mindtrek Conference
15th of November 2022.
Tampere, Finland
www.mindtrek.org
Using Eclipse technologies to develop the BRAIN-IoT model-based framework for...
This talk presents an overview of the BRAIN-IoT framework that implements a model-based approach to enable composability and deployment of heterogeneous IoT platforms in a secure way. We will highlight how Eclipse sensinAct and Eclipse Papyrus are used in BRAIN-IoT to provide some of the platform’s capabilities.
Cloud native has emerged as an important strategy for IT modernization and business transformation initiatives. The enterprise marketplace has a strong desire to see Jakarta EE, the successor of Java EE, evolve to support containers, microservices, and multi-cloud portability. The objective of the 2019 Jakarta EE Developer Survey was to help Java ecosystem stakeholders better understand the requirements, priorities, and perceptions of enterprise developer communities.
Results from the 2018 edition of our annual IoT Developer Survey.
An analysis of the key findings and trends of the survey is available here: https://blog.benjamin-cabe.com/2018/04/17/key-trends-iot-developer-survey-2018
The survey features trends on IoT cloud platforms, programming languages, databases, security practices, messaging protocols (MQTT, AMQP), and more.
SFSCON23 - Sara Gallian - The First Year of Eclipse Software Defined Vehicle ...
The document discusses the progress of the Eclipse Software Defined Vehicle (SDV) Working Group in its first year. It summarizes the growth of the working group from 41 members to numerous projects focused on areas beyond just middleware like tooling, devops, applications, and standards. It outlines the working group's governance principles and highlights upcoming events like the 2023 SDV Hackathon to encourage further collaboration on building open source software for vehicles.
Open Source for Industry 4.0 – Open IoT Summit NA 2018
Industry 4.0 is set to revolutionize the manufacturing industry. The potential for more flexible manufacturing, more efficient processes and lower costs are the driving factors behind the investment in Industry 4.0 solutions. A key part of creating successful Industry 4.0 solutions will be software on the factory floor and in the cloud.
In this talk, we will introduce how open source software has become a trusted source of technology for the enterprise IT software industry and how the Eclipse IoT open source community and other open source communities are now ready to provide production ready technology for the manufacturing industry and Industry 4.0. Open source software will provide the key building blocks that will promote the interoperability and flexibility required by Industry 4.0 solutions.
Cloud computing has become the foundation of a range of important applications. At the same time, other technologies are also driving the further advancement of cloud computing. This chapter focuses on the relationship between cloud computing and related fields and introduces you to some of the new technologies related to cloud computing.
Nurturing Business Friendly Open Source Ecosystems
Since 2004, the Eclipse Foundation has successfully developed business friendly open source ecosystems. This talk presents how the Eclipse Foundation legal and organisational framework, initially designed to foster both collaboration and commercial exploitation of the Eclipse IDE and the Eclipse Rich Client Platform, has been used to develop open source ecosystems in new domains like IoT, tools for safety critical systems, management of geo spatial data or automotive for the past five years.
[Capella Day Toulouse] - Towards an industry driven open collaboration framew...
Sections:
* More about open source
* Trends of software: Open Source is mainstream
* The Eclipse Foundation and open source ecosystems
* Open Innovation through Open Source
* The Capella Ecosystem
Fun and education with the PolarSys Rover and PolarSys Solutions
The document discusses the PolarSys Rover project, which aims to demonstrate the use of PolarSys tools in developing an autonomous rover system. It provides an overview of the current materials available, including code, documentation, and contributions from various organizations. The vision is for the rover project to cover the entire V-model development process and showcase different PolarSys solutions. An actual rover prototype is in development using readily available hardware components. The timeline and opportunities to get involved in the project are also mentioned.
