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With the so many prevailing stories of uncertainty around for everyone, our roles as educators supporting young people and colleagues to know how to navigate it can be overwhelming! As Thea Snow said on a recent episode, feeling safe in uncertainty is hard. But this is where perhaps we can all learn from the wisdom of those with expertise in futures work and facilitating spaces to explore desirable regenerative futures. Bill Sharpe (http://www.billsharpe.uk/) is one such expert, who has been helping teams in all sectors of organisations and society find co-ordinated ways of managing innovation, creating transformational change that has a chance of succeeding, and ways of seeing the future in the present. He developed the adapted version of the Three Horizons framework as a method for futures studies and practice with Anthony Hodgson, Andrew Curry and Graham Leicester.Bill was previously a Research Director at Hewlett-Packard's corporate labs in Bristol, UK. He joined HP Laboratories in 1985, becoming one of the first HP Laboratory Directors outside the US. Early work in Bristol provided the impetus for him to set up the Personal Systems Lab that led HP's early work in the emerging world of smart consumer products, mobile computing and digital imaging. Bill then took an assignment in the USA for two years to lead the Internet Solutions Operation of HP's Laserjet Bueiness through the transition to Web. Back in Bristol, Bill set up new mechanisms for coupling HP Labs to the creation of HP's new information appliance businesses. This work led him to co-found the Appliance Studio in 1999 as an independent company, delivering innovation to a wider commercial audience. Having created a range of new product ideas for clients, in particular new business in digital signage for Steelcase Inc, the Studio launched its own start-up Lucid Signs. With the sale of Lucid Signs, Bill moved on to focus entirely on personal research and consulting. Early in his career, Bill took an active role in UK government research through his work with the Science and Engineering Research Council (SERC) and Advanced IT (Alvey) programs. As a member of the Programme Directorate at Alvey - a programme designed to foster R&D between industry and academia - Bill co-coordinated research into intelligent knowledge-based systems.Bill is a highly accomplished practitioner in futures techniques and systems change, and now works with Future Stewards (https://futurestewards.com/), the International Futures Forum (https://www.internationalfuturesforum.com/) and H3Uni (https://www.h3uni.org/) to pioneer new approaches to futures, systems thinking, and transformative innovation. He is the author of Three Horizons: The Patterning of Hope (https://www.triarchypress.net/three-horizons.html) and Economies of Life: Patterns of Health and Wealth (https://www.triarchypress.net/economies-of-life.html).Additional info about Three horizons: A pathways practice for transformation - Three Horizons is a simple and intuitive framework for thinking about the future. The framework explains how people often manage to disagree so violently about their visions of the future and how to achieve them - and it offers a practical way to begin constructive conversations about the future at home, in organisations and in society at large. The three horizons are about much, much more than simply stretching our thinking to embrace the short, medium and long term. They offer a co-ordinated way of managing innovation, a way of creating transformational change that has a chance of succeeding, a way of dealing with uncertainty and a way of seeing the future in the present.Kate Raworth's excellent description of 3H: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5KfRQJqpPUJonathan Rowson's great explanation of the H2 minus vortex: https://perspecteeva.substack.com/p/deactivating-the-h2minus-vortex Social LinksLinkedIn: @bill-sharpe - https://www.linkedin.com/in/bill-sharpe-6689
Audio-Podcast – OrionX.net: Deep Insight, Market Execution, Customer Engagement
Peter Ungaro, one of the most celebrated captains of the supercomputing and AI industry, formerly the CEO of Cray, SVP and General Manager of HPC, AI, Mission Critical Systems, Edge, and HP Labs at HPE, and a board member of Simr, and Burak Yenier, CEO & Co-Founder of Simr, join Shahin Khan to discuss SimOps, an important shift in the industry and a parallel to DevOps but for digital product design and scientific discovery. [audio mp3="https://orionx.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/OXD024_SimOps-Simr_Peter-Ungaro_Burak-Yenier_20240818.mp3"][/audio] The post SimOps with Peter Ungaro and Burak Yenier of Simr appeared first on OrionX.net.
Building on the success and impact of Library 2020: Today's Leading Visionaries Describe Tomorrow's Library by Joseph Janes, Library 2035: Imagining the Next Generation of Libraries (Rowman & Littlefield, 2024) edited by Sandra Hirshupdates, expands upon, and broadens the discussions on the future of libraries and the ways in which they transform information services to best serve their communities. Library 2035 explores the lessons learned over the past decade and forecasts the opportunities, strengths, and challenges for libraries in the future. Contributors including R. David Lankes, Kelvin Watson, Annie Norman, Miguel Figueroa, and Nicole Cooke, along with 25 other library leaders, were asked to describe the “library of 2035” in whatever way they wanted. Their responses to this question will inspire, provoke, challenge, and expand our thinking about the role and importance of libraries in the future. Library leaders, LIS students and faculty will find this book particularly meaningful and useful as we grapple with what the future of libraries and the profession will be. Dr. Sandra Hirsh hosts the Library 2035: Imagining the Next Generation of Libraries Webcast with contributors to this work Dr. Sandra Hirsh is the Associate Dean for Academics in the College of Professional and Global Education at San José State University (SJSU). She previously served as professor and director of the SJSU School of Information and worked at HP Labs, Microsoft, and LinkedIn. She is past president of the Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) and the Association for Information Science & Technology (ASIS&T). Dr. Michael LaMagna is the Information Literacy Program & Library Services Coordinator and Professor of Library Services at Delaware County Community College. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Building on the success and impact of Library 2020: Today's Leading Visionaries Describe Tomorrow's Library by Joseph Janes, Library 2035: Imagining the Next Generation of Libraries (Rowman & Littlefield, 2024) edited by Sandra Hirshupdates, expands upon, and broadens the discussions on the future of libraries and the ways in which they transform information services to best serve their communities. Library 2035 explores the lessons learned over the past decade and forecasts the opportunities, strengths, and challenges for libraries in the future. Contributors including R. David Lankes, Kelvin Watson, Annie Norman, Miguel Figueroa, and Nicole Cooke, along with 25 other library leaders, were asked to describe the “library of 2035” in whatever way they wanted. Their responses to this question will inspire, provoke, challenge, and expand our thinking about the role and importance of libraries in the future. Library leaders, LIS students and faculty will find this book particularly meaningful and useful as we grapple with what the future of libraries and the profession will be. Dr. Sandra Hirsh hosts the Library 2035: Imagining the Next Generation of Libraries Webcast with contributors to this work Dr. Sandra Hirsh is the Associate Dean for Academics in the College of Professional and Global Education at San José State University (SJSU). She previously served as professor and director of the SJSU School of Information and worked at HP Labs, Microsoft, and LinkedIn. She is past president of the Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) and the Association for Information Science & Technology (ASIS&T). Dr. Michael LaMagna is the Information Literacy Program & Library Services Coordinator and Professor of Library Services at Delaware County Community College. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/education
Building on the success and impact of Library 2020: Today's Leading Visionaries Describe Tomorrow's Library by Joseph Janes, Library 2035: Imagining the Next Generation of Libraries (Rowman & Littlefield, 2024) edited by Sandra Hirshupdates, expands upon, and broadens the discussions on the future of libraries and the ways in which they transform information services to best serve their communities. Library 2035 explores the lessons learned over the past decade and forecasts the opportunities, strengths, and challenges for libraries in the future. Contributors including R. David Lankes, Kelvin Watson, Annie Norman, Miguel Figueroa, and Nicole Cooke, along with 25 other library leaders, were asked to describe the “library of 2035” in whatever way they wanted. Their responses to this question will inspire, provoke, challenge, and expand our thinking about the role and importance of libraries in the future. Library leaders, LIS students and faculty will find this book particularly meaningful and useful as we grapple with what the future of libraries and the profession will be. Dr. Sandra Hirsh hosts the Library 2035: Imagining the Next Generation of Libraries Webcast with contributors to this work Dr. Sandra Hirsh is the Associate Dean for Academics in the College of Professional and Global Education at San José State University (SJSU). She previously served as professor and director of the SJSU School of Information and worked at HP Labs, Microsoft, and LinkedIn. She is past president of the Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) and the Association for Information Science & Technology (ASIS&T). Dr. Michael LaMagna is the Information Literacy Program & Library Services Coordinator and Professor of Library Services at Delaware County Community College. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/communications
Building on the success and impact of Library 2020: Today's Leading Visionaries Describe Tomorrow's Library by Joseph Janes, Library 2035: Imagining the Next Generation of Libraries (Rowman & Littlefield, 2024) edited by Sandra Hirshupdates, expands upon, and broadens the discussions on the future of libraries and the ways in which they transform information services to best serve their communities. Library 2035 explores the lessons learned over the past decade and forecasts the opportunities, strengths, and challenges for libraries in the future. Contributors including R. David Lankes, Kelvin Watson, Annie Norman, Miguel Figueroa, and Nicole Cooke, along with 25 other library leaders, were asked to describe the “library of 2035” in whatever way they wanted. Their responses to this question will inspire, provoke, challenge, and expand our thinking about the role and importance of libraries in the future. Library leaders, LIS students and faculty will find this book particularly meaningful and useful as we grapple with what the future of libraries and the profession will be. Dr. Sandra Hirsh hosts the Library 2035: Imagining the Next Generation of Libraries Webcast with contributors to this work Dr. Sandra Hirsh is the Associate Dean for Academics in the College of Professional and Global Education at San José State University (SJSU). She previously served as professor and director of the SJSU School of Information and worked at HP Labs, Microsoft, and LinkedIn. She is past president of the Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) and the Association for Information Science & Technology (ASIS&T). Dr. Michael LaMagna is the Information Literacy Program & Library Services Coordinator and Professor of Library Services at Delaware County Community College. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/science-technology-and-society
