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7208 Courses delivered Online

SM320 - Service Manager 9.x Administration

By Nexus Human

Duration 5 Days 30 CPD hours This course is intended for Administrators, implementers and managers who are responsible for implementing, configuring and administering Service Manager 9.30. Overview At the end of the course, you will be able to:? Describe Service Manager environment andarchitecture? Install the various components of Service Manager? Learn the various implementation options (i.e.default ports, load balancing, components)? Perform tasks and set-up activities that are generallyperformed prior to moving the system to Production.? Perform daily administrative tasks such asperforming backups and monitoring log files,background processor activity, email activity, andschedule record activity.? Perform weekly administrative tasks such asarchiving and purging data? Perform monthly administrative tasks such ascleaning up the audit record, monitoring serverperformance statistics? Perform quarterly and annual administrative taskssuch as regenerating the work and holiday schedulerecords.? Additional administrative tasks, such as importing orexporting records.RECOMMENDED This class is targeted at system administrators responsible for the day to day management of the Service Manager application. The course focuses on the daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, and annual tasks required to keep the system running efficiently. This class is targeted at system administrators responsible for the day to day management of the Service Manager application. The course focuses on the daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, and annual tasks required to keep the system running efficiently. Additional course details: Nexus Humans SM320 - Service Manager 9.x Administration training program is a workshop that presents an invigorating mix of sessions, lessons, and masterclasses meticulously crafted to propel your learning expedition forward. This immersive bootcamp-style experience boasts interactive lectures, hands-on labs, and collaborative hackathons, all strategically designed to fortify fundamental concepts. Guided by seasoned coaches, each session offers priceless insights and practical skills crucial for honing your expertise. Whether you're stepping into the realm of professional skills or a seasoned professional, this comprehensive course ensures you're equipped with the knowledge and prowess necessary for success. While we feel this is the best course for the SM320 - Service Manager 9.x Administration course and one of our Top 10 we encourage you to read the course outline to make sure it is the right content for you. Additionally, private sessions, closed classes or dedicated events are available both live online and at our training centres in Dublin and London, as well as at your offices anywhere in the UK, Ireland or across EMEA.

SM320 - Service Manager 9.x Administration
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Introduction to Linux (TTLX2103)

By Nexus Human

Duration 3 Days 18 CPD hours This course is intended for This is an introductory-level course, designed for anyone wanting to learn Linux. Attendees should be comfortable working with computers and the command line, but no other specific skills are required to attend. Overview This skills-focused course is about 50% lab to lecture ratio, combining expert instructor-led discussions with practical hands-on labs that emphasize current techniques, best practices and standards. Working in a hands-on lab environment, guided by our expert practitioner, attendees will explore The Design of Linux Basic Operations File System Basics Wildcards File and Directory Permissions Working with files Executing Programs Using find Filters and other useful commands The vi editor Customizing the user environment Networking/Communications Backups and archiving This hands-on course provides you with an essentials-level foundation in core skills for using any version of Linux. This course focuses on essential skills that ordinary users might use daily when working with Linux. The Design of Linux A brief history of Linux The Linux design philosophy Linux architecture Basic Operations Logging in and out The general form of a Linux command Common commands Using man pages Essential commands File System Basics The Linux directory structure Standard directories Relative and absolute pathnames Legal file names Navigating the filesystem Wildcards Matching one character Matching many characters Shortcuts Wildcard gotchas Wildcards and ls File and Directory Permissions Viewing permissions File permissions Directory permissions Setting defaults Changing permissions Keeping data secure Working with files Viewing contents Identifying file contents Copying and moving Deleting Using symbolic links Executing Programs Redirecting STDOUT Redirecting STDERR Redirecting STDIN Creating pipelines Processes attributes Listing processes Killing processes Foreground & background processes Using find Syntax Finding by name, type, or size Combining tests Finding by size, owner, or timestamps Using xargs with find Other find options Filters and other useful commands What is a filter? cat: a generic filter head and tail grep sort wc other interesting filters The vi editor Why vi? Basic vi operations: navigating, adding, deleting Advanced operations: buffer management, search and replace, configuration options Customizing the user environment About shells Shell startup files Shell variables Search path Aliases Simple shell scripts Networking/Communications Reading and sending mail Remote login Remote file transfer Other network utilities (ping, finger, etc) Backups and archiving Checking space used or available Creating tar archives Viewing and extracting files from archives Compression utilities Working with windows

