TY - GEN A1 - Elsaid, Mohamed Esam A1 - Shawish, Ahmed A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - Enhanced cost analysis of multiple virtual machines live migration in VMware environments T2 - 2018 IEEE 8th International Symposium on Cloud and Service Computing (SC2) N2 - Live migration is an important feature in modern software-defined datacenters and cloud computing environments. Dynamic resource management, load balance, power saving and fault tolerance are all dependent on the live migration feature. Despite the importance of live migration, the cost of live migration cannot be ignored and may result in service availability degradation. Live migration cost includes the migration time, downtime, CPU overhead, network and power consumption. There are many research articles that discuss the problem of live migration cost with different scopes like analyzing the cost and relate it to the parameters that control it, proposing new migration algorithms that minimize the cost and also predicting the migration cost. For the best of our knowledge, most of the papers that discuss the migration cost problem focus on open source hypervisors. For the research articles focus on VMware environments, none of the published articles proposed migration time, network overhead and power consumption modeling for single and multiple VMs live migration. In this paper, we propose empirical models for the live migration time, network overhead and power consumption for single and multiple VMs migration. The proposed models are obtained using a VMware based testbed. Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-7281-0236-8 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/SC2.2018.00010 SP - 16 EP - 23 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Bin Tareaf, Raad A1 - Berger, Philipp A1 - Hennig, Patrick A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - Personality exploration system for online social networks BT - Facebook brands as a use case T2 - 2018 IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on Web Intelligence (WI) N2 - User-generated content on social media platforms is a rich source of latent information about individual variables. Crawling and analyzing this content provides a new approach for enterprises to personalize services and put forward product recommendations. In the past few years, brands made a gradual appearance on social media platforms for advertisement, customers support and public relation purposes and by now it became a necessity throughout all branches. This online identity can be represented as a brand personality that reflects how a brand is perceived by its customers. We exploited recent research in text analysis and personality detection to build an automatic brand personality prediction model on top of the (Five-Factor Model) and (Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count) features extracted from publicly available benchmarks. The proposed model reported significant accuracy in predicting specific personality traits form brands. For evaluating our prediction results on actual brands, we crawled the Facebook API for 100k posts from the most valuable brands' pages in the USA and we visualize exemplars of comparison results and present suggestions for future directions. KW - Big Five Model KW - Brand Personality KW - Personality Prediction KW - Machine Learning KW - Social Media Analysis Y1 - 2019 SN - 978-1-5386-7325-6 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/WI.2018.00-76 SP - 301 EP - 309 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Chujfi, Salim A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - Patterns to explore cognitive preferences and potential collective intelligence empathy for processing knowledge in virtual settings N2 - Organizations continue building virtual working teams (Teleworkers) to become more dynamic as part of their strategic innovation, with great benefits to individuals, business and society. However, during such transformations it is important to note that effective knowledge communication is particularly difficult in distributed environments as well as in non-interactive settings, because the interlocutors cannot use gestures or mimicry and have to adapt their expressions without receiving any feedback, which may affect the creation of tacit knowledge. Collective Intelligence appears to be an encouraging alternative for