Building on the success and impact of Library 2020: Today's Leading Visionaries Describe Tomorrow's Library by Joseph Janes, Library 2035: Imagining the Next Generation of Libraries (Rowman & Littlefield, 2024) edited by Sandra Hirshupdates, expands upon, and broadens the discussions on the future of libraries and the ways in which they transform information services to best serve their communities. Library 2035 explores the lessons learned over the past decade and forecasts the opportunities, strengths, and challenges for libraries in the future. Contributors including R. David Lankes, Kelvin Watson, Annie Norman, Miguel Figueroa, and Nicole Cooke, along with 25 other library leaders, were asked to describe the “library of 2035” in whatever way they wanted. Their responses to this question will inspire, provoke, challenge, and expand our thinking about the role and importance of libraries in the future. Library leaders, LIS students and faculty will find this book particularly meaningful and useful as we grapple with what the future of libraries and the profession will be. Dr. Sandra Hirsh hosts the Library 2035: Imagining the Next Generation of Libraries Webcast with contributors to this work Dr. Sandra Hirsh is the Associate Dean for Academics in the College of Professional and Global Education at San José State University (SJSU). She previously served as professor and director of the SJSU School of Information and worked at HP Labs, Microsoft, and LinkedIn. She is past president of the Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) and the Association for Information Science & Technology (ASIS&T). Dr. Michael LaMagna is the Information Literacy Program & Library Services Coordinator and Professor of Library Services at Delaware County Community College. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week, Saron talks with Camille Eddy, Technical Product Manager. Camille talks about her life growing up as a Pastor's child, how she started and grew her business, and when she first found her passion for tech. Camille also shares her experience overcoming a fear of public speaking, and why it enabled her not only to travel the world but also land internships at companies like Google X, NVIDIA, and HP Labs all before graduating. Saron also talks to Camille about when she was asked to introduce President Obama. Camille concludes with principles she would lead with if she was a career transitioner looking to start her career in tech today. Show Links Code Comments (sponsor) IRL (sponsor) Project Manager Product Manager Robotics Engineering Artificial Intelligence Camille's GitHub Camille's Instagram Camille's Twitter
Welcome to episode 2 of The Curious Refuge Podcast! In this episode we talk with two phenomenal people from the team at Leia Inc, Marlon Fuentes and Nima Zeighami. Marlon is Leia Inc's Social Media and Community Manager, and Nima is their Director of Product. In the episode we talk about a handful of different topics from the history of Leia Inc, to 3D tools, and even how to make your short film into a 3D film in just 5 seconds. Join Our Newsletter for the Latest AI Filmmaking News: https://curiousrefuge.com/ Our AI Filmmaking Course Starts Soon: https://curiousrefuge.com/ai-filmmaking Check out Leia Inc: https://www.leiainc.com/ Leia Inc. is a leading provider of eyewear-free 3D display hardware and software solutions. Our breakthrough technology, born from pioneering research at HP Labs and Philips, leverages advanced optics and AI to transform ordinary displays into naturally immersive experiences. We envision a future where the three-dimensional reality of our physical world is seamlessly reflected in the digital space to transform the way we work, play, and connect — and strive to make 3D accessible to anyone, anywhere, on any device. The company is headquartered in Menlo Park, CA. Link from the show: Future Shock by Alvin Toffler: https://www.amazon.com/Future-Shock-Alvin-Toffler/dp/0553277375 Lume Pad 2: https://www.leiainc.com/lume-pad-2
David Fattal is the founder and CTO of Leia, a company dedicated to revolutionizing visual experiences through light field display technologies. Lightfield displays are able to create 3D images without glasses. You might remember Leia for its work on the LumePad tablets and the Hydrogen One Smartphone from Red.David is a quantum physicist who got his Ph.D. from Stanford with a focus on Quantum Computing and Quantum Communications. His research experience led him to HP Labs, which was at the forefront of Quantum Information Processing. He co-authored numerous scientific papers at both institutions.A moment of serendipity while at HP Labs led to the creation of Leia. David spun the company out of HP in 2014 and has been the chief innovator since. In this conversation, David makes the case for why every screen should be capable of 3D. He goes on to discuss: - the basics of quantum computing, - how his pursuits in quantum computing led to new type of display technology, - what are light fields, why consumer should care and early use cases, - the challenges of bringing light fields to mobile devices and lessons learned from working with Red cameras in building a mobile phone, - and their go-to-market strategy.You can find all of the show notes at thearshow.com. Please consider contributing to my Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/theARshow.
Amr Awadallah is the founder and CEO of Vectara, an LLM-powered search company that enables customers to understand exactly what their users are asking. They just announced that they've raised a $28.5 Million round led by Race Capital. He was previously the founder of Cloudera, which went IPO and then was acquired for $5.3 Billion. He has held roles at Google Cloud, Yahoo, Nortel, and HP Labs before this. He has a Phd from Stanford.In this episode, we cover a range of topics including: - How search engines work - Generative AI conversational search - Hallucination problem in LLMs - Grounded Generation - Fine tuning vs In-context learning - Typical use cases within enterprise search - Generative AI companies he's excited about Amr's favorite book: Sapiens (Author: Yuval Noah Harari) --------Where to find Prateek Joshi: Newsletter: https://prateekjoshi.substack.com Website: https://prateekj.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/prateek-joshi-91047b19 Twitter: https://twitter.com/prateekvjoshi
Dr Ali El Kaafarani, founder and CEO of PQShield, explains how quantum computers will one day crack today's encryption to expose our data, discusses the race to create cryptography that can fend off quantum attacks, and why “strengthening the startup position in the UK should be a top priority for the UK government to excel at quantum computing”. Oxford-headquartered PQShield is a cybersecurity spinout founded by researchers to develop post-quantum cryptography tools. The company, which has raised nearly $27m in funding, has contributed to developing the first cryptography standards designed to block cyberattacks powered by quantum machines. Its software and hardware products are already being adopted by companies such as Bosch and Collins Aerospace. Kaafarani is also a researcher at the Mathematical Institute at the University of Oxford and has previous experience at HP Labs.
TLDR alert - If you're short on time and still want to hear some of the gems of wisdom and inspiring actions of female powerhouse Katz Kiely then here is 7-minutes of soundbites If you do have the time, on a run, cycle, or drive, check out the full episode. About KatzKatz is an award-winning digital pioneer, transformation leader, and systems thinker. She has a proven track record of delivering strategic cultural and operational programs that have led to measurable improvements in Employee Experience, employer brand, and operational efficiency.She has supported some of the world's traditional organizations through change, including the first Open Innovation Platform with HP Labs, rearchitecting the way the UN does business, and designing a city-scale behavior change platform with Intel and the GLA.She is passionate about using design thinking and digital tech to unlock the full potential of people, judges for digital awards writes for b2b publications, and regularly shares her vision of a more human-centered Future of Work at conferences, including twice at TEDxShe believes that doing good is good business, is the Founder, Chair of Trustees for Frontline.Live and a proud ambassador of the Burning Man Foundation. Social Links Katz's Site Katz TedX Talk Frontline.Live Ukraine Frontline Live mapTwitterLinkedinShow LinksSky Manifest Mira Microsoft What three words Giles Rhys Jones Bracken Darrel Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Katz Kiely Katz is an award-winning digital pioneer, transformation leader, and systems thinker. She has a proven track record of delivering strategic cultural and operational programs that have led to measurable improvements in Employee Experience, employer brand, and operational efficiency.She has supported some of the world's traditional organizations through change, including the first Open Innovation Platform with HP Labs, rearchitecting the way the UN does business, and designing a city-scale behavior change platform with Intel and the GLA.She is passionate about using design thinking and digital tech to unlock the full potential of people, judges for digital awards, writes for b2b publications, and regularly shares her vision of a more human-centered Future of Work at conferences, including twice at TEDxShe believes that doing good is good business, is the Founder, Chair of Trustees for Frontline.Live and a proud ambassador of the Burning Man Foundation. What We Discuss (3.00-8.00) Katz discusses who she is and what made her.(9.30) - Self-diagnosed with ADHD (12.50) Getting Pregnant and having a child while at University (14.15) How her tenacity manifests (16.10) Dealing with fragility and doubt (18.00 - 22.00) Her gifts and talents and what she is complimented for (26.30) How she fell in love with digital and formed her first start-up Between working with the BBC(31.27 -35.00) Katz explains her Greatest Show for Earth Idea for innovation(35.20 - 39.00) Driving digital transformation for the UN and ITU through design thinking (42.20-47.00) BEEP (48.20-56.00) The need to use technology to bond and break tribalism (1.01.30- 1.04.00) CREAT Leadership Framework (1.07.40-1.12.00) Applying the framework while Running a co-creation design thinking workshop with school children and we discuss education and the need for system change (1.15.00- 1.19) Katz explains how she created Frontline.Live (1.21.00 - 1.26.00) How she is pivoting the platform to support Ukraine and the changes she is having to make to the tech platform, and the reality of dealing with international NGOs1.29.00 - Katz's ambition for the open source value and application of the BEEP platformSocial Links Katz's Site Katz TedX Talk Frontline.Live Ukraine Frontline Live mapTwitterLinkedin Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In his recently released book “The Innovation Factory,” Ansys CTO Prith Banerjee, Ph.D., distills his 35 years of experience in academia, startups, and large companies to present a vision of how to make innovation an ongoing process. Prith stops by TechVibe Radio to detail how his book relies on his experience and that of other innovators he interviews to reveal “the ingredients of the secret sauce required to generate successful open innovation.” Before joining Ansys, he spent more than 20 years as a professor, chairman, and dean at the University of Illinois and Northwestern University. He founded two startup companies, AccelChip and Binachip. Finally, as the director of the iconic HP Labs and Accenture Labs, and as the CTO of ABB and Schneider Electric, he managed large research organizations.
