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Category:New Zealand drag performers | [[Category:Drag performers by nationality]] | Category:Drag performers by nationality
drag performers
drag performers |
Category:New Zealand drag performers | Table of Content | [[Category:Drag performers by nationality]] |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Operation Dragonfly | [[:Operation Dragonfly]] | :Operation Dragonfly
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Article has been sitting since its creation on 25 October 2023, having not been expanded at all since then. It is about a unique, out of many, Ukrainian strike against Russian forces. The only reason why it could be notable would be for it being the first instance of ATACMS usage by Ukraine in the war, according to the article.
The first results when looking up "Operation Dragonfly" on Google aren't even about the invasion of Ukraine. In five pages of results in Google, I could only find the following sources about this strike: .
I could find more sources without using the "Operation Dragonfly" name. . The most recent source is the latter, from 23 October, six days after the strike happened. I do not believe the strike has long-lasting coverage in sources. Simply by reading the article, the strike surely was not nothing, but it doesn't seem worth a Wikipedia article. Super Ψ Dro 20:34, 20 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: History, Military, Russia, and Ukraine. Super Ψ Dro 20:34, 20 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Events-related deletion discussions. WCQuidditch ☎ ✎ 23:15, 20 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Operation Dragonfly | Table of Content | [[:Operation Dragonfly]] |
Draft:Sourhouse | AFC submission |
Sourhouse is a company that makes tools for sourdough home bakers. Based in Asheville, North Carolina, Sourhouse created the first countertop warming device specifically for jars of sourdough starters.. Founded by Erik Fabian and Jennifer Yoko Olson, the company’s flagship products include Goldie by Sourhouse, DoughBed by Sourhouse, and the Sourhouse Starter Jar. |
Draft:Sourhouse | History | History
Sourhouse was founded in March 2020, during the first days of the COVID-19 lockdown when Erik Fabian, a home baker, partnered with industrial designer Jennifer Yoko Olson to create a simple solution for caring for sourdough starter. Erik came up with the initial idea for Goldie after he found himself offering people advice on how to start and maintain a healthy starter during the pandemic baking trend of 2020. |
Draft:Sourhouse | Products | Products |
Draft:Sourhouse | Goldie by Sourhouse | Goldie by Sourhouse
Goldie by Sourhouse is the first countertop warming device created specifically for sourdough starters. The thoughtfully designed device provides gentle heat to warm a starter without risk of overheating, features a transparent borosilicate glass cloche for easy visibility, and includes a simple three-zone thermometer with colored lights that help bakers understand their starter's behavior. |
Draft:Sourhouse | Sourhouse Starter Jar | Sourhouse Starter Jar
The Sourhouse Starter Jar features a clean, functional design with flat sides and no screw threads to prevent dried starter from accumulating. The jar's thoughtful design includes measurement markings to help bakers easily track fermentation progress. Notable reviewers of the Starter Jar appreciate that the silicone cap fits around the outside of the jar, making it easier to clean than other jars they’ve tried. |
Draft:Sourhouse | DoughBed by Sourhouse | DoughBed by Sourhouse
In 2024, Sourhouse introduced DoughBed, a system for the mixing and bulk-proofing stage of sourdough baking. Doughbed combines a low-wattage warming mat, oval shaped borosilicate glass dough bowl, and cork lid. The product helps to maintain ideal temperatures of 75-82°F (24-28°C) during bulk fermentation. According to reviews, Doughbed addresses the common challenge of maintaining consistent proofing conditions in home baking.
The oval shape of the Dough Bowl is inspired by the traditional wooden dough bowl used throughout Appalachia and the rectangular troughs used by traditional sourdough bakeries. |
Draft:Sourhouse | Crowdfunding and Business Growth | Crowdfunding and Business Growth
Sourhouse launched publicly in 2021, initially focusing on community building through collecting sourdough baking stories in an initiative called "Sourdough Hope." The company's product line began with Goldie and their Starter Jars and expanded through ecommerce, retail and successful crowdfunding campaigns. Sourhouse launched Goldie by Sourhouse along with the Sourhouse Starter Jar on Kickstarter on April 5, 2022. The campaign was fully funded in the first three days, ultimately raising over $103,948 from 1,007 backers.