creating knowledge. However, in this scenario it faces an important goal to be achieved, as the degree of ability of two or more individuals increases with the need to overcome barriers through the aggregation of separately processed information, whereby all actors follow similar conditions to participate in the collective. Geographically distributed organizations have the great challenge of managing people’s knowledge, not only to keep operations running, but also to promote innovation within the organization in the creation of new knowledge. The management of knowledge from Collective Intelligence represents a big difference from traditional methods of information allocation, since managing Collective Intelligence poses new requirements. For instance, semantic analysis has to merge information, coming both from the content itself and the social/individual context, and in addition, the social dynamics that emerge online have to be taken into account. This study analyses how knowledge-based organizations working with decentralized staff may need to consider the cognitive styles and social behaviors of individuals participating in their programs to effectively manage knowledge in virtual settings. It also proposes assessment taxonomies to analyze online comportments at the levels of the individual and community, in order to successfully identify characteristics to help evaluate higher effectiveness of communication. We aim at modeling measurement patterns to identify effective ways of interaction of individuals, taking into consideration their cognitive and social behaviors. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 409 KW - computer science KW - telework KW - knowledge management KW - thinking styles KW - learning styles KW - self-government KW - collective intelligence KW - collaborative work KW - cognitive patterns Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-401789 ER - TY - BOOK A1 - Meinel, Christoph A1 - Gayvoronskaya, Tatiana A1 - Schnjakin, Maxim T1 - Blockchain BT - hype or innovation N2 - The term blockchain has recently become a buzzword, but only few know what exactly lies behind this approach. According to a survey, issued in the first quarter of 2017, the term is only known by 35 percent of German medium-sized enterprise representatives. However, the blockchain technology is very interesting for the mass media because of its rapid development and global capturing of different markets. For example, many see blockchain technology either as an all-purpose weapon— which only a few have access to—or as a hacker technology for secret deals in the darknet. The innovation of blockchain technology is found in its successful combination of already existing approaches: such as decentralized networks, cryptography, and consensus models. This innovative concept makes it possible to exchange values in a decentralized system. At the same time, there is no requirement for trust between its nodes (e.g. users). With this study the Hasso Plattner Institute would like to help readers form their own opinion about blockchain technology, and to distinguish between truly innovative properties and hype. The authors of the present study analyze the positive and negative properties of the blockchain architecture and suggest possible solutions, which can contribute to the efficient use of the technology. We recommend that every company define a clear target for the intended application, which is achievable with a reasonable cost-benefit ration, before deciding on this technology. Both the possibilities and the limitations of blockchain technology need to be considered. The relevant steps that must be taken in this respect are summarized /summed up for the reader in this study. Furthermore, this study elaborates on urgent problems such as the scalability of the blockchain, appropriate consensus algorithm and security, including various types of possible attacks and their countermeasures. New blockchains, for example, run the risk of reducing security, as changes to existing technology can lead to lacks in the security and failures. After discussing the innovative properties and problems of the blockchain technology, its implementation is discussed. There are a lot of implementation opportunities for companies available who are interested in the blockchain realization. The numerous applications have either their own blockchain as a basis