“Instead of being given a roadmap of features, an empowered team is given a problem to solve and they get to figure out the best way to solve that problem." Marty Cagan is the founder of the Silicon Valley Product Group and the author of “Inspired” and “Empowered”. In this episode, we discussed how companies ought to build great products by learning from the best product companies. Marty explained the importance of building the right product and shared the two inconvenient truths about building products. Marty then elaborated on the traits a good product team has and how to create an empowered product team by ensuring ownership and alignment and by having clear product vision, strategy, and focus. Towards the end, Marty shared the importance of coaching and nurturing people, how to hire better, and how to structure product team topologies. Listen out for: Career Journey - [00:05:48] Writing Inspired & Empowered - [00:11:38] Building the Right Product - [00:16:23] Two Inconvenient Truths - [00:17:45] Traits of Good Product Teams - [00:22:06] Engineering Involvement - [00:24:53] Empowered - [00:26:44] Ownership & Alignment - [00:28:41] Product Vision & Strategy - [00:33:00] Focus - [00:35:39] Coaching & Nurturing People - [00:39:40] Hiring - [00:41:56] How to Structure Teams - [00:43:49] 4 Tech Lead Wisdom - [00:46:55] _____ Marty Cagan's Bio Before founding the Silicon Valley Product Group to pursue his interests in helping others create successful products through his writing, speaking, advising and coaching, Marty Cagan served as an executive responsible for defining and building products for some of the most successful companies in the world, including HP Labs, Netscape Communications, and eBay. Marty is also the author of the books INSPIRED: How to Create Tech Products Customers Love and EMPOWERED: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Products. Follow Marty: Website – https://www.svpg.com/ LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/cagan Twitter – @cagan Our Sponsors DevTernity 2022 (devternity.com) is the top international software development conference with an emphasis on coding, architecture, and tech leadership skills. The lineup is truly stellar and features many legends of software development like Robert "Uncle Bob" Martin, Kent Beck, Scott Hanselman, Venkat Subramaniam, Kevlin Henney, and many others! The conference takes place online, and we have the 10% discount code for you: AWSM_TLJ. Skills Matter is the global community and events platform for software professionals. You get on-demand access to their latest content, thought leadership insights as well as the exciting schedule of tech events running across all time zones. Head on over to skillsmatter.com to become part of the tech community that matters most to you - it's free to join and easy to keep up with the latest tech trends. Like this episode? Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and submit your feedback. Follow @techleadjournal on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram. Pledge your support by becoming a patron. For more info about the episode (including quotes and transcript), visit techleadjournal.dev/episodes/102.
Ever since Agile started, different frameworks have emerged. There has been an abundance of training and hyped certificates to get people up to speed. After a few days of following a course, they are now the experts of agility. But does that really support you and your organization in creating the right value? True power comes from empowerment. Having teams and people in the right place, empowered to make the decisions, instead of blindly following the traditional hierarchy is where a lot of organizations could benefit from. Marty Cagan, author and responsible for building products for organizations like HP and eBay, joins us to talk about how empowering organizations. What you'll discover in this show:- Just implementing any framework won't help you solve your problems - It takes a whole lot of courage to give power to whoever should have it - Product Discovery is tough but incredibly valuable Speakers: Marty CaganPartner, Silicon Valley Product Group Marty Cagan founded the Silicon Valley Product Group in 2003 to pursue his interests in helping others create successful products through his writing, speaking, advising, and coaching. Previously, Marty served as an executive responsible for defining and building products for some of the most successful companies in the world, including HP Labs, Netscape Communications, and eBay.Marty is the author of INSPIRED: How To Create Tech Products Customers Love, and the recently released EMPOWERED: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Products. Marty is an invited speaker at conferences and companies worldwide and is a graduate of the University of California at Santa Cruz and of the Stanford University Executive Institute. Contact Marty:www.svpg.com Twitter: @cagan LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cagan Sander Dur (host)Scrum Master, Agile Coach, trainer, and podcast host for ‘Mastering Agility”Sander Dur is a business agility enthusiast, with a passion for people. Whether it's healthy product development, agile leadership, measurement, or psychological safety, Sander has the drive to enable organizations to the best of their abilities. He is an avid article writer, working on a book about Scrum Mastery from the Trenches, and is connecting listeners with the most influential people in the industry. Masteringagility.org https://www.linkedin.com/in/sanderdur/ https://agilitymasters.com/en https://sander-dur.medium.com/ Additional resources: Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/masteringagility)
Episode 1. Immigration stories from two Professors of Computer Science, and a Distinguished Technologist in Tech Industry. Featuring: Nenad Medvidovic (IEEE Fellow, Professor at USC), Jelena Mirkovic (Research Professor at USC), and Dejan Milojicic (IEEE Fellow, Distinguished Technologist at HP Labs). All three were immigrants from Yugoslavia.For more information and episode guides visit: http://csimmigrant.org/
Joe Justice is an interesting man. Famous for building electrical cars, while combining Scrum for both soft- and hardware, Joe has been all over the globe for anything you can think of. In this episode, he's talking to us about his experience in different countries, his thoughts on humanity going to Mars, the future state of machine learning and artificial intelligence, but he's also giving away a signed copy of his book Scrum Master: The Agile Training Seminar for Business Performance. Give Joe one word, and he just takes off.What you'll discover in this show:- Japan has created a high-level state of safety and honor.- Artificial intelligence and machine learning can be incredibly useful in the future for predicting business opportunities- Epameinondas Anastasiou is a really hard name to pronounce for Joe Speakers:Joe JusticeAuthor of Scrum Master - The Agile Training Seminar for Business PerformanceJoe applied agile to automotive manufacturing in 2006, founding Team WIKISPEED, and set 4 world records. WIKISPEED became the first automotive manufacturer to accept Bitcoin in 2012, and was featured on the cover of Bitcoin Magazine issue #3. Joe Justice joined Tesla in 2020, where Joe operated Agile@Tesla from the company headquarters. Joe Justice is a TED.com speaker, guest lecturer at both MIT and Oxford University in England, featured in Forbes 5 times to date including as owner of a "Company to watch" by Forbes Billionaire Club, cited in more than 8 business paperbacks and hardcovers, the subject of a Discovery Channel documentary for his work creating the disciplines Extreme Manufacturing, Scrum@Hardware, and The Justice Method. Joe Justice founded WIKISPEED and operated Agile@Tesla from Tesla's Fremont, California global headquarters. Joe has worked with all 3 of the largest military and defense contractors, autonomous and smart road technologies, ultra-lightweight structures, AI labs, guest lectured at UC Berkeley, MIT, on behalf of Carnegie Melon, CU Denver, The University of Washington, spoken at Google, Microsoft, Zynga, Lockheed Martin, HP Labs, The Royal Bank of Canada, Pictet bank, and others. Joe's work has been featured in Forbes, Harvard Business Review, CNN Money, the Discovery Channel, and others. Contact Joe Justice: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joejustice/ Sander Dur (host)Scrum Master, Agile Coach, trainer, and podcast host for ‘Mastering Agility”Sander Dur is a business agility enthusiast, with a passion for people. Whether it's healthy product development, agile leadership, measurement, or psychological safety, Sander is driven to enable organizations to the best of their abilities. He is an avid article writer, working on a book about Scrum Mastery from the Trenches, and is connecting listeners with the most influential people in the industry. https://www.linkedin.com/in/sanderdur/ https://sander-dur.medium.com/ Additional resources: Find his book right here: https://www.amazon.com/Joe-Justice/e/B08RW4P8YN%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share Watch Joe's Tedx talk on Team WikiSpeed:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8jdx-lf2DwCheck out the WikiSpeed car:https://wikispeed.com/Support the show
I caught up with Tom Bradicich, PhD, VP of HPE Labs and an HPE fellow recently to get updated about Converged Edge, IoT, and bringing the Line of Business people and the CIO organization into common cause. I met Tom at NI where he was an early evangelist for data--he talked about Big Analog Data. He had come from IBM and then left NI to return to the IT world with Hewlett Packard and then with Hewlett Packard Enterprise after the split. At HPE, he led the team developing the Edgeline, a converged Edge product that brought in IoT from the OT side of the business to a powerful compute platform. Later at HP Labs led the team to develop Edge-as-a-Service, if you will, that converges LOB and CIO organizations for solving business problems.
