In his session at 17th Cloud Expo, Oleg Lola, CEO at MobiDev, will provide insights based on his experience of helping dozens of companies to launch their products. He will also discuss:
How to get expert feedback on the idea
How to use cloud in complex projects
When you should get the project started
How to elaborate product requirements
The importance of UI design for the success of the product
How much resources are needed to develop an MVP for cloud
How to prepare for the product launch
Monthly Archives: October 2015
Kurento to Exhibit at @ThingsExpo | @Kurentoms #IoT #API #RTC #WebRTC
SYS-CON Events announced today that Kurento will exhibit at the 17th International Cloud Expo®, which will take place on November 3-5, 2015, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
Kurento is an open source software development framework providing a media server written in C/C++, which embeds and externs GStreamer capabilities and makes possible to integrate WebRTC services with advanced media capabilities such as recording, mixing augmented reality and computer vision. Kurento also provides SDKs enabling developers to create Java and JavaScript applications consuming Kurento Media Server capabilities in a seamless way. Kurento development started in 2010 at Rey Juan Carlos University in Madrid as the result of a number of large research projects dealing with advanced multimedia real-time communication systems such as NUBOMEDIA and FIWARE. An open source software ecosystem is currently growing around Kurento comprising researchers, individual contributors, companies, and final users from all around the world.
Integrating the ‘Internet of Things’ with @EmbeddedExperts | @ThingExpo #IoT
“BSQUARE is in the business of selling software solutions for smart connected devices. It’s obvious that IoT has moved from being a technology to being a fundamental part of business, and in the last 18 months people have said let’s figure out how to do it and let’s put some focus on it, ” explained Dave Wagstaff, VP & Chief Architect, at BSQUARE Corporation, in this SYS-CON.tv interview at @ThingsExpo, held Nov 4-6, 2014, at the Santa Clara Convention Center in Santa Clara, CA.
Don’t forget the virtual environment for greater business collaboration
(c)iStock.com/Maxiphoto
As I’m writing this, I’m looking over at the foosball table that resides in the corner of the Dropbox office. It’s a hub of activity as two of my colleagues battle it out while they take a break from a planning session. There’s also a group of people huddled together on beanbags and sofas, armed with coloured markers and clearly intent on solving a challenge.
The atmosphere is informal but productive, and the reason they are able to work in this non-traditional format is because I think it’s important to create a physical working environment that helps people to feel and perform their best while at work.
By no means is this non-traditional approach to office space unique to me or to Dropbox. Today, companies all over the world spend millions of pounds ensuring the office environment gets the most out of their employees. Interesting spaces, furniture and facilities are used to encourage more productivity, creativity and better team relationships.
Employees are too often inhibited by clunky email attachments, messy tracked changes and awkward conference calls
While these unusual and dynamic working spaces have previously been the domain of tech companies in Silicon Valley, today we’re seeing companies across every sector transform the traditional office into cutting-edge working spaces. The BBC’s MediaCity, for example, has everything from “collaboration pods” to security guards on Segway scooters and giant neon and metal “thought wheels”.
But while there is lots of research around the importance of the physical space we work in, what is often overlooked is the need to also create the best virtual environment to help employees thrive. This is especially surprising, knowing that the way people work together today is increasingly complicated.
Gone are the days when people work in silos at their work stations or with a small team in their immediate vicinity. Today’s employees are working across international borders and time zones and with a wide range of partners, customers, freelancers and colleagues. Technology is redefining the way we work. According to Cisco, ten years from now seven billion people will be online, using 50 billion connected devices. Online collaboration is here to stay.
The scale of this change means businesses are facing a new and immense challenge – how to foster the same creativity and productivity that can be generated in the physical environment, online. In my experience this is an area where businesses often fall down; too focused on the functional – how things can be done faster and cheaper – rather than providing the tools that create the best possible virtual environment for employees.