This document discusses the Open Platform for the Engineering of Critical Embedded Systems (OPEES) project. The main objectives of OPEES are to ensure long-term availability of open source tools for critical systems and support them for the entire lifecycle of very long-lived products, which can last up to 78 years. OPEES aims to build a sustainable ecosystem around these technologies by federating industrial users and service providers. This will help avoid vendor lock-in and allow common platforms to be shared. OPEES will implement additional features like community management, ecosystem development focused on industrial users, and processes for long-term support and maturity assessment of tools. The OPEES project involves 35 members from 5 European countries working to
The document discusses Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) technology, beacons, and iBeacon. It provides an overview of what BLE and beacons are, how they work, and examples of use cases. Specifically, BLE allows short-range wireless transmission between devices using little power, while beacons are BLE devices that transmit signals to be detected by BLE-enabled devices like smartphones. Apple's iBeacon standard allows beacons to interact with iOS devices in the background to provide location-based experiences. Potential applications discussed include retail, publishing, and content distribution.
By 2020, video is predicted to account for 90% of all internet traffic as video uploads and sharing continue to grow exponentially. Technologies that will emerge by 2020 include wireless charging for video devices, easy complex 3D video editing, highly realistic CGI in movies and games, and digital cameras continuously connected to share content instantly. Flexible, bendable video displays and holographic TV and games will arrive by 2020, bringing a more immersive and interactive viewing experience through technologies like augmented reality.
Android is an open source software platform for mobile devices based on the Linux operating system. It was initially developed by Android Inc, which was later acquired by Google. The Open Handset Alliance was formed to further develop and promote Android. Android uses the Dalvik virtual machine and is built with security, performance and low battery usage in mind. Developers can create Android applications using Java and specific Android libraries, which can then access device capabilities and interact with other applications through intents and content providers.
The document discusses strategies for Italian companies in the current business environment. It notes that the "New Normal" is complicated and changing, requiring companies to reinvent themselves every 3-5 years. It promotes Cisco collaboration solutions like Cisco Jabber that allow unified communication across devices. The Cisco Business Edition 6000 is presented as a smart solution for Italian businesses, providing call control, voicemail, instant messaging, video conferencing and other collaboration applications for up to 1000 users on a single virtualized server.
Tizen Overview and Architecture - Seokjae Jeong (Samsung) - Korea Linux Forum...Ryo Jin
The document discusses Tizen's application framework which provides capabilities for launching applications via actions, URIs and MIME types, managing the life cycle and system events of applications, installing and uninstalling applications, and maintaining a history of launched applications. It also notes that the framework allows launching different types of applications such as moving from a web application to a native application.
Travelers 360 degree health assessment of microservices on the pivotal platformRohit Kelapure
Is your system healthy? Are SLOs being met? What are the top performance constraints? What are the high-priority implementation concerns? Is the architecture a right fit? Are the teams leveraging the capabilities of the platform? What are the pain points with platform services? It can be challenging to find root cause among problem symptoms in distributed systems. Just as in real life, it's important for microservices to undergo regular health checks.
In this talk, we'll provide a systems-based approach to execute an app health check along 10 different dimensions: monitoring and metrics, failure mode analysis, technical debt, emergency response, performance optimization, change management, microservices rationalization, platform as a product, balanced team, and path to production. We'll explain how to address issues uncovered during a health check and provide recommendations on how to build a sustainable Day 2 app-ops reliability engineering practice.
The Eclipse Foundation conducted a survey of 1,717 IoT developers in 2019. The survey found that two-thirds of respondents currently work on or will work on IoT projects in the next 18 months. AWS, Azure and GCP were the top IoT cloud platforms, while C, C++, Java, JavaScript and Python were the most used programming languages. MQTT was still the dominant communication protocol. The Eclipse IDE was also the leading development environment for building IoT applications.
Cloud Native Java Innovation at the Eclipse Foundation Thabang Mashologu
Hosted by the Eclipse Foundation, Jakarta EE is the home of open source, cloud native Java innovation. Working together, the world’s Java ecosystem leaders, including Fujitsu, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, Red Hat, SAP, and Tomitribe, are advancing Java EE and Jakarta EE to support moving mission-critical applications and workloads to the cloud. This presentation provides an overview of the various cloud native Java initiatives within the Eclipse community.