MLOps community meetup #60! Last Wednesday we talked to Vishnu Prathish, Director Of Engineering, AI Products, Innovyze. //Abstract The way Data Science is done is changing. Notebook sharing and collaboration were messy and there was minimal visibility or QA into the model deployment process. Vishnu will talk about building an ops platform that deploys hundreds of models at-scale every month. A platform that supports typical features of MLOps (CI/CD, Separated QA, Dev and PROD environment, experiments tracking, Isolated retraining, model monitoring in real-time, Automatic Retraining with live data) and ensures quality and observability without compromising the collaborative nature of data science. //Bio With 10 years in building production-grade data-first software at BBM & HP Labs, I started building Emagin's AI platform about three years ago with the goal of optimizing operations for the water industry. At Innovyze post-acquisition, we are part of the org building world-leading water infrastructure data analytics product. //Takeaways Why is MLOps necessary for model building at scale? What are various cloud-based models for MLOps? Where can ops help in various points in the ML pipeline Data Prep, Feature Engineering, Model building, Training, Retraining, Evaluation and inference //Final thoughts Please feel free to drop some questions you may have beforehand into our slack channel (https://go.mlops.community/slack) Watch some old meetups on our youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCG6qpjVnBTTT8wLGBygANOQ ----------- Connect With Us ✌️------------- Join our Slack community: https://go.mlops.community/slack Follow us on Twitter: @mlopscommunity Sign up for the next meetup: https://go.mlops.community/register Connect with Demetrios on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dpbrinkm/ Connect with Vishnu on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/vishnuprathish/ Timestamps: [00:00] Introduction to Vishnu Prathish [00:16] Vishnu's background [04:18] Use cases on wooden pipes for freshwater [04:55] Virtual representation of actual, physical, tangible assets [06:56] Platform built by Vishnu [08:30] Build a reliable representation of network [11:52] Pipeline architecture [16:17] "MLOps is still an evolving discipline. You need to try and fail many times before you figure out what's right for you." [17:11] Open-sourcing [18:17] Platform for virtual twin [20:02] Entirely Amazon Stagemaker [20:43] Data quality issues [23:21] Reproducibility [23:40] "Reproducibility is important for everybody. Most of the frameworks do that for you." [25:00] Reproducibility as Innovyze's core business. [26:38] Each model is individual to each customer [27:50] Solving reproducibility problems [28:24] "Reproducibility applies to the process of training pipelines. It starts with collected from historical raw data from customers. In real-time, there's also this data being collected directly from sensors coming from a certain pipeline." [31:55] "Reusable training is step one to attaining automated retraining." [32:17] Collaboration of Vishnu's team [36:23] War stories [41:36] Data prediction [44:24] "A data scientist is the most expensive hire you can make." [47:55] 3 Tiers [48:53] MLOps problems [52:25] Automatically retraining [52:34] "Because of the numbers of models that go through this pipeline, it's impossible for somebody to manually monitor and retrain as necessary. It's not easy, it takes a lot of time." [54:22] Metrics on retraining [56:42] "Retraining is a little less prevalent for our industry compared to a turned prediction model that changes a lot. There are external factors that depend on it but a pump is a pump."
Expert in Innovation by Design, Immersive Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality (XR) technologies, Big Data and Whole-Body Interaction design, operating at the crossroads of emerging tech, academia, and various industry verticals such as healthcare (MedTech and Digital Health), education (EdTech), entertainment (Game Design, World Building, Interactive and Immersive Music), and social enterprise (Games for Change, Serious Games, Diversity & Inclusion apps, Social Justice apps). As the founder of Enosis, he is leading innovation by design, discovery, specialized R&D, and advisory services on innovation, productization, commercialization, and business strategy. At Enosis, he works on R&D and innovation projects in partnership with academic institutions such as the London School of Economics, USC, and ASU and industry partners such as HP Labs, Google, Dolby, Experimental Design and many promising startups in the US and internationally. He takes pride in producing the Bohemian Rhapsody VR Experience, one of the first VR experiences that explored the power of immersive music in collaboration with Google and the rock band Queen. As the Chief Design Officer at Applied VR, he oversaw a series of Medical Virtual Reality therapeutic products from R&D and product design to full productization. The EaseVR platform he designed and supervised for Chronic Pain management has received Breakthrough Device Designation from the FDA in 2020.
3D printing, or digital manufacturing as it is also known, is a very complicated subject. To get to an end product, it involves lots of different types of scientific backgrounds. Companies that are successful commercializing 3D printing have been able to build a team that is capable of speaking all kinds of different scientific languages that are pushing for the same goal. That end goal being to deliver great technology that people can use, can design with, can build and iterate with, and that helps create products or projects on time. HP has been investing in 3D printing and because of their history, have the supply chain set-up for and can deliver game changing technology that is resetting the market. Lihua Zhao, the Global Head of 3D Printing Lab at HP Labs and an HP Distinguished Technologist, joined Justin Starbird for the latest episode of Inspiring Minds to talk about the future of 3D printing. Lihua shared that, “We have been developing our technology for quite a few years. One of the big things you may know is HP has a strong position in delivering fluids. We have a lot of engineering know-hows to build a printing-like technology. (We have worked hard to) leverage a lot of the existing assets and to assess the world's needs. This combination of developing and delivering our technology for plastic additive manufacturing, as well as for metal, has led to producing goods in a different fashion.” HP created the technology, called Multi Jet Fusion, to meet the demands of printing for plastic. This type of powder-based system has been integral to being able run around the clock so that there are no time limits for manufacturing and new parts, materials and objects are delivered on time. “We're living in a 3D printing world. How do you start with zeros and ones and end up with a physical thing? At HP we fuse this physical with the digital together to bring that experience and that performance to create new technology.”
In this SWE Diverse episode, FY20 SWE President Cindy Hoover speaks with Dr. Qian Lin, a research scientist who works on computer vision and deep learning in the HP Labs. This is the last podcast in our three-part HP series about social responsibility. Dr. Lin discusses what it's like being a fellow at HP and how she has helped transform HP over three decades.
In this episode of Yes But Why, we talk to performer and scientist, Mithra Vankipuram. Mithra Vankipuram is a performer and improv instructor from the Bay Area. She is the Producer-in-Chief at The San Francisco Improv Festival as well as a Senior Research Scientist at HP Labs. She is a community builder in the San Francisco improv scene. She is also the Chair of HP's Palo Alto Women's Impact Network. Mithra believes in evolving the cultural growth of her science/technology workplace by leading initiatives to empower women and minorities.In our conversation, Mithra shares her philosophy on being your most authentic self. We talk about how to use improv in the real world for making friends and for dealing with awkward situations. Mithra shares stories of her own journey as an actor. We talk about navigating emotions onstage and off. We discuss integrating the yes and philosophy of improv into your daily life. Support Mithra by supporting the San Francisco improv scene and The San Francisco Improv Festival. Yes But Why Podcast is a proud member of the HC Universal Network family of podcasts. Download the FREE HC Universal Network app for Android and iDevices or visit us at HCUniversalNetwork.com and join the fun.This episode of Yes But Why podcast is sponsored by audible - get your FREE audiobook download and your 30 day free trial at http://www.audibletrial.com/YESBUTWHY.
In this episode of Yes But Why, we talk to performer and scientist, Mithra Vankipuram. Mithra Vankipuram is a performer and improv instructor from the Bay Area. She is the Producer-in-Chief at The San Francisco Improv Festival as well as a Senior Research Scientist at HP Labs. She is a community builder in the San Francisco improv scene. She is also the Chair of HP's Palo Alto Women's Impact Network. Mithra believes in evolving the cultural growth of her science/technology workplace by leading initiatives to empower women and minorities. In our conversation, Mithra shares her philosophy on being your most authentic self. We talk about how to use improv in the real world for making friends and for dealing with awkward situations. Mithra shares stories of her own journey as an actor. We talk about navigating emotions onstage and off. We discuss integrating the yes and philosophy of improv into your daily life. Support Mithra by supporting the San Francisco improv scene and The San Francisco Improv Festival. Yes But Why Podcast is a proud member of the HC Universal Network family of podcasts. Download the FREE HC Universal Network app for Android and iDevices or visit us at HCUniversalNetwork.com and join the fun. This episode of Yes But Why podcast is sponsored by audible - get your FREE audiobook download and your 30 day free trial at http://www.audibletrial.com/YESBUTWHY.
In this episode of Yes But Why, we talk to performer and scientist, Mithra Vankipuram. Mithra Vankipuram is a performer and improv instructor from the Bay Area. She is the Producer-in-Chief at The San Francisco Improv Festival as well as a Senior Research Scientist at HP Labs. She is a community builder in the San Francisco improv scene. She is also the Chair of HP's Palo Alto Women's Impact Network. Mithra believes in evolving the cultural growth of her science/technology workplace by leading initiatives to empower women and minorities. In our conversation, Mithra shares her philosophy on being your most authentic self. We talk about how to use improv in the real world for making friends and for dealing with awkward situations. Mithra shares stories of her own journey as an actor. We talk about navigating emotions onstage and off. We discuss integrating the yes and philosophy of improv into your daily life. Support Mithra by supporting the San Francisco improv scene and The San Francisco Improv Festival. Yes But Why Podcast is a proud member of the HC Universal Network family of podcasts. Download the FREE HC Universal Network app for Android and iDevices or visit us at HCUniversalNetwork.com and join the fun. This episode of Yes But Why podcast is sponsored by audible - get your FREE audiobook download and your 30 day free trial at http://www.audibletrial.com/YESBUTWHY.
