Research partnerships, user participation, extended outreach – some of ETH L...ETH-Bibliothek
IFLA Satellite Meeting 2017: Digital Humanities, Berlin, August 2017
> From "boutique" to mass digitization
> (Cooperative) online platforms for digitized content
> Research Partnerships
> User Participation
> Outreach
Keynote at Arts & Culture track, re;publica19 in Berlin, 7 May 2019. Description:
Digital technologies and the Internet give museums fantastic opportunities to engage and empower audiences through open access to digital collections. So who is leading the way and what approaches are they using? Reflecting on his current work at Europeana, and fresh from co-leading a global survey of open access in the GLAM (Gallery, Library, Archive, Museum) sector, Douglas shares insights into the key trends and challenges in this space.
“How can the digital era inspire museums to rethink their status as hubs of knowledge exchange, democratic dialogue, and genuine social experiences in an open society?” Merete Sanderhoff, Statens Museum for Kunst
This question encapsulates the opportunities and challenges faced by museums today. In line with their everyday digital lives, people expect deeper and more personal forms of interaction with museums and their collections; participation, not passivity. For cultural heritage organisations, enabling open access to digitised public domain works should be seen as an important driver of democratisation and greater societal relevance. Embracing this vision requires cultural institutions to remodel themselves from knowledge arbiters to welcoming facilitators; new attitudes, policies and practices are needed.
What is the big picture of open access in the GLAM sector today? Where is innovation happening and who is driving it? What challenges does open access pose to museums and how might these be overcome? This session aims to answer these questions and provide a broad perspective on the field. It draws on keynote speaker Douglas McCarthy’s experiences working internationally in museums, archives, art collections – and now Europeana – for the past twenty years. It also includes fresh insights from the global survey of Open GLAM policy and practice that Douglas co-leads with Dr. Andrea Wallace, Lecturer of Law at the University of Exeter.
Research partnerships, user participation, extended outreach – some of ETH L...ETH-Bibliothek
IFLA Satellite Meeting 2017: Digital Humanities, Berlin, August 2017
> From "boutique" to mass digitization
> (Cooperative) online platforms for digitized content
> Research Partnerships
> User Participation
> Outreach
Keynote at Arts & Culture track, re;publica19 in Berlin, 7 May 2019. Description:
Digital technologies and the Internet give museums fantastic opportunities to engage and empower audiences through open access to digital collections. So who is leading the way and what approaches are they using? Reflecting on his current work at Europeana, and fresh from co-leading a global survey of open access in the GLAM (Gallery, Library, Archive, Museum) sector, Douglas shares insights into the key trends and challenges in this space.
“How can the digital era inspire museums to rethink their status as hubs of knowledge exchange, democratic dialogue, and genuine social experiences in an open society?” Merete Sanderhoff, Statens Museum for Kunst
This question encapsulates the opportunities and challenges faced by museums today. In line with their everyday digital lives, people expect deeper and more personal forms of interaction with museums and their collections; participation, not passivity. For cultural heritage organisations, enabling open access to digitised public domain works should be seen as an important driver of democratisation and greater societal relevance. Embracing this vision requires cultural institutions to remodel themselves from knowledge arbiters to welcoming facilitators; new attitudes, policies and practices are needed.
What is the big picture of open access in the GLAM sector today? Where is innovation happening and who is driving it? What challenges does open access pose to museums and how might these be overcome? This session aims to answer these questions and provide a broad perspective on the field. It draws on keynote speaker Douglas McCarthy’s experiences working internationally in museums, archives, art collections – and now Europeana – for the past twenty years. It also includes fresh insights from the global survey of Open GLAM policy and practice that Douglas co-leads with Dr. Andrea Wallace, Lecturer of Law at the University of Exeter.
Digitization and Strategies for Sharing Museum Collections OnlineJessie Christian
Digitization of museum collections is on the most effective means of providing greater access to museum holdings. However, the effort to digitize must include a vision and strategy for increasing access to museum collections. The collective effort of cultural institutions to digitize and share their collections is an effective tool for meeting institutional goals and public demand.