They subsequently launched DoughBed on Kickstarter on May 7, 2024, raising over $100,000 from over 800 backers in less than three hours after its launch, and ultimately raising $268,013 from 1,581 backers. |
Draft:Sourhouse | Awards and Recognition | Awards and Recognition
Goldie by Sourhouse received the Good Housekeeping Best Kitchen Gear Award in 2024, with testers praising its user-friendly design and helpful indicator lights that inform bakers when their starter is at the optimal temperature. The Kitchn featured Goldie in a 2023 review, highlighting its thoughtful science-based design and functional elements that maintain ideal temperatures for sourdough starters, and in another 2025 review, foregrounding its ease of use. Serious Eats published a detailed review of the Goldie, noting that it "does this job very well" in maintaining steady temperatures for sourdough starters.
In 2024 Goldie was recognized by Tasting Table as “Best of The Inspired Home Show”, and in 2025 DoughBed by Sourhouse was recognized as a finalist for the Global Innovation Awards (GIA) program, which honors excellence and innovation in home and housewares product design.
Sourhouse products have gained recognition beyond specialized kitchen publications, with distribution through premium kitchenware retailers including Williams Sonoma. |
Draft:Sourhouse | Community Initiatives | Community Initiatives
In 2021, Sourhouse launched their "Sourdough Hope" initiative to collect inspiring stories from bakers across America about how sourdough baking helped them through difficult times, including supporting ill family members, coping with COVID-19 losses, and finding meaningful community connections. Following Hurricane Helene in 2024, Sourhouse was featured by WLOS News 13 for helping coordinate local businesses' community recovery efforts in the Asheville area, and also for establishing mutual aid programs like "Bake for Your Neighbors" and "One Percent for Asheville"where they and other local business donated 1% of profits to support relief and recovery efforts after hurricane Helene.
The company also created the Sourhouse Community Cookbook, a free crowd-sourced collection of recipes and tips from home bakers that has been downloaded over 80,000 times. In a 2025 interview, Erik Fabian stated that Sourhouse had distributed over 25,000 packets of sourdough starter to new bakers. |
Draft:Sourhouse | Media Coverage | Media Coverage
Sourhouse products have received significant coverage across prominent media outlets. Goldie by Sourhouse has been featured in respected publications including Wired, which published a dedicated product review, and Good Housekeeping, which recognized it in their 2024 Kitchen Gear Awards. The New York Times' Wirecutter included Sourhouse Starter Jars in their guide to tools for bread baking, while Food & Wine highlighted Goldie among their editors' top kitchen product picks
Design-focused publications have also taken notice of Sourhouse's aesthetic and functional approach, with Design Milk featuring Goldie as "worthy of counter envy" and Engadget reviewing it as a kitchen gadget that takes "the guesswork out of sourdough." Culinary publications including Serious Eats, Bon Appétit, and Saveur have featured Sourhouse products in gift guides and reviews, praising both their form and function.
In addition to product coverage, Sourhouse's community initiatives have been featured in regional news sources such as Mountain Xpress WLOS News 13, which highlighted their "One Percent for Asheville" hurricane relief efforts.
Beyond traditional media, Sourhouse founders have been featured on numerous podcasts including Making It In Asheville, The Urban Farm, and CrowdCrux, discussing their product development process, crowdfunding success, and approach to supporting the home baking community.