In this episode of Yes But Why, we talk to performer and scientist, Mithra Vankipuram. Mithra Vankipuram is a performer and improv instructor from the Bay Area. She is the Producer-in-Chief at The San Francisco Improv Festival as well as a Senior Research Scientist at HP Labs. She is a community builder in the San Francisco improv scene. She is also the Chair of HP's Palo Alto Women's Impact Network. Mithra believes in evolving the cultural growth of her science/technology workplace by leading initiatives to empower women and minorities.In our conversation, Mithra shares her philosophy on being your most authentic self. We talk about how to use improv in the real world for making friends and for dealing with awkward situations. Mithra shares stories of her own journey as an actor. We talk about navigating emotions onstage and off. We discuss integrating the yes and philosophy of improv into your daily life. Support Mithra by supporting the San Francisco improv scene and The San Francisco Improv Festival. Yes But Why Podcast is a proud member of the HC Universal Network family of podcasts. Download the FREE HC Universal Network app for Android and iDevices or visit us at HCUniversalNetwork.com and join the fun.This episode of Yes But Why podcast is sponsored by audible - get your FREE audiobook download and your 30 day free trial at http://www.audibletrial.com/YESBUTWHY.
In this episode of the Hewlett Packard Labs podcast, Dejan Milojicic goes deep into the world of VCSEL (Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Lasers) photonics with Mike Tan. Mike, Hewlett Packard Labs Distinguished Technologist, talks about low cost optical solutions for HPE computers. Mike had an intriguing Odyssey by starting in HP Labs, then he was spun into Agilent, then he was part of the team that was moved to another company that became Avago, and he finally closed the loop by coming back to HP to lead the work on short distance optical links. Mike also discusses HP Culture, called HP Way.
In this episode of the Hewlett Packard Labs podcast, Dejan Milojicic goes deep into the world of VCSEL (Vertical-Cavity Surface-Emitting Lasers) photonics with Mike Tan. Mike, Hewlett Packard Labs Distinguished Technologist, talks about low cost optical solutions for HPE computers. Mike had an intriguing Odyssey by starting in HP Labs, then he was spun into Agilent, then he was part of the team that was moved to another company that became Avago, and he finally closed the loop by coming back to HP to lead the work on short distance optical links. Mike also discusses HP Culture, called HP Way.
Alan Curtis Kay is an American computer scientist. Alan Kay is fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, and the Royal Society of Arts. Alan Kay also was professional jazz guitarist. Alan Kay is the president of the Viewpoints Research Institute, and an adjunct professor of computer science at the University of California, Los Angeles. Alan Kay was a senior fellow at HP Labs, a visiting professor at Kyoto University, and an adjunct professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Steve Jobs and Alan Turing. Power of Now is the book by Eckhart Tolle. If you want to connect to Thomas Hansen follow his work on https://polterguy.github.io to learn about his open source projects and https://servergardens.com - the latter being the “Magic” framework and project’s commercial offspring. Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin relinquish control of Alphabet to CEO Sundar Pichai (current Google CEO): https://www.blog.google/inside-google/alphabet/letter-from-larry-and-sergey VR for cows: https://nat-geo.ru/science/v-podmoskove-testiruyut-vr-ochki-dlya-korov/ Real 3D holograms: https://youtu.be/tzWP-NL3Lck On importance of math, statistics and cause-effect by Bill Gates: https://youtu.be/6mFM3Q8cWm0 VR for HL3VR is tested. The Search for an HIV vaccine may soon be over: https://youtu.be/2On9PVrBaHY OpenAI GPT-2 fine tuning update: https://openai.com/blog/fine-tuning-gpt-2/ Reid Hoffman on decentralized currencies vs centralized in Rap form: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/bitcoin-rap-battle-hamilton-vs-satoshi-reid-hoffman Robert Aleksandrovich Schlegel is a Russian political figure, a former member of the Russian State Duma, and a member of United Russia (Шлегель). Works in Acronis now. We are for open software and human rights. You Need to Practice Being Your Future Self: https://getpocket.com/explore/item/you-need-to-practice-being-your-future-self Podcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4HNBzcFMvmVAVc4OTkkHxa Podcast on Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/ru/podcast/podcast/id1488262887?l=en Podcast on Breaker: https://www.breaker.audio/podcast-183 Podcast on Google Podcasts: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy9lYzc3NDc0L3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz Podcast on Radio Public: https://radiopublic.com/podcast-6Vyndm Podcast’s RSS: https://anchor.fm/s/ec77474/podcast/rss Episode #5 on ListenNotes: https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/podcast-tim-ivaikin-f924io7gnQP/ Episode #5 on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PQa5raA_wo8 Podcast episodes on Medium: https://medium.com/@t.s.ivaykin_24653/podcast-by-sergey-mikheev-tim-ivaikin-%D0%B2%D1%8B%D1%88%D0%B5%D0%BB-%D0%BD%D0%B0-apple-podcasts-25860f505ccb Telegram Podcast Live: https://t.me/podcastro_live Telegram Podcast Channel: https://t.me/podcastro Telegram Podcast Chat: https://t.me/podcast_chat Good Results book by Tim Ivaikin http://greatergoodresults.com/ on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Good-Results-efficiency-powerful-growth-ebook-dp-B07N4R52H2/dp/B07N4R52H2/ref=mt_kindle?_encoding=UTF8&me=&qid=
Nuclear energy is no joke, and to train to work in the field can be risky and costly… unless you’re training in a virtual environment. That’s the kind of technology Shachar “Vice” Weis, co-founder of VRAL, has been developing for the last several years. Alan and Vice discuss the pros and…well, are there really any cons to non-radioactive training simulations? Alan: Welcome to the XR for Business Podcast with your host, Alan Smithson. Today’s guest is a great friend, Shachar “Vice” Weis. He’s a software developer with 25 years experience. He’s worked in many fields and disciplines, from ancient mainframes to tiny system-on-chip units. Vice has extensive experience with 3D frameworks, game development, robotics, UX design, and automation. He has broad the R&D experience from managing an R&D in a startup environment, to developing enterprise solutions in HP Labs and leading an R&D team in the Israeli Navy Computer Center. Vice’s worked in many areas, including datamining, web development, virtual reality, 2D and 3D graphics, image and video processing. And he brings acute analytical skills, system system-wide vision, and experience with clients and knowhow in R&D work methodologies. You can learn more about his company, Packet39, it’s packet39.com. Vice, welcome to the show, my friend. Vice: Hey, good morning. Thanks for having me. Alan: It’s my pleasure. I’m really excited. Your presentation is at Virtual Reality Toronto meet-up was mind-blowing. I got there and I sat down, and all of a sudden this guy on stage is talking about nuclear reactors and using Hololenses for training and virtual reality training and simulators. And I was sitting there with my mouth open the whole time, taking photos and trying to capture all of the goodness. And I’m really honored to have you on the show. How did you get into nuclear? Like, what happened there? Vice: Well, as most things in life, it was mostly chance. I met a guy at VRTO — the Toronto VR conference — three years ago, and he was working for a company that provides services for nuclear power, specifically Oakajee here in Canada. And we got to talking and we understood that there was a lot of a lot of need and virtual reality could solve some really interesting problems. And we took it from there. Alan: VRTO, it’s a small conference, but man, the level of quality of the attendees and the speakers at that conference every year is just phenomenal. And it feels like the show keeps getting smaller but more important in its stature. So it’s cool to hear that you– Vice: It’s getting smaller and more condensed and I’ve given a talk at VRTO every year in the last three years and every time it was– Alan: Yeah, it’s amazing. This is the first year I missed it. I was traveling, but I’m really excited to see what comes next year because I know it got smaller, but it just got– the people that attended it are really deep into this stuff. So tell us about this nuclear reactor training, kind of what was the first step with that? How do you start training people in VR for nuclear facilities? Vice: Well, there’s a lot of stuff you can do in VR and a lot of stuff that you shouldn’t. And the trick is finding the correct path. We started with a proof of concept project, that was the airlock. And this was new to me as well. I didn’t have any experience in nuclear power specifically, back then when we started. And it turns out that the entire core, the entire facility where the core is housed is airtight. And to get in and out, you have to go through an
Nuclear energy is no joke, and to train to work in the field can be risky and costly… unless you’re training in a virtual environment. That’s the kind of technology Shachar “Vice” Weis, co-founder of VRAL, has been developing for the last several years. Alan and Vice discuss the pros and…well, are there really any cons to non-radioactive training simulations? Alan: Welcome to the XR for Business Podcast with your host, Alan Smithson. Today’s guest is a great friend, Shachar “Vice” Weis. He’s a software developer with 25 years experience. He’s worked in many fields and disciplines, from ancient mainframes to tiny system-on-chip units. Vice has extensive experience with 3D frameworks, game development, robotics, UX design, and automation. He has broad the R&D experience from managing an R&D in a startup environment, to developing enterprise solutions in HP Labs and leading an R&D team in the Israeli Navy Computer Center. Vice’s worked in many areas, including datamining, web development, virtual reality, 2D and 3D graphics, image and video processing. And he brings acute analytical skills, system system-wide vision, and experience with clients and knowhow in R&D work methodologies. You can learn more about his company, Packet39, it’s packet39.com. Vice, welcome to the show, my friend. Vice: Hey, good morning. Thanks for having me. Alan: It’s my pleasure. I’m really excited. Your presentation is at Virtual Reality Toronto meet-up was mind-blowing. I got there and I sat down, and all of a sudden this guy on stage is talking about nuclear reactors and using Hololenses for training and virtual reality training and simulators. And I was sitting there with my mouth open the whole time, taking photos and trying to capture all of the goodness. And I’m really honored to have you on the show. How did you get into nuclear? Like, what happened there? Vice: Well, as most things in life, it was mostly chance. I met a guy at VRTO — the Toronto VR conference — three years ago, and he was working for a company that provides services for nuclear power, specifically Oakajee here in Canada. And we got to talking and we understood that there was a lot of a lot of need and virtual reality could solve some really interesting problems. And we took it from there. Alan: VRTO, it’s a small conference, but man, the level of quality of the attendees and the speakers at that conference every year is just phenomenal. And it feels like the show keeps getting smaller but more important in its stature. So it’s cool to hear that you– Vice: It’s getting smaller and more condensed and I’ve given a talk at VRTO every year in the last three years and every time it was– Alan: Yeah, it’s amazing. This is the first year I missed it. I was traveling, but I’m really excited to see what comes next year because I know it got smaller, but it just got– the people that attended it are really deep into this stuff. So tell us about this nuclear reactor training, kind of what was the first step with that? How do you start training people in VR for nuclear facilities? Vice: Well, there’s a lot of stuff you can do in VR and a lot of stuff that you shouldn’t. And the trick is finding the correct path. We started with a proof of concept project, that was the airlock. And this was new to me as well. I didn’t have any experience in nuclear power specifically, back then when we started. And it turns out that the entire core, the entire facility where the core is housed is airtight. And to get in and out, you have to go through an
Christopher is a talent management advisor working with the business/region HRBP leads and business leaders at HP Personal Systems,3D Print & CTO/HP Labs to identify talent and organization performance requirements and execute solutions.