Presented at Florida Association of Museums Annual Conference in 2009. Session also included presentations from four other panelists.
Address to the conference ‘Museums in the Digital Sphere: Opportunities and Challenges’ held on 6 October 2017 at the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, Germany.
The event provided an opportunity to analyse the needs and wishes of museum visitors in the 21st century and to open up topics such as digital collections, transparency, and open access to public discussion. It addressed technical restrictions (databases, structures, resources) and legal limitations (copyright, image rights) as well as the opportunities created by interlinking multiple collections in comprehensive platforms such as the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek (German Digital Library – DDB), ‘bavarikon’, Europeana and introduce initiatives such as #openGLAM.
Douglas presented Europeana, a unique digital resource where thousands of cultural institutions – from regional archives to national museums – share their collections online. Douglas emphasised the benefits of working with Europeana's community of 1700+ digital heritage and tech experts to expand and improve access to our shared cultural heritage. He outlined the opportunities for cultural institutions to showcase their collections with Europeana and to engage citizens within and beyond Europe.
From the CNI Fall 2014 conference in Washington:
http://www.cni.org/topics/digital-libraries/developments-in-digital-repositories/
The National Library of Wales has developed a large number of digital resources (including newspapers, archives, manuscripts and photographs) that are freely available as a national digital public library for Wales. Development of this material has involved research and innovation in all aspects of the digital life cycle, and development of an underlying digital infrastructure, to support the creation of open and sustainable digital collections that can be used, and re-used, by the widest range of stakeholders. Central to this has been the development of digital content in collaboration with national and international partners. This presentation will discuss this national context for Cynefin, a recent project developed in collaboration with the Archives and Records Council Wales (ARCW) and funded by the UK’s Heritage Lottery Fund. The project will digitize over a thousand tithe maps covering 95% of Wales between the period 1838 and 1947. The project has explored new approaches to crowd sourcing to geo locate the tithe maps and transcribe related apportionments, and also to develop links between content in the collections, linking location, ownership, land use and value. The project has also had to find innovative ways to digitize large tithe maps, including the use of an automated tripod head originally developed to capture panoramic landscapes and the construction of a specifically designed wall to ensure a consistent horizontal distance from the camera. The digital images have been ingested into a Fedora repository and shared using the IIIF standard. The crowd-sourcing element will be released to the public at the beginning of November 2014 and the initial results of the uptake and engagement of volunteers will be discussed in the presentation. The digital preservation of the tithe maps, apportionments and the crowd-sourced data will present future challenges, and approaches to these issues will also be discussed. This project is a potential model for other institutions to leverage the resources of the crowd to produce a useful and enduring digital humanities resource.
http://chicagocollectionsconsortium.org/
http://cynefinblog.archiveswales.org.uk/?p=195
http://welshnewspapers.llgc.org.uk/en/home
http://cymru1914.org/en
EuropeanaTech update - Europeana AGM 2015Antoine Isaac
Update on the EuropeanaTech community activities. Presentation with Greg Markus, Sound and Vision. Europeana general Assembly Meeting 2015, November 2-4 2015. http://pro.europeana.eu/event/europeana-annual-general-meeting-2015
CEMEC Discovery Programme discussion digital heritageMarco Streefkerk
Presentation used to introduce the CEMEC project, the role of the DEN Foundation and the relation with developments around digital heritage in The Netherlands in a meeting with the Discovery Programme in Dublin, Ireland
Digitization and Strategies for Sharing Museum Collections OnlineJessie Christian
Digitization of museum collections is on the most effective means of providing greater access to museum holdings. However, the effort to digitize must include a vision and strategy for increasing access to museum collections. The collective effort of cultural institutions to digitize and share their collections is an effective tool for meeting institutional goals and public demand.
Presented at Florida Association of Museums Annual Conference in 2009. Session also included presentations from four other panelists.
Address to the conference ‘Museums in the Digital Sphere: Opportunities and Challenges’ held on 6 October 2017 at the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, Germany.