Sourhouse co-founder Erik Fabian has been quoted on sourdough baking in Wired and the post-Covid sourdough baking product category in the housewares industry publication Homepage News. |
Draft:Sourhouse | References | References |
Draft:Sourhouse | Table of Content | AFC submission, History, Products, Goldie by Sourhouse, Sourhouse Starter Jar, DoughBed by Sourhouse, Crowdfunding and Business Growth, Awards and Recognition, Community Initiatives, Media Coverage, References |
J. Oscar Molina | Short description | José Óscar Molina (born 1971), known as J. Oscar Molina, is a Salvadoran-American visual artist based in Southampton, New York. His work includes painting, sculpture, and installation, and often explores themes of migration, identity, and memory. He founded the Oscar Molina Gallery and created the ongoing series Children of the World. |
J. Oscar Molina | Early life | Early life
Molina was born in 1971 in Ocotillo, a canton in Lolotique, Morazán Department, El Salvador. He grew up during the Salvadoran Civil War, an experience that later informed his art. After the expropriation of his family’s farmland, his family moved to the Pacific coast of El Salvador and worked as fishermen.
At age 16, Molina migrated to the United States with his brother, traveling through Guatemala and Mexico before crossing the border in Arizona. The family settled in Southampton, New York, and was granted political asylum. Molina worked in landscaping and agriculture before co-founding M.O.E Masonry, a masonry business with his brothers. He later shifted to practicing art full-time.
Though self-taught, he studied architecture, landscape design, and drawing, which influenced his artistic approach. |
J. Oscar Molina | Career | Career
Molina began sculpting in the 1990s and later expanded into painting and installation. His early influences include Salvadoran folk art and clay work by his mother. His work explores the emotional and psychological dimensions of migration, memory, and identity. Through abstraction and symbolism, his art incorporates cultural dislocation and resilience, inviting reflection on social issues and collective memory.
He works with concrete, steel, acrylic, and oil. Faceless figures often appear in his work, representing shared human experiences. Molina has exhibited in the United States, El Salvador, Mexico, and Colombia, with venues including the Museo Nacional de Antropología in El Salvador, Long Island Museum, LongHouse Reserve, and Southampton Arts Center.
Molina has contributed to arts education programs on Long Island. He has led workshops for youth through the Organización Latino Americana (OLA) of Eastern Long Island and collaborated with institutions such as the Parrish Art Museum and LongHouse Reserve.
In 2015, he participated in National Letters and Colors, an exhibition at the National Museum of Anthropology in El Salvador. Molina has also exhibited at Casa de la Cultura in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico and Casa de la Cultura in Marinilla, Columbia.
In 2018, Molina co-organized TEDxShinnecockHills with Julio Cambron in Southampton, New York. He was also included in ROOTS, a group exhibition organized by OLA of Eastern Long Island at the Southampton Cultural Center to support Latino and Hispanic communities.
In 2019, Molina launched Children of the World, a series of sculptures and paintings focused on migration, childhood, and identity. The series features elongated, faceless figures in concrete and steel. Installations from the series have been exhibited at LongHouse Reserve in East Hampton, New York. A documentary short, Children of the World (2023), directed by Marsin Mogielski, was screened at Sag Harbor Cinema, where Molina also participated in a public panel discussion.