As a result, many businesses have been slow to adopt collaboration online. Employees are inhibited by clunky email attachments, messy tracked changes in documents and awkward conference calls. By contrast a good virtual working environment give employees:
- The comfort of knowing you’ll have access to do your documents whether you’re at a meeting or on a business trip
- The ability to work as a team on a document, contributing and editing in real time, with freelancers, partners, contractors and colleagues in different locations
- The ability to share folders with people around the world and receive content they produce instantly, even across multiple time zones
While this opportunity to have more productive and creative employees is largely being missed by many British businesses, there are some companies reaping the reward of online collaboration. One organisation, Pipers Design, is using cloud technology to change the face of London.
By embracing the virtual environment and investing in it as equal and complementary to a physical office, businesses can really thrive
As part of the regeneration of Kings Cross, Pipers has built a huge interactive model of the new station district. These kind of designs, previously made out of wood and glue, now need to be interactive and able to change as the designs develop. That’s where cloud comes in – it’s helping the team coordinate thousands of tiny, detailed design changes from collaborators across international time zones. Their staff and partners are able to be highly creative, safe in the knowledge that all information is secure, changes will be tracked and recorded and everyone can be involved even when they’re on the move. These guys are world leaders in their field, visionaries in the best way to get work done.
Pipers is just one example of how creating a virtual environment conducive to collaboration can help employees and businesses excel. But it is an example that I think other sectors should learn from. By embracing the virtual environment and investing in it as equal and complementary to a physical office space businesses can really thrive.
I’m looking forward to the day when innovative online collaboration is as commonplace as beanbags and foosball tables.
Democratizing Force of WebRTC | @ThingsExpo #IoT #M2M #RTC #WebRTC
WebRTC converts the entire network into a ubiquitous communications cloud thereby connecting anytime, anywhere through any point. In his session at WebRTC Summit, Mark Castleman, EIR at Bell Labs and Head of Future X Labs, will discuss how the transformational nature of communications is achieved through the democratizing force of WebRTC. WebRTC is doing for voice what HTML did for web content.
WebRTC Had Tough Four Years | @ThingsExpo #RTC #IoT #M2M #WebRTC
Those in the industry have been working hard to sweeten the deal again – efforts have been made to bring WebRTC into the mainstream and as a result the technology is experiencing a rebirth. Thanks to those who have remained dedicated to improving the situation for those around them, WebRTC is finally starting to fulfill the original expectations that were had of it. Both the technology and the support networks have been built up to make experimenting with it again a pleasure, not a pain. WebRTC has grown up.
Peer-to-Peer Data Sharing with WebRTC | @ThingsExpo #IoT #RTC #WebRTC
The handling of “data” has been limited to text chat and file download – all other data sharing seems to end with screensharing. What is holding back a more intensive use of peer-to-peer data? In her session at @ThingsExpo, Dr Silvia Pfeiffer, WebRTC Applications Team Lead at National ICT Australia, will look at different existing uses of peer-to-peer data sharing and how it can become useful in a live session to enable richer collaboration using WebRTC and HTML5.
Don’t Discount Macs as Work PCs
It’s no secret that more and more companies are replacing their work PCs with Macs. Over the course of six years, Cisco went from blocking Macs from their network to amassing 35,000 for their employees. Earlier this year, IBM made headlines by announcing that they were planning on purchasing 50,000 by the end of 2015. […]
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Snapshots vs. Rollback Mode in Parallels Desktop
Guest blog by Dishant Tripathi, Parallels Support Team If you didn’t know already, Parallels runs 24/7 customer support globally. We talk to our customers via phone, chat, emails and our social media channels, all day, every day. On one of these days, after a night shift answering customer questions, I scored a successful power nap […]
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The One Trick That Will Ensure No One Knows You’re Working from Home
You and I both know that work doesn’t always end when you walk away from your desk. If you’re anything like me, you have remote access to your files on your phone and at least a work and a personal email set up on your phone as well. It’s hard to walk away—but while we’re […]
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