Introduction to Linux (TTLX2103)
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Palo Alto Networks - Foundations of Palo Alto Networks Traps Endpoint protection (EDU-180)

By Nexus Human

Duration 0.5 Days 3 CPD hours This course is intended for Security EngineersNetwork Engineers Overview This course is intended to provide a top-level overview of Palo Alto Networks© Traps? Endpoint protection product. Upon completion of the class the student will be able to understand these principles: Explain the core technologies of Traps? and how it differs from traditional signature recognition technologies. Understand the advantages of these technologies over existing solutions. Understand Traps? product architecture and deployment requirements. Installation requirements for Traps? installations. Deploy Exploit Prevention Module defenses to endpoints with Policies. Deploy Malware Protection defenses to endpoints. Provide Application Execution Control in conjunction with WildFire?. Understand deployment strategies and tactics for Workstations, VDI and Server endpoints. Gather and analyze Security Event reports and forensics. Foundation classes are just introductory trainings, NOT a full technical training. Compromise isn?t inevitable, or, at least, it shouldn?t be. Traditional endpoint protection simply cannot keep up with the rapidly evolving threat landscape, leaving organizations vulnerable to advanced attacks. A new approach is needed, one that can rebuild confidence in endpoint security. This new approach needs to prevent advanced attacks originating from executables, data files or network-based exploits ? known and unknown ? before any malicious activity could successfully run. Palo Alto Networks© call this ?advanced endpoint protection.? By focusing on the attacker?s core techniques and putting up barriers to mitigate them, the attacker?s path for exploitation becomes known, even when the attack isn?t. Traps? focuses on the core techniques leveraged by exploits in advanced cyberattacks and renders these techniques ineffective by breaking the exploit sequence and blocking the technique the moment it is attempted. IntroductionThe Traps? technology alternative to endpoint defenseTraps? Exploit and Malware protectionTraps? Product ArchitectureTraps? DeploymentTraps? Exploit Policy ManagementTraps? Malware Protection PoliciesTraps? ForensicsPractical Traps? Implementation considerations Additional course details: Nexus Humans Palo Alto Networks - Foundations of Palo Alto Networks Traps Endpoint protection (EDU-180) training program is a workshop that presents an invigorating mix of sessions, lessons, and masterclasses meticulously crafted to propel your learning expedition forward. This immersive bootcamp-style experience boasts interactive lectures, hands-on labs, and collaborative hackathons, all strategically designed to fortify fundamental concepts. Guided by seasoned coaches, each session offers priceless insights and practical skills crucial for honing your expertise. Whether you're stepping into the realm of professional skills or a seasoned professional, this comprehensive course ensures you're equipped with the knowledge and prowess necessary for success. While we feel this is the best course for the Palo Alto Networks - Foundations of Palo Alto Networks Traps Endpoint protection (EDU-180) course and one of our Top 10 we encourage you to read the course outline to make sure it is the right content for you. Additionally, private sessions, closed classes or dedicated events are available both live online and at our training centres in Dublin and London, as well as at your offices anywhere in the UK, Ireland or across EMEA.

Palo Alto Networks - Foundations of Palo Alto Networks Traps Endpoint protection (EDU-180)
Delivered OnlineFlexible Dates
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Logging, Monitoring and Observability in Google Cloud