The event provided an opportunity to analyse the needs and wishes of museum visitors in the 21st century and to open up topics such as digital collections, transparency, and open access to public discussion. It addressed technical restrictions (databases, structures, resources) and legal limitations (copyright, image rights) as well as the opportunities created by interlinking multiple collections in comprehensive platforms such as the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek (German Digital Library – DDB), ‘bavarikon’, Europeana and introduce initiatives such as #openGLAM.
Douglas presented Europeana, a unique digital resource where thousands of cultural institutions – from regional archives to national museums – share their collections online. Douglas emphasised the benefits of working with Europeana's community of 1700+ digital heritage and tech experts to expand and improve access to our shared cultural heritage. He outlined the opportunities for cultural institutions to showcase their collections with Europeana and to engage citizens within and beyond Europe.
From the CNI Fall 2014 conference in Washington:
http://www.cni.org/topics/digital-libraries/developments-in-digital-repositories/
The National Library of Wales has developed a large number of digital resources (including newspapers, archives, manuscripts and photographs) that are freely available as a national digital public library for Wales. Development of this material has involved research and innovation in all aspects of the digital life cycle, and development of an underlying digital infrastructure, to support the creation of open and sustainable digital collections that can be used, and re-used, by the widest range of stakeholders. Central to this has been the development of digital content in collaboration with national and international partners. This presentation will discuss this national context for Cynefin, a recent project developed in collaboration with the Archives and Records Council Wales (ARCW) and funded by the UK’s Heritage Lottery Fund. The project will digitize over a thousand tithe maps covering 95% of Wales between the period 1838 and 1947. The project has explored new approaches to crowd sourcing to geo locate the tithe maps and transcribe related apportionments, and also to develop links between content in the collections, linking location, ownership, land use and value. The project has also had to find innovative ways to digitize large tithe maps, including the use of an automated tripod head originally developed to capture panoramic landscapes and the construction of a specifically designed wall to ensure a consistent horizontal distance from the camera. The digital images have been ingested into a Fedora repository and shared using the IIIF standard. The crowd-sourcing element will be released to the public at the beginning of November 2014 and the initial results of the uptake and engagement of volunteers will be discussed in the presentation. The digital preservation of the tithe maps, apportionments and the crowd-sourced data will present future challenges, and approaches to these issues will also be discussed. This project is a potential model for other institutions to leverage the resources of the crowd to produce a useful and enduring digital humanities resource.
http://chicagocollectionsconsortium.org/
http://cynefinblog.archiveswales.org.uk/?p=195
http://welshnewspapers.llgc.org.uk/en/home
http://cymru1914.org/en
EuropeanaTech update - Europeana AGM 2015Antoine Isaac
Update on the EuropeanaTech community activities. Presentation with Greg Markus, Sound and Vision. Europeana general Assembly Meeting 2015, November 2-4 2015. http://pro.europeana.eu/event/europeana-annual-general-meeting-2015
CEMEC Discovery Programme discussion digital heritageMarco Streefkerk
Presentation used to introduce the CEMEC project, the role of the DEN Foundation and the relation with developments around digital heritage in The Netherlands in a meeting with the Discovery Programme in Dublin, Ireland
Facilitating Access and Reuse of Research Materials: the Case of The European...The European Library
The European Library provides access to research materials from the collections of Europe’s national and research libraries, representing members from 46 countries. This paper presents the current status, on-going work, and future plans of the resource dissemination services provided by The European Library, covering resources such as national bibliographies, digital collections, full text collections, its access portal and API, open linked data publication, and integration in digital humanities infrastructures. In the coming years, The European Library will work to provide the means and tools for digital humanities researchers to easily use research materials from libraries in their research activities.