or use existing and widespread blockchain systems. Various consortia and projects offer "blockchain-as-a-serviceänd help other companies to develop, test and deploy their own applications. This study gives a detailed overview of diverse relevant applications and projects in the field of blockchain technology. As this technology is still a relatively young and fast developing approach, it still lacks uniform standards to allow the cooperation of different systems and to which all developers can adhere. Currently, developers are orienting themselves to Bitcoin, Ethereum and Hyperledger systems, which serve as the basis for many other blockchain applications. The goal is to give readers a clear and comprehensive overview of blockchain technology and its capabilities. N2 - Der Begriff Blockchain ist in letzter Zeit zu einem Schlagwort geworden, aber nur wenige wissen, was sich genau dahinter verbirgt. Laut einer Umfrage, die im ersten Quartal 2017 veröffentlicht wurde, ist der Begriff nur bei 35 Prozent der deutschen Mittelständler bekannt. Dabei ist die Blockchain-Technologie durch ihre rasante Entwicklung und die globale Eroberung unterschiedlicher Märkte für Massenmedien sehr interessant. So sehen viele die Blockchain-Technologie entweder als eine Allzweckwaffe, zu der aber nur wenige einen Zugang haben, oder als eine Hacker-Technologie für geheime Geschäfte im Darknet. Dabei liegt die Innovation der Blockchain-Technologie in ihrer erfolgreichen Zusammensetzung bereits vorhandener Ansätze: dezentrale Netzwerke, Kryptographie, Konsensfindungsmodelle. Durch das innovative Konzept wird ein Werte-Austausch in einem dezentralen System möglich. Dabei wird kein Vertrauen zwischen dessen Knoten (z.B. Nutzer) vorausgesetzt. Mit dieser Studie möchte das Hasso-Plattner-Institut den Lesern helfen, ihren eigenen Standpunkt zur Blockchain-Technologie zu finden und dabei dazwischen unterscheiden zu können, welche Eigenschaften wirklich innovativ und welche nichts weiter als ein Hype sind. Die Autoren der vorliegenden Arbeit analysieren positive und negative Eigenschaften, welche die Blockchain-Architektur prägen, und stellen mögliche Anpassungs- und Lösungsvorschläge vor, die zu einem effizienten Einsatz der Technologie beitragen können. Jedem Unternehmen, bevor es sich für diese Technologie entscheidet, wird dabei empfohlen, für den geplanten Anwendungszweck zunächst ein klares Ziel zu definieren, das mit einem angemessenen Kosten-Nutzen-Verhältnis angestrebt werden kann. Dabei sind sowohl die Möglichkeiten als auch die Grenzen der Blockchain-Technologie zu beachten. Die relevanten Schritte, die es in diesem Zusammenhang zu beachten gilt, fasst die Studie für die Leser übersichtlich zusammen. Es wird ebenso auf akute Fragestellungen wie Skalierbarkeit der Blockchain, geeigneter Konsensalgorithmus und Sicherheit eingegangen, darunter verschiedene Arten möglicher Angriffe und die entsprechenden Gegenmaßnahmen zu deren Abwehr. Neue Blockchains etwa laufen Gefahr, geringere Sicherheit zu bieten, da Änderungen an der bereits bestehenden Technologie zu Schutzlücken und Mängeln führen können. Nach Diskussion der innovativen Eigenschaften und Probleme der Blockchain-Technologie wird auf ihre Umsetzung eingegangen. Interessierten Unternehmen stehen viele Umsetzungsmöglichkeiten zur Verfügung. Die zahlreichen Anwendungen haben entweder eine eigene Blockchain als Grundlage oder nutzen bereits bestehende und weitverbreitete Blockchain-Systeme. Zahlreiche Konsortien und Projekte bieten „Blockchain-as-a-Service“ an und unterstützen andere Unternehmen beim Entwickeln, Testen und Bereitstellen von Anwendungen. Die Studie gibt einen detaillierten Überblick über zahlreiche relevante Einsatzbereiche und Projekte im Bereich der Blockchain-Technologie. Dadurch, dass sie noch relativ jung ist und sich schnell entwickelt, fehlen ihr noch einheitliche Standards, die Zusammenarbeit der verschiedenen Systeme erlauben und an die sich alle Entwickler halten können. Aktuell orientieren sich Entwickler an Bitcoin-, Ethereum- und Hyperledger-Systeme, diese dienen als Grundlage für viele weitere Blockchain-Anwendungen. Ziel ist, den Lesern einen klaren und umfassenden Überblick über die Blockchain-Technologie und deren Möglichkeiten zu vermitteln. T3 - Technische Berichte des Hasso-Plattner-Instituts für Digital Engineering an der Universität Potsdam - 124 KW - ACINQ KW - altchain KW - alternative chain KW - ASIC KW - atomic swap KW - Australian securities exchange KW - bidirectional payment channels KW - Bitcoin Core KW - bitcoins KW - BitShares KW - Blockchain Auth KW - blockchain consortium KW - cross-chain KW - inter-chain KW - blocks KW - blockchain KW - Blockstack ID KW - Blockstack KW - blumix platform KW - BTC KW - Byzantine Agreement KW - chain KW - cloud KW - Colored Coins KW - confirmation period KW - contest period KW - DAO KW - Delegated Proof-of-Stake KW - decentralized autonomous organization KW - Distributed Proof-of-Research KW - double hashing KW - DPoS KW - ECDSA KW - Eris KW - Ether KW - Ethereum KW - E-Wallet KW - Federated Byzantine Agreement KW - federated voting KW - FollowMyVote KW - Fork KW - Gridcoin KW - Hard Fork KW - Hashed Timelock Contracts KW - hashrate KW - identity management KW - smart contracts KW - Internet of Things KW - IoT KW - BCCC KW - Japanese Blockchain Consortium KW - consensus algorithm KW - consensus protocol KW - ledger assets KW - Lightning Network KW - Lock-Time-Parameter KW - merged mining KW - merkle root KW - micropayment KW - micropayment channels KW - Microsoft Azur KW - miner KW - mining KW - mining hardware KW - minting KW - Namecoin KW - NameID KW - NASDAQ KW - nonce KW - off-chain transaction KW - Onename KW - OpenBazaar KW - Oracles KW - Orphan Block KW - P2P KW - Peercoin KW - peer-to-peer network KW - pegged sidechains KW - PoB KW - PoS KW - PoW KW - Proof-of-Burn KW - Proof-of-Stake KW - Proof-of-Work KW - quorum slices KW - Ripple KW - rootstock KW - scarce tokens KW - difficulty KW - SCP KW - SHA KW - sidechain KW - Simplified Payment Verification KW - scalability of blockchain KW - Slock.it KW - Soft Fork KW - SPV KW - Steemit KW - Stellar Consensus Protocol KW - Storj KW - The Bitfury Group KW - transaction KW - Two-Way-Peg KW - The DAO KW - Unspent Transaction Output KW - contracts KW - Watson IoT KW - difficulty target KW - Zookos triangle KW - Blockchain-Konsortium R3 KW - blockchain-übergreifend KW - Blöcke KW - Blockkette KW - Blumix-Plattform KW - dezentrale autonome Organisation KW - doppelter Hashwert KW - Identitätsmanagement KW - intelligente Verträge KW - Internet der Dinge KW - Japanisches Blockchain-Konsortium KW - Kette KW - Konsensalgorithmus KW - Konsensprotokoll KW - Micropayment-Kanäle KW - Off-Chain-Transaktionen KW - Peer-to-Peer Netz KW - Schwierigkeitsgrad KW - Skalierbarkeit der Blockchain KW - Transaktion KW - Verträge KW - Zielvorgabe KW - Zookos Dreieck Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-414525 SN - 978-3-86956-441-8 SN - 1613-5652 SN - 2191-1665 IS - 124 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Jacqmin, Julien A1 - Özdemir, Paker Doğu A1 - Fell Kurban, Caroline A1 - Tunç Pekkan, Zelha A1 - Koskinen, Johanna A1 - Suonpää, Maija A1 - Seng, Cheyvuth A1 - Carlon, May Kristine Jonson A1 - Gayed, John Maurice A1 - Cross, Jeffrey S. A1 - Langseth, Inger A1 - Jacobsen, Dan Yngve A1 - Haugsbakken, Halvdan A1 - Bethge, Joseph A1 - Serth, Sebastian A1 - Staubitz, Thomas A1 - Wuttke, Tobias A1 - Nordemann, Oliver A1 - Das, Partha-Pratim A1 - Meinel, Christoph A1 - Ponce, Eva A1 - Srinath, Sindhu A1 - Allegue, Laura A1 - Perach, Shai A1 - Alexandron, Giora A1 - Corti, Paola A1 - Baudo, Valeria A1 - Turró, Carlos A1 - Moura Santos, Ana A1 - Nilsson, Charlotta A1 - Maldonado-Mahauad, Jorge A1 - Valdiviezo, Javier A1 - Carvallo, Juan Pablo A1 - Samaniego-Erazo, Nicolay A1 - Poce, Antonella A1 - Re, Maria Rosaria A1 - Valente, Mara A1 - Karp Gershon, Sa’ar A1 - Ruipérez-Valiente, José A. A1 - Despujol, Ignacio A1 - Busquets, Jaime A1 - Kerr, John A1 - Lorenz, Anja A1 - Schön, Sandra A1 - Ebner, Martin A1 - Wittke, Andreas A1 - Beirne, Elaine A1 - Nic Giolla Mhichíl, Mairéad A1 - Brown, Mark A1 - Mac Lochlainn, Conchúr A1 - Topali, Paraskevi A1 - Chounta, Irene-Angelica A1 - Ortega-Arranz, Alejandro A1 - Villagrá-Sobrino, Sara L. A1 - Martínez-Monés, Alejandra A1 - Blackwell, Virginia Katherine A1 - Wiltrout, Mary Ellen A1 - Rami Gaddem, Mohamed A1 - Hernández Reyes, César Augusto A1 - Nagahama, Toru A1 - Buchem, Ilona A1 - Okatan, Ebru A1 - Khalil, Mohammad A1 - Casiraghi, Daniela A1 - Sancassani, Susanna A1 - Brambilla, Federica A1 - Mihaescu, Vlad A1 - Andone, Diana A1 - Vasiu, Radu A1 - Şahin, Muhittin A1 - Egloffstein, Marc A1 - Bothe, Max A1 - Rohloff, Tobias A1 - Schenk, Nathanael A1 - Schwerer, Florian A1 - Ifenthaler, Dirk A1 - Hense, Julia A1 - Bernd, Mike ED - Meinel, Christoph ED - Staubitz, Thomas ED - Schweiger, Stefanie ED - Friedl, Christian ED - Kiers, Janine ED - Ebner, Martin ED - Lorenz, Anja ED - Ubachs, George ED - Mongenet, Catherine ED - Ruipérez-Valiente, José A. ED - Cortes Mendez, Manoel T1 - EMOOCs 2021 N2 - From June 22 to June 24, 2021, Hasso Plattner Institute, Potsdam, hosted the seventh European MOOC Stakeholder Summit (EMOOCs 2021) together with the eighth ACM Learning@Scale Conference. Due to the COVID-19 situation, the conference was held fully online. The boost in digital education worldwide as a result of the pandemic was also one of the main topics of this year’s EMOOCs. All institutions of learning have been forced to transform and redesign their educational methods, moving from traditional models to hybrid or completely online models at scale. The learnings, derived from practical experience and research, have been explored in EMOOCs 2021 in six tracks and additional workshops, covering various aspects of this field. In this publication, we present papers from the conference’s Experience Track, the Policy Track, the Business Track, the International Track, and the Workshops. KW - e-learning KW - microcredential KW - MOOC KW - digital education KW - experience KW - online course design KW - online course creation KW - higher education Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-510300 SN - 978-3-86956-512-5 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bethge, Joseph A1 - Serth, Sebastian A1 - Staubitz, Thomas A1 - Wuttke, Tobias A1 - Nordemann, Oliver A1 - Das, Partha-Pratim A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - TransPipe BT - A Pipeline for Automated Transcription and Translation of Videos JF - EMOOCs 2021 N2 - Online learning environments, such as Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), often rely on videos as a major component to convey knowledge. However, these videos exclude potential participants who do not understand the lecturer’s language, regardless of whether that is due to language unfamiliarity or aural handicaps. Subtitles and/or interactive transcripts solve this issue, ease navigation based on the content, and enable indexing and retrieval by search engines. Although there are several automated speech-to-text converters and translation tools, their quality varies and the process of integrating them can be quite tedious. Thus, in practice, many videos on MOOC platforms only receive subtitles after the course is already finished (if at all) due to a lack of resources. This work describes an approach to tackle this issue by providing a dedicated tool, which is closing this gap between MOOC platforms and transcription and translation tools and offering a simple workflow that can easily be handled by users with a less technical background. The proposed method is designed and evaluated by qualitative interviews with three major MOOC providers. Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-516943 VL - 2021 SP - 79 EP - 94 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER - TY - BOOK A1 - Meinel, Christoph A1 - Willems, Christian A1 - Staubitz, Thomas A1 - Sauer, Dominic A1 - Hagedorn, Christiane T1 - openHPI T1 - openHPI BT - 10 Years of MOOCs at the Hasso Plattner Institute BT - 10 Jahre MOOCs am Hasso-Plattner-Institut N2 - On the occasion of the 10th openHPI anniversary, this technical report provides information about the HPI MOOC platform, including its core features, technology, and architecture. In an introduction, the platform family with all partner platforms is presented; these now amount to nine platforms, including openHPI. This section introduces openHPI as an advisor and research partner in various projects. In the second chapter, the functionalities and common course formats of the platform are presented. The functionalities are divided into learner and admin features. The learner features section provides detailed information about performance records, courses, and the learning materials of which a course is composed: videos, texts, and quizzes. In addition, the learning materials can be enriched by adding external exercise tools that communicate with the HPI MOOC platform via the Learning Tools Interoperability (LTI) standard. Furthermore, the concept of peer assessments completed the possible learning materials. The section then