Building cloud native microservices with project HelidonDmitry Kornilov
Helidon is a set of Java libraries for building cloud-native microservices. It includes Helidon SE, which provides a lightweight microservices framework, and Helidon MP, which implements the MicroProfile specifications. The presentation covered what Helidon is, its open source nature, components of Helidon SE and MP, performance benchmarks, and roadmap plans including upcoming support for MicroProfile 3.0, Hibernate, HTTP/2 and more.
Why robotics needs open source communitiesPhilippe Krief
This document discusses why robotics needs open source communities. It provides examples of how open source communities helped Bosch and MQTT gain visibility and recognition. Being an open source citizen means feeding, respecting, embracing, and engaging your community. Open source foundations like Eclipse can help by providing infrastructure, governance, and community development support. The Eclipse Foundation is launching an industrial robotics working group to further this area.
The document discusses the growing adoption of open source software. It outlines the four core freedoms that define open source and free software. It discusses perspectives from developers and organizations on why they contribute to open source. It notes that over 90% of companies rely on open source components and that open source is driving innovation. Foundations like Eclipse play an important role in supporting open source collaboration and governance.
For 15 years, the Eclipse Foundation has provided our global community of developers and organizations with a mature, scalable and business-friendly platform and environment for open source software collaboration and innovation. We provide the governance, processes, and infrastructure that fuel the commercial success of our members. Learn more at http://eclipse.org
Eclipse MicroProfile: Accelerating Cloud-Native Application Development with ...Thabang Mashologu
An overview of the business value that the Eclipse MicroProfile project can bring to an organization that is faced with the challenges of evolving into a world where containers, microservices, cloud, open source, and enterprise Java intersect.
This document provides an overview of the Eclipse Foundation, including its history and current focus areas. It discusses how the Eclipse Foundation was launched in 2001 as an open source project led by IBM, before becoming an independent non-profit in 2004. It then summarizes the Foundation's growth in members, projects, committers and lines of code. The rest of the document outlines the Foundation's current focus on areas like Java, IoT, automation and cloud native computing, and provides examples of projects in these areas like Eclipse Che and Eclipse Kuksa.
Cloud Native Java Community Day | EclipseCon Europe 2019Jakarta_EE
Cloud Native Java session, Community Day at EclipseCon Europe 2019.
Presented by Community Day Organizers: Heiko Rupp, Jan Westerkamp, Tanja Obradovic, Susan Iwai, Shabnam Mayel
Leveraging the Open IoT Ecosystem to Accelerate Product StrategyIan Skerrett
The document discusses leveraging open source technologies to accelerate product strategies for Internet of Things (IoT) projects. It advocates embracing open IoT standards to access a larger ecosystem, using open hardware to lower barriers to entry, and participating in open source software projects to build larger ecosystems and lower costs. The Eclipse Foundation is presented as a resource for open IoT projects through its IoT working group and projects that provide open protocols, frameworks, and tools to connect, manage and develop IoT solutions.
"Open Source as a enabler for industry collaborations and innovation!" by Gaë...Mindtrek
Track | the Future of Open Source Business
Gaël Blondelle, Chief Membership Officer, Eclipse Foundation
Mindtrek Conference
15th of November 2022.
Tampere, Finland
www.mindtrek.org
Using Eclipse technologies to develop the BRAIN-IoT model-based framework for...Brain IoT Project
This talk presents an overview of the BRAIN-IoT framework that implements a model-based approach to enable composability and deployment of heterogeneous IoT platforms in a secure way. We will highlight how Eclipse sensinAct and Eclipse Papyrus are used in BRAIN-IoT to provide some of the platform’s capabilities.
Cloud native has emerged as an important strategy for IT modernization and business transformation initiatives. The enterprise marketplace has a strong desire to see Jakarta EE, the successor of Java EE, evolve to support containers, microservices, and multi-cloud portability. The objective of the 2019 Jakarta EE Developer Survey was to help Java ecosystem stakeholders better understand the requirements, priorities, and perceptions of enterprise developer communities.
Results from the 2018 edition of our annual IoT Developer Survey.
An analysis of the key findings and trends of the survey is available here: https://blog.benjamin-cabe.com/2018/04/17/key-trends-iot-developer-survey-2018
The survey features trends on IoT cloud platforms, programming languages, databases, security practices, messaging protocols (MQTT, AMQP), and more.