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
Slides 2 - 39:Europeana Network Association General Assembly by Marco de Niet, Georgia Angelaki, Erwin Verbruggen, Fred Truyen and Sara Di Giorgio
Slide 40: Keynote Frédéric Kaplan
Slide 41: State Secretary Angela Ferreira
Slide 42: Wrap up day one by Marco de Niet
Slide 45: Welcome by Marco de Niet
Slide 46: Welcome by Maria Ines Cordeiro
Slide 47: Europeana Strategy 2020+ by Rehana Schwinninger-Ladak
Slides 48 - 142: Developments at Europeana by Harry Verwayen
Slides 143 - 147: Welcome & Introduction to the conference programme by Marco de Niet
Slides 149 - 191: The Europeana Innovation Agenda highlights by Ina Blümel, Johan Oomen, Sara Di Giorgio, Lorna Hughes, Pedro Santos and Andy Neale
Slides 193 - 194: Introduction of the afternoon programme by Fred Truyen
Slides 195 - 231: We transform the world with culture by Harry Verwayen, Elisabeth Niggemann, Rehana Schwinninger-Ladak, Katherine Heid and Merete Sanderhoff
Slides 232 - : The Europeana Innovation Agenda highlights by Gregory Markus, Chris Dijkshoorn, Maarten Dammers and Harald Sack
Slide 285: Pitch your project (See pitch your project presentation slides)
Slides 286 - 290: Unsung Heroes by Marco de Niet
Slides 291 - 292: Wrap up and closure of day two by Sara Di Giorgio
Slides 2 - 6: Introduction to the programme by Georgia Angelaki
Slides 7 - 9: Keynote Michael Edson
Slides 10 - 40: Europeana Aggregators Forum by Marco Rendina
Slides 42 - 75: Promoting Cultural Heritage with digital invasion by Altheo Valentini-Egina and Marianna Marcucci
Slides 77 - 97: Opportunities for digital cultural heritage and the public domain, under the EU Copyright Rules by Paul Keller, Steven Stegers, Jurga Gradauskaite, Antje Schmidt, Sebastiaan ter Burg and Harry Verwayen
Slides 98 - 101: Climate Call for Action: Outcomes by Barbara Fischer
Slides 102 - 114: Wrap up and closure by Marco de Niet
Europeana 2019 - Connect Communities - Pitch your projectEuropeana
Slides 3 - 10: The GIFT Box: Helping museums make richer digital experiences for their visitors by Anders Sundnes Lovlie
Slides 11 - 18: Between people and things - Transfer of knowledge at SHMH by Elisabeth Böhm
Slides 19 - 30: Automated recognition of historical image content by Tino Mager
Slides 31 - 51: 50s in Europe: Kaleidoscope by Sofie Taes
Slides 52 - 63: CrowdHeritage: Crowdsourcing Platform for Enriching Europeana Metadata by Vassilis Tzouvaras
Slides 64 - 73: One by One: developing digital literacy in museums by Anra Kennedy
Slides 74 - 85: HeritageMaps.ie - Ireland's One-Stop Heritage Portal by Patrick Reid
Slides 86 - 90: Open GLAM now! - Sharing knowledge openly online by Larissa Borck
Slides 91 - 103: Endangered Archives Programme the world's most diverse online archive by Tristan Roddis
Slides 104 - 109: We transform the world with culture - Our impact on climate change by Barbara Fischer, Killian Downing and Peter Soemers
Slide 2 - 66: Shaping innovatin in education with cultural heritage by Fred Truyen, Steven Stegers, Evita Tasiopoulou and Marco Neves
Slides 67 - 152: Multilingual access and machine translation by Andy Neale, Antoine Isaac, Pavel Kats, Alex Raginsky and Sergiu Gordea
Slides 155 - 164: How to implement the FAIR principles in digital culture by Sara Di Giorgio, Saskia Scheltjens and Makx Dekkers, Seamus Ross, Franco Niccolucci and Erzsébet Tóth-Czifra
Slide 166: EuropeanaTech Unconference by Clemens Neudecker
Slides 2 - 35: Introduction to Impact Workshop by Dafydd Tudur, Maja Drabczyk, Julia Fallon and Simon Tanner
Slides 36 - 68: Music to my ears: Making rights understandable by Juozas Markauskas and Jurga Gradauskaite
Slides 70 - 92: Achieving inclusivity & diversity in the Europeana Network by Killian Downing, Larissa Borck and Tola Dabiri
Slides 94 - 123: Communicating the value of digital culture to stakeholders by Susan Hazan, Eleanor Kenny and Katherine Heid
Welcome to the first live UiPath Community Day Dubai! Join us for this unique occasion to meet our local and global UiPath Community and leaders. You will get a full view of the MEA region's automation landscape and the AI Powered automation technology capabilities of UiPath. Also, hosted by our local partners Marc Ellis, you will enjoy a half-day packed with industry insights and automation peers networking.