Molina is a board member of the Southampton Hospital Association. In 2024, his work was featured at the Hamptons Fine Art Fair in a collaborative presentation with Yubal Márquez Fleites. |
J. Oscar Molina | Oscar Molina Gallery | Oscar Molina Gallery
In 2023, Molina opened the Oscar Molina Gallery in Southampton, New York. The gallery hosts exhibitions, talks, and workshops and features artists from the Americas. Exhibitions have included:
House and Home (2024), featuring Glen Mayo, Flavio Franco, Franco Cuttica, and Mary Ellen Bartley
Women’s Work (2023), a group exhibition
Manifest (2023), with Demarcus McGaughey and UncuttArt
Bronze Children of the World (2023), a solo exhibition by Molina |
J. Oscar Molina | Selected works | Selected works
Molina's works and series include Cielo Azul #5 (2024), Morning Sky (2023), the Mar Azul Collection (2023), Children of the World at Hyatt (2023), Red World #1 (2022), and Dark Night (2021). Other series include Stages of Love, Tulips Collection, and Values & Principles Collection. |
J. Oscar Molina | Notable work | Notable work
Molina’s notable works include:
Children of the world
Stages of love
Values & principles
Rain drops
Tulipanes
Mujeres |
J. Oscar Molina | Selected exhibitions | Selected exhibitions
Molina has exhibited his work in solo and group shows across the Americas. Selected exhibitions include:
Museo Nacional de Antropología, San Salvador, El Salvador (2024)
Hotel Matilda, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico – solo exhibition (2024)
Sala Nacional de Exposiciones Salarrué, San Salvador (2024, solo)
Art on Paper Fair, New York (2024)
Hamptons Fine Art Fair, Southampton, New York (2022–2024)
Long Island Museum of American Art, Stony Brook, New York – SOMOS/WE ARE (2023)
LongHouse Reserve, East Hampton, New York (2023–2024)
Oscar Molina Gallery, Southampton – Processions: Cabrera + Molina (2022)
Embassy of El Salvador, Washington, D.C. – Retrospective (2021, solo)
Southampton Arts Center, Southampton, New York – East End Collected Five (2019)
Southampton Cultural Center, Southampton, New York – OLA’s ROOTS Art Show (2019)
Casa de la Cultura, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico – Shaping Lifetime Emotions (2019)
Casa de la Cultura, Marinilla, Colombia – Apasionarte (2015)
Library of Hempstead / Casa de la Cultura, Hempstead, New York (2013) |
J. Oscar Molina | References | References |
J. Oscar Molina | External links | External links
Official website
J. Oscar Molina Biography
Oscar Molina Exhibitions
"Oscar Molina Gallery", Saatchi Art
"Oscar Molina Gallery (Southampton)", Artsy
Category:Living people
Category:1971 births
Category:Salvadoran emigrants to the United States
Category:American people of Salvadoran descent
Category:Salvadoran artists
Category:American contemporary artists
Category:American sculptors
Category:American painters
Category:People from Morazán Department
Category:People from Southampton (town), New York
Category:Self-taught artists
Category:Installation artists
Category:21st-century American artists |
J. Oscar Molina | Table of Content | Short description, Early life, Career, Oscar Molina Gallery, Selected works, Notable work, Selected exhibitions, References, External links |
File:Goldcrest Films logo.svg | Invalid SVG | |
File:Goldcrest Films logo.svg | Summary | Summary |
File:Goldcrest Films logo.svg | Licensing | Licensing |
File:Goldcrest Films logo.svg | Table of Content | Invalid SVG, Summary, Licensing |
Tartarugas River | Infobox river
| The Tartarugas River () is a river of Marajó, which itself is an island in the mouth of the Amazon. It is located in the state Pará in northern Brazil, and forms the border between the municipalities Chaves and Soure.
The source of Tartartugas River is in the swamp areas called mondongos that are normally flooded during the wet season. When the area around the source is flooded, it is sometimes called Lake Tartarugas (Lago Tartarugas). It has a connection to Lake Arari through the Jenipapucu River. It is fed by a stream called Igarapé Jararaca.
Part of the river was canalised in the first half of the 20th Century, named the Tartarugas Canal (Canal Tartarugas). This was done to connect Lake Arari to the Atlantic Ocean, and also to facilitate drainage of the area in times of flooding. Because of this, the river can be navigated well.