The document discusses the progress of the Eclipse Software Defined Vehicle (SDV) Working Group in its first year. It summarizes the growth of the working group from 41 members to numerous projects focused on areas beyond just middleware like tooling, devops, applications, and standards. It outlines the working group's governance principles and highlights upcoming events like the 2023 SDV Hackathon to encourage further collaboration on building open source software for vehicles.
Open Source for Industry 4.0 – Open IoT Summit NA 2018Benjamin Cabé
Industry 4.0 is set to revolutionize the manufacturing industry. The potential for more flexible manufacturing, more efficient processes and lower costs are the driving factors behind the investment in Industry 4.0 solutions. A key part of creating successful Industry 4.0 solutions will be software on the factory floor and in the cloud.
In this talk, we will introduce how open source software has become a trusted source of technology for the enterprise IT software industry and how the Eclipse IoT open source community and other open source communities are now ready to provide production ready technology for the manufacturing industry and Industry 4.0. Open source software will provide the key building blocks that will promote the interoperability and flexibility required by Industry 4.0 solutions.
Cloud computing has become the foundation of a range of important applications. At the same time, other technologies are also driving the further advancement of cloud computing. This chapter focuses on the relationship between cloud computing and related fields and introduces you to some of the new technologies related to cloud computing.
Nurturing Business Friendly Open Source EcosystemsGaël Blondelle
Since 2004, the Eclipse Foundation has successfully developed business friendly open source ecosystems. This talk presents how the Eclipse Foundation legal and organisational framework, initially designed to foster both collaboration and commercial exploitation of the Eclipse IDE and the Eclipse Rich Client Platform, has been used to develop open source ecosystems in new domains like IoT, tools for safety critical systems, management of geo spatial data or automotive for the past five years.
[Capella Day Toulouse] - Towards an industry driven open collaboration framew...Gaël Blondelle
Sections:
* More about open source
* Trends of software: Open Source is mainstream
* The Eclipse Foundation and open source ecosystems
* Open Innovation through Open Source
* The Capella Ecosystem
Fun and education with the PolarSys Rover and PolarSys SolutionsGaël Blondelle
The document discusses the PolarSys Rover project, which aims to demonstrate the use of PolarSys tools in developing an autonomous rover system. It provides an overview of the current materials available, including code, documentation, and contributions from various organizations. The vision is for the rover project to cover the entire V-model development process and showcase different PolarSys solutions. An actual rover prototype is in development using readily available hardware components. The timeline and opportunities to get involved in the project are also mentioned.
This document discusses the Open Platform for the Engineering of Critical Embedded Systems (OPEES) project. The main objectives of OPEES are to ensure long-term availability of open source tools for critical systems and support them for the entire lifecycle of very long-lived products, which can last up to 78 years. OPEES aims to build a sustainable ecosystem around these technologies by federating industrial users and service providers. This will help avoid vendor lock-in and allow common platforms to be shared. OPEES will implement additional features like community management, ecosystem development focused on industrial users, and processes for long-term support and maturity assessment of tools. The OPEES project involves 35 members from 5 European countries working to
Presentation of SOA standards at OW2 track of the first Open World Forum. Focus on WSDL, JBI and SCA, and their use in PEtALS and Dragon open source projects.
RPA In Healthcare Benefits, Use Case, Trend And Challenges 2024.pptxSynapseIndia
Your comprehensive guide to RPA in healthcare for 2024. Explore the benefits, use cases, and emerging trends of robotic process automation. Understand the challenges and prepare for the future of healthcare automation
UiPath Community Day Kraków: Devs4Devs ConferenceUiPathCommunity
We are honored to launch and host this event for our UiPath Polish Community, with the help of our partners - Proservartner!
We certainly hope we have managed to spike your interest in the subjects to be presented and the incredible networking opportunities at hand, too!