proceeds with further information on the discussion forum, a fundamental concept of MOOCs compared to traditional e-learning offers. The section is concluded with a description of the quiz recap, learning objectives, mobile applications, gameful learning, and the help desk. The next part of this chapter deals with the admin features. The described functionality is restricted to describing the news and announcements, dashboards and statistics, reporting capabilities, research options with A/B testing, the course feed, and the TransPipe tool to support the process of creating automated or manual subtitles. The platform supports a large variety of additional features, but a detailed description of these features goes beyond the scope of this report. The chapter then elaborates on common course formats and openHPI teaching activities at the HPI. The chapter concludes with some best practices for course design and delivery. The third chapter provides insights into the technology and architecture behind openHPI. A special characteristic of the openHPI project is the conscious decision to operate the complete application from bare metal to platform development. Hence, the chapter starts with a section about the openHPI Cloud, including detailed information about the data center and devices, the used cloud software OpenStack and Ceph, as well as the openHPI Cloud Service provided for the HPI. Afterward, a section on the application technology stack and development tooling describes the application infrastructure components, the used automation, the deployment pipeline, and the tools used for monitoring and alerting. The chapter is concluded with detailed information about the technology stack and concrete platform implementation details. The section describes the service-oriented Ruby on Rails application, inter-service communication, and public APIs. It also provides more information on the design system and components used in the application. The section concludes with a discussion of the original microservice architecture, where we share our insights and reasoning for migrating back to a monolithic application. The last chapter provides a summary and an outlook on the future of digital education. N2 - Anlässlich des 10-jährigen Jubiläums von openHPI informiert dieser technische Bericht über die HPI-MOOC-Plattform einschließlich ihrer Kernfunktionen, Technologie und Architektur. In einer Einleitung wird die Plattformfamilie mit allen Partnerplattformen vorgestellt; diese belaufen sich inklusive openHPI aktuell auf neun Plattformen. In diesem Abschnitt wird außerdem gezeigt, wie openHPI als Berater und Forschungspartner in verschiedenen Projekten fungiert. Im zweiten Kapitel werden die Funktionalitäten und gängigen Kursformate der Plattform präsentiert. Die Funktionalitäten sind in Lerner- und Admin-Funktionen unterteilt. Der Bereich Lernerfunktionen bietet detaillierte Informationen zu Leistungsnachweisen, Kursen und den Lernmaterialien, aus denen sich ein Kurs zusammensetzt: Videos, Texte und Quiz. Darüber hinaus können die Lernmaterialien durch externe Übungstools angereichert werden, die über den Standard Learning Tools Interoperability (LTI) mit der HPI MOOC-Plattform kommunizieren. Das Konzept der Peer-Assessments rundet die möglichen Lernmaterialien ab. Der Abschnitt geht dann weiter auf das Diskussionsforum ein, das einen grundlegenden Unterschied von MOOCs im Vergleich zu traditionellen E-Learning-Angeboten darstellt. Zum Abschluss des Abschnitts folgen eine Beschreibung von Quiz-Recap, Lernzielen, mobilen Anwendungen, spielerischen Lernens und dem Helpdesk. Der nächste Teil dieses Kapitels beschäftigt sich mit den Admin-Funktionen. Die Funktionalitätsbeschreibung beschränkt sich Neuigkeiten und Ankündigungen, Dashboards und Statistiken, Berichtsfunktionen, Forschungsoptionen mit A/B-Tests, den Kurs-Feed und das TransPipe-Tool zur Unterstützung beim Erstellen von automatischen oder manuellen Untertiteln. Die Plattform unterstützt außerdem eine Vielzahl zusätzlicher Funktionen, doch eine detaillierte Beschreibung dieser Funktionen würde den Rahmen des Berichts sprengen. Das Kapitel geht dann auf gängige Kursformate und openHPI-Lehrveranstaltungen am HPI ein, bevor es mit einigen Best Practices für die Gestaltung und Durchführung von Kursen schließt. Zum Abschluss des technischen Berichts gibt das letzte Kapitel eine Zusammenfassung und einen