Christopher is a talent management advisor working with the business/region HRBP leads and business leaders at HP Personal Systems,3D Print & CTO/HP Labs to identify talent and organization performance requirements and execute solutions.
Christopher is a talent management advisor working with the business/region HRBP leads and business leaders at HP Personal Systems,3D Print & CTO/HP Labs to identify talent and organization performance requirements and execute solutions.
Production management software is popping up all over, from the veterans like MovieMagic to newb's like Celtx, it's hard to decide which one is best for your needs. This week, we talk to Jim Miller & Ben Yennie, creators of ProductionNext, which is an all-in-one system, attempting to meet all of your production management needs. Discussing with them the uses of the program, we get deep into how it can help your productions, be they 4-8 member crews with limited budgets like ours, or 100 crews with 6 figure+ budgets. Keep track of your crews inventory, create srotyboards, write and maintain a budget amongst crew members, schedule your shoot days, and keep everyone up-to-speed on the progress of the film from pre-production all the way through post. If you sign up for ProductionNext, use the link beta.productionnext.com/filmmakingsucks to get three free months added to your service. Ben Yennie was VP of Sales for Taal, a mobile video interview platform for the hospitality industry. He is the founder of Producer Foundry, a center for workshops, networking, and entrepreneurial training for film and video producers. Jim Miller brings a deep understanding of user experience, interaction design and development, and Internet communities from a career spent at Apple, HP Labs, Gateway, and, most recently, as an independent design and development consultant. As always, subscribe to us on iTunes, Stitcher, YouTube, Google Play, or your favorite podcatching app. And don't forget to rate and review us! Email us at filmmakingsucks@gmail.com with any questions, comments, or subjects you'd like to hear us discuss. You can also now follow us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/filmmakingpodcast! #FilmmakingSucks Join the Indie Filmmaker Community on Facebook: facebook.com/groups/1798997870171718/ Listen to the HorrorHappens Radio show for current news and interviews from the genre film festivals and conventions you should have on your radar: horrorhappens.com Sign up for ProductionNext via beta.productionnext.com/filmmakingsucks
I had a great interview with Will Allen, an HP Fellow and VP at HP Labs.
Today we have the incredible honor to interview John Wilkes, Principle Engineer at Google and co-author of the Borg paper, about the history of Borg and how Kubernetes came to be. And guess what, Mark is very excited! Francesc is excited too, though. About John John Wilkes has been at Google since 2008, where he is working on cluster management and infrastructure services. Before that, he spent a long time at HP Labs, becoming an HP and ACM Fellow in 2002. He is interested in far too many aspects of distributed systems, but a recurring theme has been technologies that allow systems to manage themselves. In his spare time he continues, stubbornly, trying to learn how to blow glass. Cool things of the week New Regions coming in 2017 announcement Mumbai, Singapore, Sydney, Northern Virginia, São Paulo, London, Finland and Frankfurt — and there are more regions to be announced next year. Bringing Pokémon GO to life on Google Cloud blog And many other cool things from Horizons here Interview Cluster management at Google with Borg - dotScale 2015 - John Wilkes YouTube Large-scale cluster management at Google with Borg Google research Bazel: Google's own build tool bazel.io Site Reliability Engineering SRE Book SLO: Service Level Objective Wikipedia The Chubby Lock Service for Loosely-Coupled Distributed Systems Google Research DiRT: Weathering the Unexpected ACM Kubernetes homepage Docker homepage Paxos algorithm and etcd Question of the week Installing Application Default Credentials locally docs $ gcloud beta auth application-default login Were will we be? Francesc is today be in New York running a Go workshop on October 5th, and then he'll do a similar meetup this time online. He also will be speaking on Thursday at GDG NYC. You can find Mark at SIEGE from October 7th to 9th
Humans use multiple senses to navigate their surroundings in day-to-day life. But data is largely confined to the realm of the visual; from the ways the systems that collect it are designed and programmed, to the spreadsheets and databases that analyse it, to the visualisations that help us make sense of it. But is this enough? ‘Data manifestation’ describes how we move data away from the screen and into physical and environmental forms, so we can use different senses to understand its meaning. Giles Lane will talk about the Lifestreams project – which works to express complex datasets into 3D forms to help people recognise patterns and understand meaning by using spatial and tactile senses – and hint at future possibilities. About Giles Lane Giles Lane is an artist, designer and the founder of creative studio Proboscis. He has led internationally acclaimed transdisciplinary projects such as Mapping Perception, Urban Tapestries and Navigating History, with a strong focus on research, public engagement and participation. Proboscis collaborates with research partners including UCL, the London School of Economics, the Institute of Child Health, the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge and Birkbeck College, and also with industrial companies including Orange, HP Labs, France Telecom R&D, Channel 4 and Ordnance Survey.
Traffic congestion impedes our mobility, pollutes the air, wastes fuel, and hampers economic growth. While physical bottlenecks, overpopulation, weather, and construction can all lead to congestion, a key contributor to traffic congestion is road accidents - events that disrupt the normal flow of traffic. Reducing the impact of traffic accidents has been one of the primary objectives for transportation policy makers. In this talk, we present a novel machine learning framework to forecast how travel-time delays - caused by accidents - occur and progress in the transportation network. This research is conducted by correlating 4 years of historical traffic sensor and accident data archived under ADMS project developed - by METRANS and IMSC centers of USC - for Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro). Speakers: Ugur Demiyurek Associate Director, Integrated Media Systems Center USC Viterbi Dingxiong Deng Ph. D student, Computer Science Department University of Southern California Ugur Demiryurek is Associate Director of Research at IMSC, and has M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from USC. His research is focused on fundamental and applied data management with special interest in Geospatial Databases, Cloud Computing, and Machine Learning. He has been supported by grants from both government agencies (NSF, Caltrans, Metro) and industry partners (Microsoft Research, Oracle Labs, Intel, HP Labs). Demiryurek authored two book chapters and more than forty research articles since 2010 and holds three US patents. Prior to IMSC, Demiryurek worked for fortune 500 companies in database technology development and data scientist positions. He regularly serves on the program committee of various major database conferences including ACM SIGMOD, ACM SIGSPATIAL, IEEE ICDM, DASFAA, SSTD, and MDM, and is a member of IEEE and ACM.
Research on new technologies to help security analysts defend networks and systems from attacks has unique challenges --- the ad-hoc nature of attacks and their mitigation makes formal modeling elusive; the diverse threat scenarios of organizations makes a one-size-fit-all solution unlikely; and the lack of data and production deployment to test research prototypes makes evaluation extremely difficult. In this talk I will describe the unique approaches we have been taking to address this problem. Since algorithms and tools that arise from this research are intended to help the tasks performed by human analysts, it becomes a pre-requisite for researchers to first understand how analysts do their jobs, and identify the key obstacles and bottlenecks for performance. I will explain how we designed/built the SnIPS system for intrusion analysis by eliciting expert knowledge through ad-hoc interviews, and the formulation of a customized Dempster-Shafer theory to capture how humans deal with the inherent uncertainty in this reasoning process. I then explain how this led us to eventually adopt an anthropological approach to address this research challenge.Anthropology is a social science well known for its long-term participant observation method in which researchers spend substantial amounts of time living/working together with the subjects of study, as participant observers who take part in the daily lives and challenges of those they study, giving them a more empathic perspective understanding of their views, practices, and challenges. I will use the examples in my past eight years' research to explain why this type of ethnographic fieldwork is crucial and could be a very effective method to extract the "tacit knowledge" embodied in the practices of security analysts. Joining the "community of practice" of security operations will enable researchers to access the tacit knowledge, make it explicit, subject it to systematic analysis and modeling, and yield algorithms that execute the knowledge in an automated fashion. I will also talk about "unexpected findings" we are still deriving from on-going anthropological fieldwork at multiple security operations centers. About the speaker: Dr. Xinming (Simon) Ou is an associate professor of Computer Science and the Peggy and Gary Edwards Chair in Engineering at Kansas State University. He received his PhD from Princeton University in 2005. Before joining Kansas State University in 2006, he was a post-doctoral research associate at Purdue University's Center for Education and Research in Information Assurance and Security (CERIAS), and a research associate at Idaho National Laboratory (INL). Dr. Ou's research is primarily in cyber defense technologies, with focuses on intrusion/forensics analysis, cloud security and moving-target defense, mobile system security, and cyber physical system security. Dr. Ou's research has been funded by National Science Foundation, Department of Defense, Department of Energy, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), HP Labs, and Rockwell Collins. He is a recipient of 2010 NSF Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award, a three-time winner of HP Labs Innovation Research Program (IRP) award, and 2013 K-State College of Engineering Frankenhoff Outstanding Research Award.