By Nexus Human

Duration 3 Days 18 CPD hours This course is intended for This class is intended for the following customer job roles: Cloud architects, administrators, and SysOps personnel Cloud developers and DevOps personnel Overview This course teaches participants the following skills: Plan and implement a well-architected logging and monitoring infrastructure Define Service Level Indicators (SLIs) and Service Level Objectives (SLOs) Create effective monitoring dashboards and alerts Monitor, troubleshoot, and improve Google Cloud infrastructure Analyze and export Google Cloud audit logs Find production code defects, identify bottlenecks, and improve performance Optimize monitoring costs This course teaches you techniques for monitoring, troubleshooting, and improving infrastructure and application performance in Google Cloud. Guided by the principles of Site Reliability Engineering (SRE), and using a combination of presentations, demos, hands-on labs, and real-world case studies, attendees gain experience with full-stack monitoring, real-time log management and analysis, debugging code in production, tracing application performance bottlenecks, and profiling CPU and memory usage. Introduction to Google Cloud Monitoring Tools Understand the purpose and capabilities of Google Cloud operations-focused components: Logging, Monitoring, Error Reporting, and Service Monitoring Understand the purpose and capabilities of Google Cloud application performance management focused components: Debugger, Trace, and Profiler Avoiding Customer Pain Construct a monitoring base on the four golden signals: latency, traffic, errors, and saturation Measure customer pain with SLIs Define critical performance measures Create and use SLOs and SLAs Achieve developer and operation harmony with error budgets Alerting Policies Develop alerting strategies Define alerting policies Add notification channels Identify types of alerts and common uses for each Construct and alert on resource groups Manage alerting policies programmatically Monitoring Critical Systems Choose best practice monitoring project architectures Differentiate Cloud IAM roles for monitoring Use the default dashboards appropriately Build custom dashboards to show resource consumption and application load Define uptime checks to track aliveness and latency Configuring Google Cloud Services for Observability Integrate logging and monitoring agents into Compute Engine VMs and images Enable and utilize Kubernetes Monitoring Extend and clarify Kubernetes monitoring with Prometheus Expose custom metrics through code, and with the help of OpenCensus Advanced Logging and Analysis Identify and choose among resource tagging approaches Define log sinks (inclusion filters) and exclusion filters Create metrics based on logs Define custom metrics Link application errors to Logging using Error Reporting Export logs to BigQuery Monitoring Network Security and Audit Logs Collect and analyze VPC Flow logs and Firewall Rules logs Enable and monitor Packet Mirroring Explain the capabilities of Network Intelligence Center Use Admin Activity audit logs to track changes to the configuration or metadata of resources Use Data Access audit logs to track accesses or changes to user-provided resource data Use System Event audit logs to track GCP administrative actions Managing Incidents Define incident management roles and communication channels Mitigate incident impact Troubleshoot root causes Resolve incidents Document incidents in a post-mortem process Investigating Application Performance Issues Debug production code to correct code defects Trace latency through layers of service interaction to eliminate performance bottlenecks Profile and identify resource-intensive functions in an application Optimizing the Costs of Monitoring Analyze resource utilization cust for monitoring related components within Google Cloud Implement best practices for controlling the cost of monitoring within Google Cloud

Logging, Monitoring and Observability in Google Cloud
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Getting Started with Programming, OO and Basic Java for Non-Developers (TT2000)