Ausblick auf die Zukunft der digitalen Bildung. Ein besonderes Merkmal des openHPI-Projekts ist die bewusste Entscheidung, die komplette Anwendung von den physischen Netzwerkkomponenten bis zur Plattformentwicklung eigenständig zu betreiben. Bei der vorliegenden deutschen Variante handelt es sich um eine gekürzte Übersetzung des technischen Berichts 148, bei der kein Einblick in die Technologien und Architektur von openHPI gegeben wird. Interessierte Leser:innen können im technischen Bericht 148 (vollständige englische Version) detaillierte Informationen zum Rechenzentrum und den Geräten, der Cloud-Software und dem openHPI Cloud Service aber auch zu Infrastruktur-Anwendungskomponenten wie Entwicklungstools, Automatisierung, Deployment-Pipeline und Monitoring erhalten. Außerdem finden sich dort weitere Informationen über den Technologiestack und konkrete Implementierungsdetails der Plattform inklusive der serviceorientierten Ruby on Rails-Anwendung, die Kommunikation zwischen den Diensten, öffentliche APIs, sowie Designsystem und -komponenten. Der Abschnitt schließt mit einer Diskussion über die ursprüngliche Microservice-Architektur und die Migration zu einer monolithischen Anwendung. T3 - Technische Berichte des Hasso-Plattner-Instituts für Digital Engineering an der Universität Potsdam - 148 KW - openHPI KW - MOOC KW - digital learning platform KW - digital enlightenment KW - lifelong learning KW - openHPI KW - MOOC KW - digitale Lernplattform KW - digitale Aufklärung KW - lebenslanges Lernen Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-560208 SN - 978-3-86956-544-6 SN - 1613-5652 SN - 2191-1665 IS - 148 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER - TY - BOOK A1 - Meinel, Christoph A1 - Galbas, Michael A1 - Hagebölling, David T1 - Digital sovereignty: insights from Germany’s education sector T1 - Digitale Souveränität: Erkenntnisse aus dem deutschen Bildungssektor N2 - Digital technology offers significant political, economic, and societal opportunities. At the same time, the notion of digital sovereignty has become a leitmotif in German discourse: the state’s capacity to assume its responsibilities and safeguard society’s – and individuals’ – ability to shape the digital transformation in a self-determined way. The education sector is exemplary for the challenge faced by Germany, and indeed Europe, of harnessing the benefits of digital technology while navigating concerns around sovereignty. It encompasses education as a core public good, a rapidly growing field of business, and growing pools of highly sensitive personal data. The report describes pathways to mitigating the tension between digitalization and sovereignty at three different levels – state, economy, and individual – through the lens of concrete technical projects in the education sector: the HPI Schul-Cloud (state sovereignty), the MERLOT data spaces (economic sovereignty), and the openHPI platform (individual sovereignty). N2 - Digitale Technologien bieten erhebliche politische, wirtschaftliche und gesellschaftliche Chancen. Zugleich ist der Begriff digitale Souveränität zu einem Leitmotiv im deutschen Diskurs über digitale Technologien geworden: das heißt, die Fähigkeit des Staates, seine Verantwortung wahrzunehmen und die Befähigung der Gesellschaft – und des Einzelnen – sicherzustellen, die digitale Transformation selbstbestimmt zu gestalten. Exemplarisch für die Herausforderung in Deutschland und Europa, die Vorteile digitaler Technologien zu nutzen und gleichzeitig Souveränitätsbedenken zu berücksichtigen, steht der Bildungssektor. Er umfasst Bildung als zentrales öffentliches Gut, ein schnell aufkommendes Geschäftsfeld und wachsende Bestände an hochsensiblen personenbezogenen Daten. Davon ausgehend beschreibt der Bericht Wege zur Entschärfung des Spannungsverhältnisses zwischen Digitalisierung und Souveränität auf drei verschiedenen Ebenen – Staat, Wirtschaft und Individuum – anhand konkreter technischer Projekte im Bildungsbereich: die HPI Schul-Cloud (staatliche Souveränität), die MERLOT-Datenräume (wirtschaftliche Souveränität) und die openHPI-Plattform (individuelle Souveränität). T3 - Technische Berichte des Hasso-Plattner-Instituts für Digital Engineering an der Universität Potsdam - 157 KW - digitalization KW - digital sovereignty KW - digital education KW - HPI Schul-Cloud KW - MERLOT KW - openHPI KW - European Union KW - Digitalisierung KW - digitale Souveränität KW - digitale Bildung KW - HPI Schul-Cloud KW - MERLOT KW - openHPI KW - Europäische Union Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-597723 SN - 978-3-86956-561-3 SN - 1613-5652 SN - 2191-1665 IS - 157 SP - 1 EP - 27 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER - TY - GEN A1 - Serth, Sebastian A1 - Staubitz, Thomas A1 - van Elten, Martin A1 - Meinel, Christoph ED - Gamage, Dilrukshi T1 - Measuring the effects of course modularizations in online courses for life-long learners T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Reihe der Digital Engineering Fakultät N2 - Many participants in Massive Open Online Courses are full-time employees seeking greater flexibility in their time commitment and the available learning paths. We recently addressed these requirements by splitting up our 6-week courses into three 2-week modules followed by a separate exam. Modularizing courses offers many advantages: Shorter modules are more sustainable and can be combined, reused, and incorporated into learning paths more easily. Time flexibility for learners is also improved as exams can now be offered multiple times per year, while the learning content is available independently. In this article, we answer the question of which impact this modularization has on key learning metrics, such as course completion rates, learning success, and no-show rates. Furthermore, we investigate the influence of longer breaks between modules on these metrics. According to our analysis, course modules facilitate more selective learning behaviors that encourage learners to focus on topics they are the most interested in. At the same time, participation in overarching exams across all modules seems to be less appealing compared to an integrated exam of a 6-week course. While breaks between the modules increase the distinctive appearance of individual modules, a break before the final exam further reduces initial interest in the exams. We further reveal that participation in self-paced courses as a preparation for the final exam is unlikely to attract new learners to the course offerings, even though learners' performance is comparable to instructor-paced courses. The results of our long-term study on course modularization provide a solid foundation for future research and enable educators to make informed decisions about the design of their courses. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Reihe der Digital Engineering Fakultät - 17 KW - Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) KW - course design KW - modularization KW - learning path KW - flexibility KW - e-learning KW - assignments KW - self-paced learning Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-589182 IS - 17 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Bin Tareaf, Raad A1 - Berger, Philipp A1 - Hennig, Patrick A1 - Meinel, Christoph T1 - ASEDS BT - Towards automatic social emotion detection system using facebook reactions T2 - IEEE 20th International Conference on High Performance Computing and Communications; IEEE 16th International Conference on Smart City; IEEE 4th International Conference on Data Science and Systems (HPCC/SmartCity/DSS)) N2 - The Massive adoption of social media has provided new ways for individuals to express their opinion and emotion online. In 2016, Facebook introduced a new reactions feature that allows users to express their psychological emotions regarding published contents using so-called Facebook reactions. In this paper, a framework for predicting the distribution of Facebook post reactions is presented. For this purpose, we collected an enormous amount of Facebook posts associated with their reactions labels using the proposed scalable Facebook crawler. The training process utilizes 3 million labeled posts for more than 64,000 unique Facebook pages from diverse categories. The evaluation on standard benchmarks using the proposed features shows promising results compared to previous research. The final model is able to predict the reaction distribution on Facebook posts with a recall score of 0.90 for "Joy" emotion. KW - Emotion Mining KW - Psychological Emotions KW - Machine Learning KW - Social Media Analysis KW - Natural Language Processing Y1 - 2018 SN - 978-1-5386-6614-2 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/HPCC/SmartCity/DSS.2018.00143 SP - 860 EP - 866 PB - IEEE CY - New York ER -