Along the river there are several elevations called tesos. They contain indigenous cemeteries with human remains buried in ceramic pots according to Marajoara culture. Depending on the water level, the tesos can present themselves as islands in the river, which is how naturalist Alexandre Rodrigues Ferreira described them in the 18th Century. |
Tartarugas River | References | References
Category:Rivers of Pará |
Tartarugas River | Table of Content | Infobox river
, References |
Category:Drag performers from Wellington City | [[Category:People from Wellington City by occupation]] | Category:People from Wellington City by occupation
Wellington City |
Category:Drag performers from Wellington City | Table of Content | [[Category:People from Wellington City by occupation]] |
Samuel G. Butman | short description | Samuel Grenville Butman (April 1826February 18, 1899) was an American politician, who served in the Maine House of Representatives. He was the son of politician Samuel Butman. |
Samuel G. Butman | References | References |
Samuel G. Butman | External links | External links
at the Maine State Legislature Legislators Biographical Database
Category:1826 births
Category:1899 deaths
Category:Republican Party members of the Maine House of Representatives
Category:19th-century members of the Maine Legislature |
Samuel G. Butman | Table of Content | short description, References, External links |
Draft:Veterans Party of America | AFC submission |
The Veterans Party Of America was a United States political party, it was founded in 2013. it seeks to create a more Constitutional, viable, fiscally-responsible government
The party had Ballot Access in Mississippi
The party was formerly ballot-qualified in Florida.
in 2016 the party nominated its 1st presidential ticket Nominating Christopher Robert Keniston For President They were only on the ballot in Colorado Receiving 5,028 Votes
Roger Gerrard would run a campaign under the party banner for United States House of Representatives In 2016 He Would Receive 8,696 Votes
in 2020 Max Abramson would seek the presidential nomination of the party And would attempt to Merge the Reform And Veterans Parties Which was Rejected by Reform Party leadership The Veterans Party would not nominate a candidate in 2020.
In 2022 the Party Would Lose its ballot access in Mississippi |
Draft:Veterans Party of America | References | References |
Draft:Veterans Party of America | Table of Content | AFC submission, References |
2025–26 Toronto Raptors season | Use mdy dates | The 2025–26 Toronto Raptors season will be the 31st season for the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA). |
2025–26 Toronto Raptors season | Draft | Draft
RoundPickPlayerPosition(s)NationalityCollege / club 1 9 2 39
The Raptors will enter the draft holding one first-round pick and one second-round pick. |
2025–26 Toronto Raptors season | Roster | Roster |
2025–26 Toronto Raptors season | References | References
Category:Toronto Raptors seasons
Toronto Raptors
Toronto Raptors
Toronto Raptors
Tor
Toronto Raptors season
Toronto Raptors season |
2025–26 Toronto Raptors season | Table of Content | Use mdy dates, Draft, Roster, References |
Draft:Spider-Man: Brand New Day (2026 film) | k
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[[|thumb]] |
Draft:Spider-Man: Brand New Day (2026 film) | Table of Content | k
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File:Barwon Water logo.svg | Valid SVG | |
File:Barwon Water logo.svg | Summary | Summary |
File:Barwon Water logo.svg | Licensing | Licensing |
File:Barwon Water logo.svg | Table of Content | Valid SVG, Summary, Licensing |
Category:2026 in Toronto | Portal | This category is for the city of Toronto in the year
Toronto
Toronto |
Category:2026 in Toronto | Table of Content | Portal |
Category:Drag performers from Antwerp | [[Category:Drag performers by populated place | Antwerp
Category:Entertainers from Antwerp |
Category:Drag performers from Antwerp | Table of Content | [[Category:Drag performers by populated place |
Category:2026 in Canada by city | Navseasoncats with decades below year | City
*Canada |
Category:2026 in Canada by city | Table of Content | Navseasoncats with decades below year |
Primordial Soup (studio) | Short description | Primordial Soup is a creative studio founded by filmmaker Darren Aronofsky, dedicated to storytelling innovation, integrating artificial intelligence (AI) into the filmmaking process. |
Primordial Soup (studio) | Overview | Overview
In May 2025, Primordial Soup was unveiled during Google’s annual developer conference, Google I/O, as part of a strategic partnership with Google DeepMind to explore the use of generative AI in storytelling. The company also entered into a collaboration with Google DeepMind to refine the technology company’s generative AI video model, including Veo. |
Primordial Soup (studio) | Projects | Projects
Primordial Soup's first announced project is ANCESTRA, a short film by director Eliza McNitt, which blends live-action performance with AI-generated visuals. The film is scheduled to premiere at the Tribeca Festival on June 13, 2025. |
Primordial Soup (studio) | References | References
Category:American film studios
Category:Companies based in New York
Category:American companies established in 2025
Category:Entertainment companies established in 2025
Category:Generative artificial intelligence companies |
Primordial Soup (studio) | Table of Content | Short description, Overview, Projects, References |
Category:Bridges over the Weser | Commons category | Weser
|
Category:Bridges over the Weser | Table of Content | Commons category |
Draft:Eito Kawahara | Draft article | is a Japanese child actor from Tokyo . He is a member of the Himawari Theater Company.