By Nexus Human

Duration 5 Days 30 CPD hours This course is intended for This basic course is intended for anyone who is new to software development and wants, or needs, to gain an understanding of the fundamentals of coding and basics of Java and object-oriented programming concepts. Attendees might include: Technically-minded attendees who want or who want to begin the process of becoming an OO application developer Technical team members from non-development roles, re-skilling to move into software and application development roles within an organization Recent college graduates looking to apply their college experience to programming skills in a professional environment, or perhaps needing to learn the best practices and standards for programming within their new organization Technical managers tasked with overseeing programming teams, or development projects, where basic coding knowledge and exposure will be useful in project oversight or communications needs Overview This 'skills-centric' course is about 50% hands-on lab and 50% lecture, designed to train attendees in basic coding with Java, coupling the most current, effective techniques with the soundest industry practices. Our engaging instructors and mentors are highly experienced practitioners who bring years of current 'on-the-job' experience into every classroom. Working in a hands-on learning environment, guided by our expert team, attendees will learn: The steps involved in the creation and deployment of a computer program What OO programming is and what the advantages of OO are in today's world To work with objects, classes, and OO implementations The basic concepts of OO such as encapsulation, inheritance, polymorphism, and abstraction The basic constructs that all programming languages share The basic Java constructs supporting processing as well as the OO orientation How to use Java exception handling About and how to use classes, inheritance and polymorphism About use collections, generics, autoboxing, and enumerations How to take advantage of the Java tooling that is available with the programming environment being used in the class Getting Started with Programming, OO and Java Basics for Non-Developers is a skills-focused, hands-on coding course that teaches students the fundamentals of programming object oriented (OO) applications with Java to a basic level, using sound coding skills and best practices for OO development. This course is presented in a way that enables interested students to embrace the fundamentals of coding as well as an introduction to Java, in a gentle paced environment that focuses on coding basics.Students are introduced to the application development cycle, structure of programs, and specific language syntax. The course introduces important algorithmic constructs, string and character manipulation, dynamic memory allocation, standard I/O, and fundamental object-oriented programming concepts. The course explains the use of inheritance and polymorphism early on so the students can practice extensively in the hands-on labs. Structured programming techniques and error handling are emphasized. The course includes the processing of command line arguments and environment variables, so students will be able to write flexible, user-friendly programs. Students will leave this course armed with the required skills to begin their journey as a Java programmer using modern coding skills and technologies. Introduction to Computer Programming Introduction to Programming Programming Tools Programming Fundamentals Thinking About Objects Program Basics Programming Constructs Java: A First Look The Java Platform Using the JDK The Eclipse Paradigm Writing a Simple Class OO Concepts Object-Oriented Programming Inheritance, Abstraction, and Polymorphism Getting Started with Java Adding Methods to the Class Language Statements Using Strings Specializing in a Subclass Essential Java Programming Fields and Variables Using Arrays Java Packages and Visibility Advanced Java Programming Inheritance and Polymorphism Interfaces and Abstract Classes Exceptions Java Developer's Toolbox Utility Classes Enumerations and Static Imports Formatting Strings Collections and Generics Introduction to Generics Collections

Getting Started with Programming, OO and Basic Java for Non-Developers (TT2000)
Delivered OnlineFlexible Dates
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CertNexus Certified Ethical Emerging Technologist (CEET) v1.0