Check out our proposed agenda below 👇👇
08:30 ☕ Welcome coffee (30')
09:00 Opening note/ Intro to UiPath Community (10')
Cristina Vidu, Global Manager, Marketing Community @UiPath
Dawid Kot, Digital Transformation Lead @Proservartner
09:10 Cloud migration - Proservartner & DOVISTA case study (30')
Marcin Drozdowski, Automation CoE Manager @DOVISTA
Pawel Kamiński, RPA developer @DOVISTA
Mikolaj Zielinski, UiPath MVP, Senior Solutions Engineer @Proservartner
09:40 From bottlenecks to breakthroughs: Citizen Development in action (25')
Pawel Poplawski, Director, Improvement and Automation @McCormick & Company
Michał Cieślak, Senior Manager, Automation Programs @McCormick & Company
10:05 Next-level bots: API integration in UiPath Studio (30')
Mikolaj Zielinski, UiPath MVP, Senior Solutions Engineer @Proservartner
10:35 ☕ Coffee Break (15')
10:50 Document Understanding with my RPA Companion (45')
Ewa Gruszka, Enterprise Sales Specialist, AI & ML @UiPath
11:35 Power up your Robots: GenAI and GPT in REFramework (45')
Krzysztof Karaszewski, Global RPA Product Manager
12:20 🍕 Lunch Break (1hr)
13:20 From Concept to Quality: UiPath Test Suite for AI-powered Knowledge Bots (30')
Kamil Miśko, UiPath MVP, Senior RPA Developer @Zurich Insurance
13:50 Communications Mining - focus on AI capabilities (30')
Thomasz Wierzbicki, Business Analyst @Office Samurai
14:20 Polish MVP panel: Insights on MVP award achievements and career profiling
Implementations of Fused Deposition Modeling in real worldEmerging Tech
The presentation showcases the diverse real-world applications of Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM) across multiple industries:
1. **Manufacturing**: FDM is utilized in manufacturing for rapid prototyping, creating custom tools and fixtures, and producing functional end-use parts. Companies leverage its cost-effectiveness and flexibility to streamline production processes.
2. **Medical**: In the medical field, FDM is used to create patient-specific anatomical models, surgical guides, and prosthetics. Its ability to produce precise and biocompatible parts supports advancements in personalized healthcare solutions.
3. **Education**: FDM plays a crucial role in education by enabling students to learn about design and engineering through hands-on 3D printing projects. It promotes innovation and practical skill development in STEM disciplines.
4. **Science**: Researchers use FDM to prototype equipment for scientific experiments, build custom laboratory tools, and create models for visualization and testing purposes. It facilitates rapid iteration and customization in scientific endeavors.
5. **Automotive**: Automotive manufacturers employ FDM for prototyping vehicle components, tooling for assembly lines, and customized parts. It speeds up the design validation process and enhances efficiency in automotive engineering.
6. **Consumer Electronics**: FDM is utilized in consumer electronics for designing and prototyping product enclosures, casings, and internal components. It enables rapid iteration and customization to meet evolving consumer demands.
7. **Robotics**: Robotics engineers leverage FDM to prototype robot parts, create lightweight and durable components, and customize robot designs for specific applications. It supports innovation and optimization in robotic systems.
8. **Aerospace**: In aerospace, FDM is used to manufacture lightweight parts, complex geometries, and prototypes of aircraft components. It contributes to cost reduction, faster production cycles, and weight savings in aerospace engineering.
9. **Architecture**: Architects utilize FDM for creating detailed architectural models, prototypes of building components, and intricate designs. It aids in visualizing concepts, testing structural integrity, and communicating design ideas effectively.
Each industry example demonstrates how FDM enhances innovation, accelerates product development, and addresses specific challenges through advanced manufacturing capabilities.
INDIAN AIR FORCE FIGHTER PLANES LIST.pdfjackson110191
These fighter aircraft have uses outside of traditional combat situations. They are essential in defending India's territorial integrity, averting dangers, and delivering aid to those in need during natural calamities. Additionally, the IAF improves its interoperability and fortifies international military alliances by working together and conducting joint exercises with other air forces.
Blockchain technology is transforming industries and reshaping the way we conduct business, manage data, and secure transactions. Whether you're new to blockchain or looking to deepen your knowledge, our guidebook, "Blockchain for Dummies", is your ultimate resource.