|
Draft:Eito Kawahara | Filmography | Filmography |
Draft:Eito Kawahara | Anime films | Anime films
2020: Stand by Me Doraemon 2 Young Nobita Nobi
|
Draft:Eito Kawahara | Table of Content | Draft article, Filmography, Anime films |
Milan Roganović | Short description | Milan Roganović (Cyrillic:Милан Рогановић, born 28 October 2005) is a Montenegrin professional footballer who plays as a right-back for Serbian club Partizan. |
Milan Roganović | Club career | Club career
Roganović made his debut for the senior team of Zeta at the age of sixteen. During the 2021/22 season, he played 21 matches in the Montenegrin First League. In 2023, he moved to the youth team of Partizan, with whom he initially signed a three-year contract. He made his first professional appearance for that club in the last round of the Serbian Super League for the 2023/24 season. He then replaced Aranđel Stojković on the field in the 74th minute of the match. Although he developed as a midfielder in his younger years, he established himself as a right-back among the Partizan first team. After an injury, and then a period spent in Teleoptik, he was given the opportunity to perform continuously from the beginning of 2025. |
Milan Roganović | International career | International career
He played for the Montenegrin national teams at U15, U16, U17, U19 and U21 levels. |
Milan Roganović | Notes | Notes |
Milan Roganović | References | References |
Milan Roganović | External links | External links
Category:2005 births
Category:Living people
Category:People from Podgorica
Category:Men's association football defenders
Category:Montenegrin men's footballers
Category:Montenegro men's youth international footballers
Category:FK Partizan players
Category:FK Zeta players
Category:FK Teleoptik players
Category:Serbian SuperLiga players
Category:Montenegrin First League players |
Milan Roganović | Table of Content | Short description, Club career, International career, Notes, References, External links |
Category:Drag performers from Amsterdam | [[Category:Drag performers by populated place | Amsterdam
Category:Entertainers from Amsterdam |
Category:Drag performers from Amsterdam | Table of Content | [[Category:Drag performers by populated place |
Noah Dillon | <!-- EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | Noah Patrick Dillon (born August 2, 1994) is an American artist, photographer, director and musician. He is based in Los Angeles and is best known for being the founder of the band The Hellp. He also founded a now defunct art collective known as Hot Mess with actor and model Luka Sabbat. |
Noah Dillon | Early life and education | Early life and education
Dillon was born in Durango, Colorado. He later attended Fort Lewis College, where he majored in physiology and minored in education. |
Noah Dillon | Career | Career |
Noah Dillon | Photography | Photography
On February 27, 2020, Dillon was hosted by the Poynter Fellowship at Yale University for a lecture titled "Images from the Void" where he speaks about authenticity in art. In June 2021, he shot the cover art for The Marías album Cinema. In 2022, Dillon released a photo book titled "Blust Vol. 1" that contains 174 photographs depicting the street style of Los Angeles. In October 2022, Dillon shot Nicolas Cage and his wife Riko Shibata for the cover of Flaunt Magazine.In August 2023, Dillon shot musician Yves Tumor for the cover of Alternative Press' fall 2023 issue. |
Noah Dillon | Film | Film
On November 6, 2016, Dillon released a documentary through his YouTube channel titled "Chemical Sunday" (stylized in all-caps), which chronicles the struggles of four local residents in the small southwestern town of Gallup, New Mexico. In September 2019, Dillon directed the music video for Ryan Beatty of Brockhampton's song "Dark Circles". In April 2022, Dillon collaborated with clothing brand Le Père to create advertisements for their Spring 2022 collection.In October 2024, Dillon directed the music video for Ian and Chief Keef's song Sh*t Sad. |
Noah Dillon | Art | Art |