📕 Curious on our agenda? Wait no more!
10:00 Welcome note - UiPath Community in Dubai
Lovely Sinha, UiPath Community Chapter Leader, UiPath MVPx3, Hyper-automation Consultant, First Abu Dhabi Bank
10:20 A UiPath cross-region MEA overview
Ashraf El Zarka, VP and Managing Director MEA, UiPath
10:35: Customer Success Journey
Deepthi Deepak, Head of Intelligent Automation CoE, First Abu Dhabi Bank
11:15 The UiPath approach to GenAI with our three principles: improve accuracy, supercharge productivity, and automate more
Boris Krumrey, Global VP, Automation Innovation, UiPath
12:15 To discover how Marc Ellis leverages tech-driven solutions in recruitment and managed services.
Brendan Lingam, Director of Sales and Business Development, Marc Ellis
Alt. GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using ...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
zkStudyClub - Reef: Fast Succinct Non-Interactive Zero-Knowledge Regex ProofsAlex Pruden
This paper presents Reef, a system for generating publicly verifiable succinct non-interactive zero-knowledge proofs that a committed document matches or does not match a regular expression. We describe applications such as proving the strength of passwords, the provenance of email despite redactions, the validity of oblivious DNS queries, and the existence of mutations in DNA. Reef supports the Perl Compatible Regular Expression syntax, including wildcards, alternation, ranges, capture groups, Kleene star, negations, and lookarounds. Reef introduces a new type of automata, Skipping Alternating Finite Automata (SAFA), that skips irrelevant parts of a document when producing proofs without undermining soundness, and instantiates SAFA with a lookup argument. Our experimental evaluation confirms that Reef can generate proofs for documents with 32M characters; the proofs are small and cheap to verify (under a second).
Paper: https://eprint.iacr.org/2023/1886
LF Energy Webinar: Electrical Grid Modelling and Simulation Through PowSyBl -...DanBrown980551
Do you want to learn how to model and simulate an electrical network from scratch in under an hour?
Then welcome to this PowSyBl workshop, hosted by Rte, the French Transmission System Operator (TSO)!
During the webinar, you will discover the PowSyBl ecosystem as well as handle and study an electrical network through an interactive Python notebook.
PowSyBl is an open source project hosted by LF Energy, which offers a comprehensive set of features for electrical grid modelling and simulation. Among other advanced features, PowSyBl provides:
- A fully editable and extendable library for grid component modelling;
- Visualization tools to display your network;
- Grid simulation tools, such as power flows, security analyses (with or without remedial actions) and sensitivity analyses;
The framework is mostly written in Java, with a Python binding so that Python developers can access PowSyBl functionalities as well.
What you will learn during the webinar:
- For beginners: discover PowSyBl's functionalities through a quick general presentation and the notebook, without needing any expert coding skills;
- For advanced developers: master the skills to efficiently apply PowSyBl functionalities to your real-world scenarios.
Pushing the limits of ePRTC: 100ns holdover for 100 daysAdtran
At WSTS 2024, Alon Stern explored the topic of parametric holdover and explained how recent research findings can be implemented in real-world PNT networks to achieve 100 nanoseconds of accuracy for up to 100 days.