Fluttercon 2024: Showing that you care about security - OpenSSF Scorecards fo...Chris Swan
Have you noticed the OpenSSF Scorecard badges on the official Dart and Flutter repos? It's Google's way of showing that they care about security. Practices such as pinning dependencies, branch protection, required reviews, continuous integration tests etc. are measured to provide a score and accompanying badge.
You can do the same for your projects, and this presentation will show you how, with an emphasis on the unique challenges that come up when working with Dart and Flutter.
The session will provide a walkthrough of the steps involved in securing a first repository, and then what it takes to repeat that process across an organization with multiple repos. It will also look at the ongoing maintenance involved once scorecards have been implemented, and how aspects of that maintenance can be better automated to minimize toil.
Are you interested in dipping your toes in the cloud native observability waters, but as an engineer you are not sure where to get started with tracing problems through your microservices and application landscapes on Kubernetes? Then this is the session for you, where we take you on your first steps in an active open-source project that offers a buffet of languages, challenges, and opportunities for getting started with telemetry data.
The project is called openTelemetry, but before diving into the specifics, we’ll start with de-mystifying key concepts and terms such as observability, telemetry, instrumentation, cardinality, percentile to lay a foundation. After understanding the nuts and bolts of observability and distributed traces, we’ll explore the openTelemetry community; its Special Interest Groups (SIGs), repositories, and how to become not only an end-user, but possibly a contributor.We will wrap up with an overview of the components in this project, such as the Collector, the OpenTelemetry protocol (OTLP), its APIs, and its SDKs.
Attendees will leave with an understanding of key observability concepts, become grounded in distributed tracing terminology, be aware of the components of openTelemetry, and know how to take their first steps to an open-source contribution!
Key Takeaways: Open source, vendor neutral instrumentation is an exciting new reality as the industry standardizes on openTelemetry for observability. OpenTelemetry is on a mission to enable effective observability by making high-quality, portable telemetry ubiquitous. The world of observability and monitoring today has a steep learning curve and in order to achieve ubiquity, the project would benefit from growing our contributor community.
Comparison Table of DiskWarrior Alternatives.pdfAndrey Yasko
To help you choose the best DiskWarrior alternative, we've compiled a comparison table summarizing the features, pros, cons, and pricing of six alternatives.
Best Programming Language for Civil EngineersAwais Yaseen
The integration of programming into civil engineering is transforming the industry. We can design complex infrastructure projects and analyse large datasets. Imagine revolutionizing the way we build our cities and infrastructure, all by the power of coding. Programming skills are no longer just a bonus—they’re a game changer in this era.
Technology is revolutionizing civil engineering by integrating advanced tools and techniques. Programming allows for the automation of repetitive tasks, enhancing the accuracy of designs, simulations, and analyses. With the advent of artificial intelligence and machine learning, engineers can now predict structural behaviors under various conditions, optimize material usage, and improve project planning.
Kief Morris rethinks the infrastructure code delivery lifecycle, advocating for a shift towards composable infrastructure systems. We should shift to designing around deployable components rather than code modules, use more useful levels of abstraction, and drive design and deployment from applications rather than bottom-up, monolithic architecture and delivery.
論文紹介:A Systematic Survey of Prompt Engineering on Vision-Language Foundation ...Toru Tamaki
Jindong Gu, Zhen Han, Shuo Chen, Ahmad Beirami, Bailan He, Gengyuan Zhang, Ruotong Liao, Yao Qin, Volker Tresp, Philip Torr "A Systematic Survey of Prompt Engineering on Vision-Language Foundation Models" arXiv2023
https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.12980
The Rise of Supernetwork Data Intensive ComputingLarry Smarr
Invited Remote Lecture to SC21
The International Conference for High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage, and Analysis
St. Louis, Missouri
November 18, 2021
BT & Neo4j: Knowledge Graphs for Critical Enterprise Systems.pptx.pdfNeo4j
Presented at Gartner Data & Analytics, London Maty 2024. BT Group has used the Neo4j Graph Database to enable impressive digital transformation programs over the last 6 years. By re-imagining their operational support systems to adopt self-serve and data lead principles they have substantially reduced the number of applications and complexity of their operations. The result has been a substantial reduction in risk and costs while improving time to value, innovation, and process automation. Join this session to hear their story, the lessons they learned along the way and how their future innovation plans include the exploration of uses of EKG + Generative AI.