Noah Dillon | Solo work | Solo work
In 2023, Pio Pico Gallery in Los Angeles held an exhibition of Dillon's works titled "New Works". |
Noah Dillon | Hot Mess | Hot Mess
In 2016, Virgil Abloh commissioned Dillon and Sabbat to create a book for his brand Off-White titled "Woman" (stylized in all-caps). In 2017, Milk Gallery commissioned Dillon and Sabbat to create 250 pieces of multimedia artwork for New York Fashion Week. The artworks were featured alongside poems created by Hot Mess member and author Curtis Eggleston. Dillon and Sabbat later collaborated with SSENSE to release a collection of clothing.In 2021, Los Angeles boutique and gallery Terminal 27 held an exhibition titled "Surfaces" containing works of Dillon and Sabbat. |
Noah Dillon | The Hellp | The Hellp
In 2015, Dillon started the band with Eddie Liaboh and Devin Finucane while living in Durango. In February 2016, they released their debut album Twin Sinner.In 2021, the band signed to Terrible Records where they released their EP Enemy.In 2023, the band was signed to Atlantic Records under the imprint Anemoia. On October 25, 2024, they released their sophomore album LL. |
Noah Dillon | References | References
Category:Photographers
Category:1994 births
Category:Musicians from Colorado |
Noah Dillon | Table of Content | <!-- EDIT BELOW THIS LINE -->, Early life and education, Career, Photography, Film, Art, Solo work, Hot Mess, The Hellp, References |
Template:Taxonomy/Stolonochloa | Don't edit this line {{{machine code | |
Template:Taxonomy/Stolonochloa | Table of Content | Don't edit this line {{{machine code |
Draft:Embedding Generative AI in Public Sector and Enterprise Workflows: From Edge Deployments to Compliance-Ready Tooling | AFC submission |
Generative AI (GenAI) is reshaping operational landscapes across both public sector institutions and enterprise environments. From automating customer service to enabling real-time edge decision-making, GenAI technologies are being embedded deeper into workflows—enhancing efficiency, adaptability, and compliance. This article explores how GenAI is being operationalized across domains, with an emphasis on secure, scalable, and compliant implementations.
GenAI in the Public Sector
Public agencies are increasingly integrating GenAI to modernize citizen services, improve internal operations, and accelerate decision-making.
1. Document Processing and Policy Drafting
Governments manage massive volumes of documents—case files, legal texts, permits, and legislative drafts. GenAI models are now being used to summarize documents, extract relevant data points, and even generate first drafts of policy proposals. These capabilities drastically reduce manual workload while increasing accuracy and speed.
2. Citizen Engagement and Smart Chatbots
Virtual assistants powered by large language models (LLMs) are being used to handle public queries, file processing, and multilingual communications. AI-driven chatbots help departments like the DMV, IRS, and public health agencies respond 24/7 with accurate and context-aware information.
3. Emergency Services and Edge AI
In public safety and disaster management, edge-deployed GenAI solutions are used to analyze real-time video, transcribe radio communications, and provide situational summaries. These devices function autonomously with embedded GenAI models, ensuring low-latency insights even in disconnected environments.
4. Compliance and Data Sovereignty
Given the sensitivity of government data, GenAI tools are being deployed within FedRAMP-authorized cloud environments or secure on-premises data centers. These implementations adhere to frameworks such as NIST AI Risk Management Framework and CJIS compliance to maintain data integrity, auditability, and access control.
GenAI in Enterprise Workflows
Enterprises are embedding GenAI into every layer of operations—from HR and legal to engineering and customer experience. The integration improves decision-making, accelerates development cycles, and reduces operational overhead.