Learn how your LIS skill sets are opening up paths to careers in a number of exciting, new ways. Our skills at finding, managing and analyzing information are increasingly valued as organizations worldwide struggle to gain insight and make decisions in the face of explosive information growth. In this session, I will present one professional's journey and experiences, as I transitioned from working in traditional library roles to doing strategic analysis for a well-known industrial R&D lab, HP Labs.
Learn how your LIS skill sets are opening up paths to careers in a number of exciting, new ways. Our skills at finding, managing and analyzing information are increasingly valued as organizations worldwide struggle to gain insight and make decisions in the face of explosive information growth. In this session, I will present one professional's journey and experiences, as I transitioned from working in traditional library roles to doing strategic analysis for a well-known industrial R&D lab, HP Labs.
Synopsis This special episode of Down the Rabbithole is sponsored exclusively by HP Canada, and I wanted to thank them for hosting this fantastic event! In this episode I sat down with Charlie Bess and EG Nadhan to talk about Cloud Computing. Now, this isn't your standard cloud discussion ... no my friends, these are two of the top technologists HP has to offer from the labs and services organizations talking about the paradigm shifts in computing that "the cloud" offers. We talk through business adoption, getting over the "it's cheaper" mentatlity, security ... and even some of the things learned here at the event in Montreal. What a fantastic opportunity to pick the brains of some extremely smart people, and hear their responses to one of the most difficult and rewarding business shifts in technology in the last 10 years. You're not going to want to miss this. Guests EG Nadhan - Distinguished Technologist, HP Enterprise Services Charlie Bess - Fellow, HP Labs
HP SkyRoom is a new HD videoconferencing and collaboration solution from HP that builds on technical innovations from HP Labs.
HP SkyRoom is a new HD videoconferencing and collaboration solution from HP that builds on technical innovations from HP Labs.
Prith Banerjee, senior vice president of research with Hewlett-Packard, discusses future research at HP. Before joining HP, he was the engineering dean at the University of Illinois at Chicago. His research interests are in very large-scale-integration, computer-aided design; parallel computing; and compilers.
Back in August 2008 I wrote a long review of the Magcloud print-on-demand publishing solution from HP Labs. Since then I've helped produce a number of editions of Professionally Speaking for our local National Speakers Association (NSA) chapter as well as a magazine for my wife's College Admissions Counseling business. I was recently invited by Dick Bruso of the Writers and Publishers Professional Expert Group (PEG) of NSA to deliver a one-hour teleseminar on Magcloud. The teleseminar was given on May 21, 2009. The teleseminar covered three areas: A background on printing on demand for magazine publishers The mechanics of producing your own magazine for free Some examples and my own experience of the time and effort involved. Websites referenced in my talk Magcloud Professionally Speaking Georgia Speaker Step Into College Two Words Issuu To hear the teleseminar click on the podcast icon below. Since this is a 55 minute recording you may prefer to Download and listen at your convenience.
In 1971, Leon O. Chua published a seminal paper on the missing basic circuit element. Leon O. Chua and Sung-Mo Kang published a paper, in 1976, that described a large class of devices and systems they called memristive devices and systems. Just recently, Stan Williams and his research team at HP Labs unveiled a two-terminal titanium dioxide nanoscale device in Nature magazine that exhibited memristor characteristics. This symposium will explore the potential of memristors and memristive systems as they advance state of the art nano-electronic circuits. Program (Part 3) Panel Discussion Pushkar Apte, Moderator, Vice President of Technology Programs, Semiconductor Indsutry Association (SIA) Jeff Welser, Director, Nanoelectronics Research Initiative (NRI), Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC) Stan Williams, HP Senior Fellow and Director of Information & Quantum Systems Lab, Hewlett-Packard Wolfgang Porod, Frank M. Freiman Professor of Electrical Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Notre Dame Massimiliano Di Ventra, Professor, Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego Rainer Waser, RWTH Aachen University at Research Center Juelich, Germany The event is co-sponsored by UC Merced and UC Berkeley in cooperation with the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA). The Symposium is funded by the National Science Foundation.
In 1971, Leon O. Chua published a seminal paper on the missing basic circuit element. Leon O. Chua and Sung-Mo Kang published a paper, in 1976, that described a large class of devices and systems they called memristive devices and systems. Just recently, Stan Williams and his research team at HP Labs unveiled a two-terminal titanium dioxide nanoscale device in Nature magazine that exhibited memristor characteristics. This symposium will explore the potential of memristors and memristive systems as they advance state of the art nano-electronic circuits. Program (Part 1) Opening Remarks Steve Kang, Chancellor, UC Merced Pinaki Mazumder, Program Director, National Science Foundation Stuart Russell, Chair of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences Department, College of Engineering, UC Berkeley Memristors Leon Chua, Professor, Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences Department, College of Engineering, UC Berkeley Finding the Missing Memristor Stan Williams, HP Senior Fellow and Director of Information & Quantum Systems Lab, Hewlett-Packard Material Implication Using Memristors: An Alternate Form of Boolean Logic Philip Kuekes, Computer Architect, Information and Quantum Systems Laboratory, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories The event is co-sponsored by UC Merced and UC Berkeley in cooperation with the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA). The Symposium is funded by the National Science Foundation.
In 1971, Leon O. Chua published a seminal paper on the missing basic circuit element. Leon O. Chua and Sung-Mo Kang published a paper, in 1976, that described a large class of devices and systems they called memristive devices and systems. Just recently, Stan Williams and his research team at HP Labs unveiled a two-terminal titanium dioxide nanoscale device in Nature magazine that exhibited memristor characteristics. This symposium will explore the potential of memristors and memristive systems as they advance state of the art nano-electronic circuits. Program (Part 2) Memristors as Synapses in a Neural Computing Architecture Greg Snider, Senior Architect, Information and Quantum Systems Laboratory, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories Prospects and Challenges of Redox-based Memristive RRAM Concpets Rainer Waser, RWTH Aachen University at Research Center Juelich, Germany The event is co-sponsored by UC Merced and UC Berkeley in cooperation with the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA). The Symposium is funded by the National Science Foundation.
In 1971, Leon O. Chua published a seminal paper on the missing basic circuit element. Leon O. Chua and Sung-Mo Kang published a paper, in 1976, that described a large class of devices and systems they called memristive devices and systems. Just recently, Stan Williams and his research team at HP Labs unveiled a two-terminal titanium dioxide nanoscale device in Nature magazine that exhibited memristor characteristics. This symposium will explore the potential of memristors and memristive systems as they advance state of the art nano-electronic circuits. Program (Part 3) Pinaki Mazumder, Program Director, National Science Foundation Memristors: An Interstedd Observer's Perspective Wolfgang Porod, Frank M. Freiman Professor of Electrical Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Engineering, Univresity of Notre Dame Memristive Systems: From Spintronics to Amoeba's Learning Massimiliano Di Ventra, Professor, Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego Proposals for Memristor Crossbar Design and Applications Blaise Mouttet, Graduate Student, George Mason University The event is co-sponsored by UC Merced and UC Berkeley in cooperation with the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA). The Symposium is funded by the National Science Foundation.
In 1971, Leon O. Chua published a seminal paper on the missing basic circuit element. Leon O. Chua and Sung-Mo Kang published a paper, in 1976, that described a large class of devices and systems they called memristive devices and systems. Just recently, Stan Williams and his research team at HP Labs unveiled a two-terminal titanium dioxide nanoscale device in Nature magazine that exhibited memristor characteristics. This symposium will explore the potential of memristors and memristive systems as they advance state of the art nano-electronic circuits. Program (Part 3) Panel Discussion Pushkar Apte, Moderator, Vice President of Technology Programs, Semiconductor Indsutry Association (SIA) Jeff Welser, Director, Nanoelectronics Research Initiative (NRI), Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC) Stan Williams, HP Senior Fellow and Director of Information & Quantum Systems Lab, Hewlett-Packard Wolfgang Porod, Frank M. Freiman Professor of Electrical Engineering, Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Notre Dame Massimiliano Di Ventra, Professor, Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego Rainer Waser, RWTH Aachen University at Research Center Juelich, Germany The event is co-sponsored by UC Merced and UC Berkeley in cooperation with the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA). The Symposium is funded by the National Science Foundation.
In 1971, Leon O. Chua published a seminal paper on the missing basic circuit element. Leon O. Chua and Sung-Mo Kang published a paper, in 1976, that described a large class of devices and systems they called memristive devices and systems. Just recently, Stan Williams and his research team at HP Labs unveiled a two-terminal titanium dioxide nanoscale device in Nature magazine that exhibited memristor characteristics. This symposium will explore the potential of memristors and memristive systems as they advance state of the art nano-electronic circuits. Program (Part 3) Pinaki Mazumder, Program Director, National Science Foundation Memristors: An Interstedd Observer's Perspective Wolfgang Porod, Frank M. Freiman Professor of Electrical Engineering, Dept. of Electrical Engineering, Univresity of Notre Dame Memristive Systems: From Spintronics to Amoeba's Learning Massimiliano Di Ventra, Professor, Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego Proposals for Memristor Crossbar Design and Applications Blaise Mouttet, Graduate Student, George Mason University The event is co-sponsored by UC Merced and UC Berkeley in cooperation with the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA). The Symposium is funded by the National Science Foundation.