The Metaverse and AI: how can decision-makers harness the Metaverse for their...Jen Stirrup
The Metaverse is popularized in science fiction, and now it is becoming closer to being a part of our daily lives through the use of social media and shopping companies. How can businesses survive in a world where Artificial Intelligence is becoming the present as well as the future of technology, and how does the Metaverse fit into business strategy when futurist ideas are developing into reality at accelerated rates? How do we do this when our data isn't up to scratch? How can we move towards success with our data so we are set up for the Metaverse when it arrives?
How can you help your company evolve, adapt, and succeed using Artificial Intelligence and the Metaverse to stay ahead of the competition? What are the potential issues, complications, and benefits that these technologies could bring to us and our organizations? In this session, Jen Stirrup will explain how to start thinking about these technologies as an organisation.
State of ICS and IoT Cyber Threat Landscape Report 2024 previewPrayukth K V
The IoT and OT threat landscape report has been prepared by the Threat Research Team at Sectrio using data from Sectrio, cyber threat intelligence farming facilities spread across over 85 cities around the world. In addition, Sectrio also runs AI-based advanced threat and payload engagement facilities that serve as sinks to attract and engage sophisticated threat actors, and newer malware including new variants and latent threats that are at an earlier stage of development.
The latest edition of the OT/ICS and IoT security Threat Landscape Report 2024 also covers:
State of global ICS asset and network exposure
Sectoral targets and attacks as well as the cost of ransom
Global APT activity, AI usage, actor and tactic profiles, and implications
Rise in volumes of AI-powered cyberattacks
Major cyber events in 2024
Malware and malicious payload trends
Cyberattack types and targets
Vulnerability exploit attempts on CVEs
Attacks on counties – USA
Expansion of bot farms – how, where, and why
In-depth analysis of the cyber threat landscape across North America, South America, Europe, APAC, and the Middle East
Why are attacks on smart factories rising?
Cyber risk predictions
Axis of attacks – Europe
Systemic attacks in the Middle East
Download the full report from here:
https://sectrio.com/resources/ot-threat-landscape-reports/sectrio-releases-ot-ics-and-iot-security-threat-landscape-report-2024/
PHP Frameworks: I want to break free (IPC Berlin 2024)Ralf Eggert
In this presentation, we examine the challenges and limitations of relying too heavily on PHP frameworks in web development. We discuss the history of PHP and its frameworks to understand how this dependence has evolved. The focus will be on providing concrete tips and strategies to reduce reliance on these frameworks, based on real-world examples and practical considerations. The goal is to equip developers with the skills and knowledge to create more flexible and future-proof web applications. We'll explore the importance of maintaining autonomy in a rapidly changing tech landscape and how to make informed decisions in PHP development.
This talk is aimed at encouraging a more independent approach to using PHP frameworks, moving towards a more flexible and future-proof approach to PHP development.
Accelerate your Kubernetes clusters with Varnish CachingThijs Feryn
A presentation about the usage and availability of Varnish on Kubernetes. This talk explores the capabilities of Varnish caching and shows how to use the Varnish Helm chart to deploy it to Kubernetes.
This presentation was delivered at K8SUG Singapore. See https://feryn.eu/presentations/accelerate-your-kubernetes-clusters-with-varnish-caching-k8sug-singapore-28-2024 for more details.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 4DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 4. In this session, we will cover Test Manager overview along with SAP heatmap.
The UiPath Test Manager overview with SAP heatmap webinar offers a concise yet comprehensive exploration of the role of a Test Manager within SAP environments, coupled with the utilization of heatmaps for effective testing strategies.
Participants will gain insights into the responsibilities, challenges, and best practices associated with test management in SAP projects. Additionally, the webinar delves into the significance of heatmaps as a visual aid for identifying testing priorities, areas of risk, and resource allocation within SAP landscapes. Through this session, attendees can expect to enhance their understanding of test management principles while learning practical approaches to optimize testing processes in SAP environments using heatmap visualization techniques
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into SAP testing best practices
2. Heatmap utilization for testing
3. Optimization of testing processes
4. Demo
Topics covered:
Execution from the test manager
Orchestrator execution result
Defect reporting
SAP heatmap example with demo
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Transcript: Selling digital books in 2024: Insights from industry leaders - T...BookNet Canada
The publishing industry has been selling digital audiobooks and ebooks for over a decade and has found its groove. What’s changed? What has stayed the same? Where do we go from here? Join a group of leading sales peers from across the industry for a conversation about the lessons learned since the popularization of digital books, best practices, digital book supply chain management, and more.