Quantum Communications Q&A with Gemini LLM. These are based on Shannon's Noisy channel Theorem and offers how the classical theory applies to the quantum world.
2019.02 Eclipse Foundation and Eclipse IoT presentation at Eclipse IoT Day Grenoble
1. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
2. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
3. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Thanks to the
sponsors
4. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Thanks to the
organizers
5. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Tweet it!
Follow
@EclipseIoT
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6. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
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Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
State of the Union of Eclipse IoT
Gaël Blondelle, VP Ecosystem Development
February 19th, 2019
7. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
8
275+
Members
360+
Projects
1550+
Committers
30
Professional Staff
Eclipse Foundation
By the
Numbers
10+
Working Groups
162M+
Lines of Code
8. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Validated by Industry Leaders
9
" I look forward to Jakarta
EE quickly adopting cloud
native technologies from
EE-centric communities
like Eclipse MicroProfile
and becoming the
fast-moving platform we
all need for Java in the
cloud.“
Ian Robinson
IBM Distinguished
Engineer and WebSphere
Chief Architect
"Red Hat is passionate
about supporting open
source communities. It is
core to our business and
strategy...so it is natural
for Red Hat to increase its
commitment to the
Eclipse community"
Mike Piech
VP & General Manager,
Middleware, Red Hat
“No company can realize
the IoT on its own…Within
the Eclipse Community,
through the contribution
of many IoT developers,
tools and standards are
created on an open
platform that many
companies can benefit
from for their IoT
applications.”
Stefan Ferber
CEO, Bosch Software
Innovations
9. Copyright (c) 2018, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
10
The Platform for
Open Innovation and
Collaboration
10. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
An Eclipse Project...
• Conforms to the EDP and Eclipse IP Policy;
• Calls itself an “Eclipse Project” and conforms
to Eclipse Foundation Branding Guidelines;
• Operates independently from any specific
vendor;
• Uses infrastructure provided by the Eclipse
Foundation for core content.
11
11. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
A business friendly ecosystem
based on extensible platforms
Infrastructure
Governance
& Process
Community
Development
IP
Management
& Licensing
Open Source Common
Platform
Products Added Value
Compete on
products &
services
Open,
Vendor-neutral,
Collaboration
platform
Collaborate
with your
competitors
12. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Transparency Openness Meritocracy
13. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Strategic Focus Areas
Eclipse Foundation
Cloud Native Java Automotive
openMobility
openADx
openGENESIS
InfrastructureIP Management &
Licensing
Governance &
Process
Community
Development
ToolsEclipse IoT
Industrial IoT
Edge Computing
IoT Cloud Platform
14
14. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Eclipse Foundation
Specification Process
15
EFSP
Community
review
completed
Plan Plan
Review
Development
Release
Review
Milestone
Build
Ratified Final
Specification
Progress
Review
Specification
Version
Proposal Creation
Review
15. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Final Specification
16
Final Specification
Specification Document
(read-only text)
Technical Artifacts
(distribution)
TCK
(distribution)
Compatible
Implementation
1..n
EF Spec. License
Project License
EF TCK License
Open Source
License
16. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
A Sustainable, Business-Friendly Community
17
Business
Models
Projects &
Working Groups
ValueCreation
• For 15 years, we have provided a
vendor-neutral home for
developers and companies to
collaborate on sustainable
technologies that enable
business model innovation
and create value for all.
• This value can then be
reinvested in Eclipse projects
and our developer community
17. Copyright (c) 2019, Eclipse Foundation, Inc. | Made available under the Eclipse Public License 2.0 (EPL-2.0)
Research @
OSS
Data Mining
Robotic
Platform
Standard
Industry 4.0
Standard
GDPR
Dev Tools
IoT
Gateway
Safety
Assurance &
Certification
IoT
Model-based
Interoperability
Automotive &
Smart Mobility