In 1971, Leon O. Chua published a seminal paper on the missing basic circuit element. Leon O. Chua and Sung-Mo Kang published a paper, in 1976, that described a large class of devices and systems they called memristive devices and systems. Just recently, Stan Williams and his research team at HP Labs unveiled a two-terminal titanium dioxide nanoscale device in Nature magazine that exhibited memristor characteristics. This symposium will explore the potential of memristors and memristive systems as they advance state of the art nano-electronic circuits. Program (Part 1) Opening Remarks Steve Kang, Chancellor, UC Merced Pinaki Mazumder, Program Director, National Science Foundation Stuart Russell, Chair of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences Department, College of Engineering, UC Berkeley Memristors Leon Chua, Professor, Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences Department, College of Engineering, UC Berkeley Finding the Missing Memristor Stan Williams, HP Senior Fellow and Director of Information & Quantum Systems Lab, Hewlett-Packard Material Implication Using Memristors: An Alternate Form of Boolean Logic Philip Kuekes, Computer Architect, Information and Quantum Systems Laboratory, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories The event is co-sponsored by UC Merced and UC Berkeley in cooperation with the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA). The Symposium is funded by the National Science Foundation.
In 1971, Leon O. Chua published a seminal paper on the missing basic circuit element. Leon O. Chua and Sung-Mo Kang published a paper, in 1976, that described a large class of devices and systems they called memristive devices and systems. Just recently, Stan Williams and his research team at HP Labs unveiled a two-terminal titanium dioxide nanoscale device in Nature magazine that exhibited memristor characteristics. This symposium will explore the potential of memristors and memristive systems as they advance state of the art nano-electronic circuits. Program (Part 2) Memristors as Synapses in a Neural Computing Architecture Greg Snider, Senior Architect, Information and Quantum Systems Laboratory, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories Prospects and Challenges of Redox-based Memristive RRAM Concpets Rainer Waser, RWTH Aachen University at Research Center Juelich, Germany The event is co-sponsored by UC Merced and UC Berkeley in cooperation with the Semiconductor Industry Association (SIA). The Symposium is funded by the National Science Foundation.
Every summer, the best and brightest science and engineering students from across the country and around the world spend a summer interning at Silicon Valley companies. This select bunch of students are mostly post-graduates with a handful of undergraduates. PARC, SAP Labs, Sun Labs, Microsoft Research, Google and HP Labs host a series of visits and social networking events. These events culminate in a visit to HP Labs and a reception for the students. I helped organize the visit to HP this year and took the opportunity to ask the students where they were from, which company they were interning at and a little about their research interests. To hear what excites the next generation of Silicon Valley scientists and engineers, click on the podcast icon below.
Just after I finished talking with Art Fong, my colleague Barbara Waugh introduced me to another distinguished HP retiree - Zvonko Fazarinc. Dr. Fazarinc emigrated from Yugoslavia and started working at HP Labs in 1965. He remembers clearly the impact that Dave Packard and Bill Hewlett's management style had on Labs - which they used to visit every morning when arriving at work. Listen to the podcast to hear some amazing stories - such as the time he tried to convince Dave Packard that he found more socialism in action with the HP Way than back home in Yugoslavia!
Stan Williams is one of the four Senior Fellows at HP Labs - the most distinguished technologists in the company. He runs the Information and Quantum Systems Lab and his research focus is on what is called CeNSE - the Central Nervous System for the Earth. Stan is looking over the horizon to developments in nanotechnology - the control of matter on the atomic and molecular scale, where dimensions are measured in nanometers. One nanometer is one billionth of a meter - way smaller than the proverbial width of an ant’s leg. In fact, the comparative size of a nanometer to a meter is the same as that of a marble to the size of the earth. Or another way of putting it: a nanometer is the amount a man's beard grows in the time it takes him to raise the razor to his face! I asked Stan to describe his research interests in the terms that my Mum could understand. Click on the podcast icon below to hear what Stan says about his research. It could revolutionize human interaction with the earth as profoundly as the Internet has revolutionized personal and business interactions. Hear him describe a possible future world where trillions of nanoscale sensors and actuators are embedded in the environment, monitoring every breath we take, every move we make. And how concerns for our privacy in this world are addressed.
One of the unexpected delights in the HP Labs event in Palo Alto today was the opportunity to meet many of the retired employees who were invited to attend. It was a great honor to talk with Art Fong. He was recruited to the company back in 1946 by Bill Hewlett over a home-cooked spaghetti dinner. He was one of the first 100 employees at what is now a 172,000 person company. He shared some stories of his years at HP and how inventions he created helped change history. His opinion of the research being done today? "Real cool!" To hear Art discuss unique moments in HP history, click on the podcast icon below.
E Pluribus Unum - Out of One, Many HP Labs Pluribus - Out of Many projectors, One super-screen Super-bright, large-scale, and very high-resolution digital projectors are indispensable tools of modern communication. They help CEOs wow audiences of analysts. They make rock concerts intimate. They turn computer gaming into a spectator sport. And they can make digital cinema an instant reality. They are also very expensive. Prices for high-end projectors run into tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars, which keeps these devices from being widely used. HP Labs' Nelson Chang and Niranjan Damera-Venkata had a hunch they could make a much cheaper projection system by combining the outputs of several smaller projectors to create a single, high-quality image. They work in the Multimedia Interaction and Understanding Lab in Palo Alto on a project code-named Pluribus. Seeing Pluribus in action, it's easy to be overwhelmed by the huge, crystal-clear picture it creates. Hook a 16-foot screen up to a game of Madden NFL Football, for example, and the players are life-size - putting you front row and center at the same scale as the real thing. Although Pluribus looks great, its true appeal lies in the cost savings it offers anyone in the business of projecting large images. How so? For example, Pluribus can combine ten off-the-shelf projectors costing $1,000 each to project an image as bright and sharp as that created by a single high-grade projector costing $100,000. Once this technology reaches your local Best Buy it will cause the prices of what is possible with high-end home theatre to be reset to a new price-point. You'll just have to be patient. Hear Nelson and Niranjan discuss their work in the podcast.
Bernardo Huberman is one of only four Senior Fellows at HP Labs - the most distinguished technologists in the company. He runs the Social Computing Lab. His research focus is on the behavior of millions of people using the internet and how this can be analyzed and predicted. He is recognized around the world as an authority on how people communicate and collaborate on the Internet. His lab has recently developed Cloudprint, which lets you store documents in the cloud so you can retrieve and print them on any printer using a mobile phone. One amusing way of illustrating his research in everyday terms is the choices people make when they place bets. Using the patters of behavior that the bookmakers need to understand to make a living, he looks at predictions we can make in corporate purchasing departments and other business settings. To hear Bernardo's remarks click on the podcast icon below.
This is a conversation with Howard Taub of HP Labs about place-based media, wearable cameras and the rude awakening we all may be in for if we don’t archive their data storage appropriately. Howard Taub is the Vice President and Associate Director of HP Labs and a renowned expert in digital imaging. He is also… The post Wearable Tech with HP VP Howard Taub appeared first on Eric Schwartzman.
In outsourced content publishing, the data owner gives the content to a service provider who answers requests from users. Similarly, in outsourced databases, the data owner delegates a service provider to answer queries. Outsourcing enables fast and fault-tolerant delivery of information. However, since service providers in outsourced systems may not be trusted by users, the user needs to verify the integrity ofinformation obtained.First, I present a cryptographic solution for the verification of pseudonymized documents. A document can be pseudonymized by the service provider on the fly, based on the data owner's policies and the user's access permissions. Our pseudonym protocol is simple and efficient, and only requires the data owner to prepare and sign the document once.Second, I present a solution for integrity verification of database aggregate queries, such as sum and max. We design proofs of correctness and completeness of aggregate results. What makes the problem challenging is that individual data entries may be sensitive (such as in medical databases), and should not be revealed to the user. We givecryptographic protocols to support verification of query results in a privacy-preserving fashion. About the speaker: Danfeng Yao is a fifth-year graduate student in the Computer Science Department at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island. She obtained her B.S degree from Peking University, China, and Master degrees from Princeton University and Indiana University at Bloomington. Her thesis research is focused on cryptographic protocols indecentralized trust management, under the advising of Professor Roberto Tamassia. In the summer of 2006, Danfeng interned at HP Labs, Princeton, NJ. She worked closely with Stuart Haber, Bill Horne, and Tomas Sander on various aspects of the digital redaction project, which led to two HP technical reports. Danfeng's homepage is at http://www.cs.brown.edu/people/dyao/.
You may know that HP Labs invented the pocket scientific calculator and thermal inkjet printing, but the company's central research lab is also the source of the technology behind cordless mice, cesium-beam atomic clocks, a device for ultrasound imaging and telecommunications platforms that today serve more than 100 million people. Learn more about 40 years of innovation at HP Labs.
You may know that HP Labs invented the pocket scientific calculator and thermal inkjet printing, but the company's central research lab is also the source of the technology behind cordless mice, cesium-beam atomic clocks, a device for ultrasound imaging and telecommunications platforms that today serve more than 100 million people. Learn more about 40 years of innovation at HP Labs.