Link to video recording: https://bnctechforum.ca/sessions/selling-digital-books-in-2024-insights-from-industry-leaders/
Presented by BookNet Canada on May 28, 2024, with support from the Department of Canadian Heritage.
4. Vision:
We believe in making cultural heritage openly accessible in a
digital way, to promote the exchange of ideas and information.
This helps us all to understand our cultural diversity better and
contributes to a thriving knowledge economy.
5.
6. 5.6 million visits 2012
500+ Europeana Network
members
2200+ participatinginstitutions
ny Hackathonsyielding 75prototypes
25 API
implementations, 40
requests per week
27 million objects released as open data
Data Model used by
US, Brazil, Korea,
S.Africa
11. The European
Library acts as
the library
aggregator
indexes 115m
bibliographic
records, plus 16m
digital links
48 National
Libraries of Europe
Plus 19 research
libraries
Links to digitised
content and
bibliographic
records at
libraries
Started in 1990s -
‘Mother’ of
Europeana.
23. Cultivatenew ways for users
toparticipatein their
cultural heritage
ENGAGE
Enhance users’
experience
Extend social media
presence
Channels to Users
27. Licensing Framework
EDM
Business models
O
pen
Labs
Knowledge sharing
Repository
Core Platform
Europeana as a core service platform
We have a 3-year
project
Europeana
Cloud
Cloud-based
infrastructure for
the storage &
sharing of data &
content
Offering
economies of
scale
With access to
knowledge &
solutions for
sustainability,
licensing
&governance
28. Impact
A sustainable
infrastructure and
service for
European
Researchers and
others
Provide use cases
from Researchers
on what they want
and how they want
it
Produce a
Legal, Social and
Technological
Framework for
working together in
the Cloud
Deliver technical
infrastructure to
support the cloud
Create pilot ‘service’
Europeana
Research. Joint
Venture Europeana
& The European
Library
→
Europeana Cloud Work
34. Europeana
Research:
Cross-domain
platform to support
digital scholarship
Emphasis on open
access content,
tools and services
Data from
Europeana & The
European Library
but also content
from willing
museum, library,
archive, audio
visual providers
TEL
researcher
Europeana
Europeana Research
DARIAH
DANS
CESSDA
CLARIN
35. Europeana Research Services
Europeana Research
Platform
Content & Data
Tools
“Portal”
“Annotation”
“API”
“SPARQL”
Services
Europeana Repository
TEL Repository
DARIAH
CLARIN
Includes 115 million
bibliographic records from
European libraries
Includes non
textual
m
aterial AV,
Pictures, 3D
etc
36. Working with user communities in Europeana Cloud and from the
Europeana Network to create Europeana Research,
But this may not be a portal…..it could be an API delivering tools and
services to existing humanities portals, or a set of resources, data and
mechanisms accessible via the cloud…..
Europeana
Research
Digital Humanities researchers
Product Developers from TEL &
Europeana and within Europeana
Cloud
43. Toolbox (white)
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Europeana was born as a political vision to create social and economical capital
Grew out of The European Library, but only gives access to resources with digital items attached. Takes stuff from museums, libraries, archives, audio visual collections and is dependent on an aggregation structure.
Sneak preview of the new portal out this week
The strategic plan comprises four tracks around which our activity turns and on which all our resources are focused
400 direct partners representing potentially 60,000 instibutions across Europe all able to talk to each other and discover the
This has led to the creation of a strong infrastructure for aggregation of cultural objects and a variety of ways to access this material online.
So it brings in digital content but it also holds non digital bibliographic records. As libraries you can all join TEL – it delivers to Europeana but also into Research library systems, has its own linked open data cloud….