1. Customer Support and Internal Helpdesks
AI-powered virtual agents are automating ticket classification, email responses, and resolution suggestions. Integrated into CRM systems like Salesforce or Zendesk, these agents reduce time-to-resolution and free up human agents for more complex issues.
2. Software Engineering and DevOps
Developers now use GenAI copilots (e.g., GitHub Copilot, AWS CodeWhisperer) embedded within IDEs for code generation, documentation, and test case creation. Combined with CI/CD pipelines, GenAI reduces development time and increases consistency.
3. Knowledge Management and Search
Enterprise data lakes and intranet platforms are being paired with retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) systems to allow employees to query internal data using natural language. GenAI models fine-tuned on proprietary data provide context-aware, up-to-date insights.
4. Edge AI and IoT Workflows
In manufacturing and retail, edge-deployed GenAI models generate quality reports, suggest maintenance actions, and deliver real-time analytics directly on IoT devices. These AI-enabled edge devices operate independently, providing insights with minimal latency.
5. Legal and Regulatory Compliance
GenAI is used for automated contract review, policy summarization, and regulatory change tracking. Legal departments benefit from AI's ability to detect anomalies, suggest revisions, and log all interactions for auditing. Tools are often integrated with enterprise-grade platforms such as Microsoft Purview and Google Workspace with DLP controls.
Compliance-Ready AI Tooling
For both sectors, deploying GenAI responsibly requires tooling that addresses privacy, transparency, and auditability. Organizations are embracing models hosted on platforms like Azure OpenAI, AWS Bedrock, and Google Vertex AI with secure VPC configurations and IAM-based access.
Additional safeguards include:
Human-in-the-loop review pipelines
Red-teaming and adversarial testing
Explainable AI dashboards
Version-controlled prompt and output logs |
Draft:Embedding Generative AI in Public Sector and Enterprise Workflows: From Edge Deployments to Compliance-Ready Tooling | References | References
U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) AI Risk Management Framework: https://www.nist.gov/itl/ai-risk-management-framework
FedRAMP Program Office – Cloud Security Guidelines: https://www.fedramp.gov
Microsoft Responsible AI Standard: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/ai/responsible-ai
Google Vertex AI: https://cloud.google.com/vertex-ai
OpenAI for Government Services: https://openai.com/blog/openai-gov
AWS Bedrock for Compliance-Aware Deployments: https://aws.amazon.com/bedrock/
GitHub Copilot for Enterprise: https://github.com/features/copilot-for-business |
Draft:Embedding Generative AI in Public Sector and Enterprise Workflows: From Edge Deployments to Compliance-Ready Tooling | Table of Content | AFC submission, References |
Category:Bridges in Bremen | [[Category:Buildings and structures in Bremen]] | Category:Buildings and structures in Bremen
Category:Transport in Bremen
Bremen |
Category:Bridges in Bremen | Table of Content | [[Category:Buildings and structures in Bremen]] |
Andrija Perčić | short description | Andrija Perčić (born 12 October 1942 – 7 February 2017) was a Croatian football manager and footballer. |
Andrija Perčić | Career | Career
Born in Yugoslavia, Perčić played for FD Zvezda Spartak Subotica and HNK Rijeka in his homeland and the Swiss club Mendrisiostar.
As a football coach, Perčić stated he was part of the training of players such as Zvonimir Boban, Robert Prosinečki, Alen Bokšić, Robert Jarni and Dejan Savićević. In 1989–90, he led Spartak Subotica.
As a manager, Perčić stood out in the Chilean Primera División. He came to Chile in 1991 thanks to his compatriot Mirko Jozić, then the manager of Colo-Colo, and signed with Deportes Antofagasta until 1995, reaching good seasons in 1992 and 1993. The next seasons, he was with Huachipato until 1999.
After many years without managing, Perčić assumed as manager of Coquimbo Unido in 2007. |
Andrija Perčić | Personal life | Personal life
Following Coquimbo Unido, Perčić returned to Croatia and died in Rijeka on 7 February 2017. |
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