By Nexus Human

Duration 5 Days 30 CPD hours This course is intended for This course is designed for technology leaders, solution developers, project managers, organizational decision makers, and other individuals seeking to demonstrate a vendor-neutral, cross-industry understanding of ethics in emerging data-driven technologies, such as AI, robotics, IoT, and data science. This course is also designed for professionals who want to pursue the CertNexus Certification Exam CET-110: Certified Ethical Emerging Technologies. Overview In this course, you will incorporate ethics into data-driven technologies such as AI, IoT, and data science. You will: Describe general concepts, theories, and challenges related to ethics and emerging technologies. Identify ethical risks. Practice ethical reasoning. Identify and mitigate safety and security risks. Identify and mitigate privacy risks. Identify and mitigate fairness and bias risks. Identify and mitigate transparency and explainability risks. Identify and mitigate accountability risks. Build an ethical organization. Develop ethical systems in technology-focused organizations. Mutually reinforcing innovations in computing and engineering are catapulting advances in technological production. From blockchain and artificial intelligence (AI) to gene editing and the Internet of Things (IoT), these advances come with tremendous opportunities for improvement in productivity, efficiency, and human well-being. But as scandals increasingly demonstrate, these advances also introduce new and serious risks of conflict and harm.Technology professionals now face growing demands to identify and mitigate ethical risks to human rights and the environment, as well as to navigate ethical tradeoffs between qualities such as privacy and accuracy, fairness and utility, and safety and accountability. This course provides the tools to identify and manage common ethical risks in the development of emerging data-driven technologies. It distills ethical theory, public regulations, and industry best practices into concrete skills and guidelines needed for the responsible development of digital products and services. By following the course's practical, problems-based approach, learners will become adept at applying theories, principles, frameworks, and techniques in their own roles and organizations. Introduction to Ethics of Emerging Technologies Topic A: What?s at Stake Topic B: Ethics and Why It Matters Topic C: Ethical Decision-Making in Practice Topic D: Causes of Ethical Failures Identifying Ethical Risks Topic A: Ethical Reasons Topic B: Stumbling Blocks for Ethical Reasoning Topic C: Identify Ethical Risks in Product Development Topic D: Tools for Identifying Ethical Risks Topic E: Use Regulations, Standards, and Human Rights to Identify Ethical Risks Ethical Reasoning in Practice Topic A: Ethical Theories Topic B: Use Ethical Decision-Making Frameworks Topic C: Select Options for Action Topic D: Avoid Problems in Ethical Decision-Making Identifying and Mitigating Security Risks Topic A: What Is Security? Topic B: Identify Security Risks Topic C: Security Tradeoffs Topic D: Mitigate Security Risks Identifying and Mitigating Privacy Risks Topic A: What Is Privacy? Topic B: Identify Privacy Risks Topic C: Privacy Tradeoffs Topic D: Mitigate Privacy Risks Identifying and Mitigating Fairness and Bias Risks Topic A: What Are Fairness and Bias? Topic B: Identify Bias Risks Topic C: Fairness Tradeoffs Topic D: Mitigate Bias Risks Identifying and Mitigating Transparency and Explainability Risks Topic A: What Are Transparency and Explainability? Topic B: Identify Transparency and Explainability Risks Topic C: Transparency and Explainability Tradeoffs Topic D: Mitigate Transparency and Explainability Risks Identifying and Mitigating Accountability Risks Topic A: What Is Accountability? Topic B: Identify Accountability Risks Topic C: Accountability Tradeoffs Topic D: Mitigate Accountability Risks Building an Ethical Organization Topic A: What Are Ethical Organizations? Topic B: Organizational Purpose Topic C: Ethics Awareness Topic D: Develop Professional Ethics within Organizations Developing Ethical Systems in Technology-Focused Organizations Topic A: Policy and Compliance Topic B: Metrics and Monitoring Topic C: Communication and Stakeholder Engagement Topic D: Ethical Leadership

CertNexus Certified Ethical Emerging Technologist (CEET) v1.0
Delivered OnlineFlexible Dates
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Site Reliability Engineering (SRE) Practitioner (DevOps Institute)