These are the kinds of things we have been doing so far and they give a taster of what is to come.
SoundCloud, MuseScore, Wikipedia, Twitter, Google Maps and Europeana, with content from the British Library, Bibliothèque Nationale de France, IMSLP and other Europeana data providers.
Showing specific content together with other relevant content
Distribution is central to the strategy of Europeana and has been enabled by a few things- Interoperability, Open metadata, Rights labelling, machine access.
Futher looking at our facilation or fix work
Developing our API for distribution
Producing linked open data
Link to the books and monographs on world war one – all languages – taking the interested user deeper Peak in traffic generated by Press release on Hitler and Bible – more eyeballs – 20,000 per day – returning user remaining high
Among them I could mention the Fundaccion Cristobal Balenciaga in Spain, the Fendi Heritage foundation and GucciMuseo in Italy. Armani foundation also contacted us for a meeting two days ago. The surprising thing for us is that these private institutions, which are multinational brands, have been always very conservative about sharing material from their archives, which have been always considered an asset to protect rather than open and share. And these institutions have been always very reluctant in joining "multibrand" initiatives. ...It seems that the open and collaborative nature of Europeana is slowly changing their mind-set. Another clear example of this change is the enthusiasm showed by Salvatore Ferragamo Museum in joining our new Tumblr blog ( http://bit.ly/XGV9DW ), for which the director of the museum is curating a special edition on Ferragamo iconic shoes that is going online during this week. And just few days ago also the Bata Shoe Museum in Toronto asked us to collaborate on our Tumblr blog. The relation and the possible creative synergies between Fashion industry and the GLAMs community will be also the main theme of our forthcoming international conference in Florence, in which we will have keynotes speakers coming from major public museums in Europe (like V&A and MoMu), top fashion brands like Pucci, Ferragamo and Balenciaga, fashion magazines like Vogue and academic institutions like the FIT of New York, the London College of Fashion, Polimoda in Florence and the Centre for Fashion Studies of the University of Stockholm. You could find more info on the programme here: http://www.europeanafashion.eu/conference/ And finally, another important achievement we're trying to reach is related to the engagement of users. In fact, on the 22nd of March, hosted by our partner Nordiska Museet in Stockholm, we're going to organise our first GLAM-WIKI event in cooperation with Wikimedia Sweden and Europeana Awareness. This will be the first public event of a series of five events we're going to organise with Wikimedia in the Netherlands, UK, France and Italy, with the goal of engaging users with fashion heritage content on-line.
So we’ve done a lot, but to move to the next stage I believe we have to pool resources, create a common hub. From which we can create a variety of frontends or services.
The aim being to create a hub that contains all this stuff, This for me is the vision for Europeana and the ecosystem, and I see Europeana Cloud being able to deliver on it. And the main reason is that Europeana cannot be all things to all men……it needs to deliver to specific audiences to engage
This is the aim of Europeana Cloud – it builds on much of what we have done and are doing, both technically and within the network but can be made to happen now courtesy of 2 major projects with some contribution from a couple of others funded in the last call such as LoCloud and Eagle.
We create a space where backend infrastructures are shared and the costs therefore reduced, but that has mulitiple front ends to serve specific audiences, including, within this project the development of Europeana Research from the work of The European Library but incorporating a much wide set of data
Is based on 2 premises
From here we can create a front end or a platform of services that serve the research community
If you want to help us create a service of that includes non textual data you can do so by joining the Europeana network and becoming part of the taskforces that work out what is needed and how we deliver it technically, socially and legally.
This is the aim of Europeana Cloud – it builds on much of what we have done and are doing, both technically and within the network but can be made to happen now courtesy of 2 major projects with some contribution from a couple of others funded in the last call such as LoCloud and Eagle.
This is what you can do…….You can also come to me afterwards if you want to
Go to pro.europeana.eu and click on the Europeana Network tab
Scroll down to Join the Europeana Network. Now if you have not already done this, could you now click on the Register for Membership link and then fill in the form.