By Nexus Human

Duration 3 Days 18 CPD hours This course is intended for The target audience for the SRE Practitioner course are professionals including: Anyone focused on large-scale service scalability and reliability Anyone interested in modern IT leadership and organizational change approaches Business Managers Business Stakeholders Change Agents Consultants DevOps Practitioners IT Directors IT Managers IT Team Leaders Product Owners Scrum Masters Software Engineers Site Reliability Engineers System Integrators Tool Providers Overview After completing this course, students will have learned: Practical view of how to successfully implement a flourishing SRE culture in your organization. The underlying principles of SRE and an understanding of what it is not in terms of anti-patterns, and how you become aware of them to avoid them. The organizational impact of introducing SRE. Acing the art of SLIs and SLOs in a distributed ecosystem and extending the usage of Error Budgets beyond the normal to innovate and avoid risks. Building security and resilience by design in a distributed, zero-trust environment. How do you implement full stack observability, distributed tracing and bring about an Observability-driven development culture? Curating data using AI to move from reactive to proactive and predictive incident management. Also, how you use DataOps to build clean data lineage. Why is Platform Engineering so important in building consistency and predictability of SRE culture? Implementing practical Chaos Engineering. Major incident response responsibilities for a SRE based on incident command framework, and examples of anatomy of unmanaged incidents. Perspective of why SRE can be considered as the purest implementation of DevOps SRE Execution model Understanding the SRE role and understanding why reliability is everyone's problem. SRE success story learnings This course introduces a range of practices for advancing service reliability engineering through a mixture of automation, organizational ways of working and business alignment. Tailored for those focused on large-scale service scalability and reliability. SRE Anti-patterns Rebranding Ops or DevOps or Dev as SRE Users notice an issue before you do Measuring until my Edge False positives are worse than no alerts Configuration management trap for snowflakes The Dogpile: Mob incident response Point fixing Production Readiness Gatekeeper Fail-Safe really? SLO is a Proxy for Customer Happiness Define SLIs that meaningfully measure the reliability of a service from a user?s perspective Defining System boundaries in a distributed ecosystem for defining correct SLIs Use error budgets to help your team have better discussions and make better data-driven decisions Overall, Reliability is only as good as the weakest link on your service graph Error thresholds when 3rd party services are used Building Secure and Reliable Systems SRE and their role in Building Secure and Reliable systems Design for Changing Architecture Fault tolerant Design Design for Security Design for Resiliency Design for Scalability Design for Performance Design for Reliability Ensuring Data Security and Privacy Full-Stack Observability Modern Apps are Complex & Unpredictable Slow is the new down Pillars of Observability Implementing Synthetic and End user monitoring Observability driven development Distributed Tracing What happens to Monitoring? Instrumenting using Libraries an Agents Platform Engineering and AIOPs Taking a Platform Centric View solves Organizational scalability challenges such as fragmentation, inconsistency and unpredictability. How do you use AIOps to improve Resiliency How can DataOps help you in the journey A simple recipe to implement AIOps Indicative measurement of AIOps SRE & Incident Response Management SRE Key Responsibilities towards incident response DevOps & SRE and ITIL OODA and SRE Incident Response Closed Loop Remediation and the Advantages Swarming ? Food for Thought AI/ML for better incident management Chaos Engineering Navigating Complexity Chaos Engineering Defined Quick Facts about Chaos Engineering Chaos Monkey Origin Story Who is adopting Chaos Engineering Myths of Chaos Chaos Engineering Experiments GameDay Exercises Security Chaos Engineering Chaos Engineering Resources SRE is the Purest form of DevOps Key Principles of SRE SREs help increase Reliability across the product spectrum Metrics for Success Selection of Target areas SRE Execution Model Culture and Behavioral Skills are key SRE Case study Post-class assignments/exercises Non-abstract Large Scale Design (after Day 1) Engineering Instrumentation- Instrumenting Gremlin (after Day 2)

Site Reliability Engineering (SRE) Practitioner (DevOps Institute)
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Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP/CAN)

By Nexus Human

Duration 2 Days 12 CPD hours This course is intended for Data Protection OfficersData Protection ManagersAuditorsLegal Compliance OfficersSecurity ManagerInformation ManagersAnyone involved with data protection processes and programs Overview It will show the world that students know privacy laws and regulations and how to apply them, and that students know how to secure your place in the information economy. When students earn a CIPP credential, it means they?ve gained a foundational understanding of broad global concepts of privacy and data protection law and practice, including: jurisdictional laws, regulations and enforcement models; essential privacy concepts and principals; legal requirements for handling and transferring data and more. It will show the world that students know privacy laws and regulations and how to apply them, and that students know how to secure their place in the information economy. When students earn a CIPP credential, it means they've gained a foundational understanding of broad global concepts of privacy and data protection law and practice, including: jurisdictional laws, regulations and enforcement models; essential privacy concepts and principals; legal requirements for handling and transferring data and more. Common Principles and Approaches to Privacy This unit includes a brief discussion about the modern history of privacy, an introduction to types of information, an overview of information risk management and a summary of modern privacy principles. Jurisdiction and Industries This unit introduces the major privacy models employed around the globe and provides an overview of privacy and data protection regulation by jurisdictions and industry sectors. Information Security: Safeguarding Personal Information This unit presents introductions to information security, including definitions, elements, standards, and threats/ vulnerabilities, as well as introductions to information security management and governance, including frameworks, controls, cryptography and identity and access management (IAM). Online Privacy: Using Personal Information on Websites and with Other Internet-related Technologies This unit focuses on the web as a platform, as well as privacy considerations for sensitive online information, including policies and notices, access, security, authentication and data collection. Additional topics include children?s online privacy, email, searches, online marketing and advertising, social media, online assurance, cloud computing and mobile devices. Canadian Legal Framework This unit provides an introduction to the Canadian legal system. It includes enforcement agencies and their powers, privacy basics from a Canadian perspective and the underlying framework for Canadian privacy law and practice. Canadian Private-sector Privacy Laws This unit focuses on the Canadian legal system. It includes enforcement agencies and their powers, privacy basics from a Canadian perspective and the underlying framework for Canadian privacy law and practice. Canadian Public-sector Privacy Laws This unit highlights key concepts and practices related to the collection, retention, use, disclosure and disposal of personal information by federal, provincial and territorial governments. Health Information Privacy Laws This unit touches on the applicability and purpose of health information privacy laws. Private-sector Compliance Practices This unit delves into the components that make up compliance regulations, including Generally Accepted Privacy Principals and security breach notification, and also examines compliance track records and Federal Commissioner Findings. Public-sector Compliance Practices This unit presents the various methods that can be implemented for compliance in the public sector, such as privacy impact assessments and data sharing agreements. In addition, it discusses the challenges presented by digital information exchanges, as well as non-legislative considerations. Health-sector Compliance Practices This unit covers the issues presented with digital compliance in the health sector. Additional course details: Nexus Humans Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP/CAN) training program is a workshop that presents an invigorating mix of sessions, lessons, and masterclasses meticulously crafted to propel your learning expedition forward. This immersive bootcamp-style experience boasts interactive lectures, hands-on labs, and collaborative hackathons, all strategically designed to fortify fundamental concepts. Guided by seasoned coaches, each session offers priceless insights and practical skills crucial for honing your expertise. Whether you're stepping into the realm of professional skills or a seasoned professional, this comprehensive course ensures you're equipped with the knowledge and prowess necessary for success. While we feel this is the best course for the Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP/CAN) course and one of our Top 10 we encourage you to read the course outline to make sure it is the right content for you. Additionally, private sessions, closed classes or dedicated events are available both live online and at our training centres in Dublin and London, as well as at your offices anywhere in the UK, Ireland or across EMEA.

Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP/CAN)
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Weekly Peace Meditation

4.8(31)

By The Hamblin Vision

The sessions include an initial period of settling in, relaxing and focusing on the breath. Once the busy mind has quieted, there will be time to go deeper into the space of the heart, to be still and to listen inwardly to connect with ourselves and those around us. The Zoom details are the same each week. If you would like to be added to the Weekly Peace Meditation reminder list, fill out the form below. The weekly sessions are normally facilitated by Kathryn Bingham, yoga teacher and former Hamblin Team member. Some sessions will be led by astrologer Patricia Godden, Hamblin trustee Victoria Willson, and invited guest facilitators. These Weekly Peace Meditation sessions are free of charge, but donations are welcome to help us keep our events either free or low cost. Thank you so much for your generosity.

Weekly Peace Meditation
Delivered OnlineFlexible Dates
FREE

AN15 IBM Power Systems for AIX III - Advanced Administration and Problem Determination

By Nexus Human

Duration 5 Days 30 CPD hours This course is intended for This is an advanced course for AIX system administrators, and system support individuals with at least six months of experience in AIX. Overview Perform system problem determination and reporting procedures including analyzing error logs, creating dumps of the system, and providing needed data to the AIX Support personnel Examine and manipulate Object Data Manager databases Identify and resolve conflicts between the Logical Volume Manager (LVM) disk structures and the Object Data Manager (ODM) Complete a very basic configuration of Network Installation Manager to provide network boot support for either system installation or booting to maintenance mode Identify various types of boot and disk failures and perform the matching recovery procedures Implement advanced methods such as alternate disk install, multibos, and JFS2 snapshots to use a smaller maintenance window In this course, learn advanced AIX system administrator skills focusing on availability and problem determination and learn detailed knowledge of the ODM database where AIX maintains configuration information. Day 1 Advanced AIX administration overview The Object Data Manager Error monitoring Day 2 Network Installation Manager basics System initialization: Accessing a boot image Day 3 System initialization: rc.boot and inittab LVM metadata and related problems Disk management procedures Day 4 Disk management procedures (continued) Install and cloning techniques Advanced backup techniques Day 5 Advanced backup techniques (continued) Diagnostics The AIX system dump facility

AN15 IBM Power Systems for AIX III - Advanced Administration and Problem Determination
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