Friday, March 6, 2020

Evolving Uses in Speech Recognition Technologies

technology

Founder of D2IQ, formerly Mesosphere, Florian “Flo” Leibert previously worked as a software engineer at some of the biggest tech companies in the world, including Twitter and Airbnb. Florian Leibert has extensive experience in many areas of machine learning, including speech recognition technologies.


Recently, speech recognition has been a major focus in the tech industry as the desire for speech-operated systems surges. For instance, the retail industry is investing heavily in speech integration in their stores. In brick and mortar stores, the use of automated assistants that can recognize voice commands is being explored and big e-commerce retailers such as Amazon are already integrating speech recognition into their search functions.

In public transportation, voice assistants can already be used to book or order from Uber. Another application that is being developed is the use of voice commands to navigate public transportation systems with commands such as “where is the nearest bus stop?”

Evidence of evolving uses of speech recognition can be seen in just about every industry. If current trends remain, it is likely that most processes that we are accustomed to doing manually today will have some level of voice integration in the near future.

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

ACM and IEEE to Hold Joint Symposium on Architecture Communications


A software engineer with over 15 years of experience, Florian “Flo” Leibert oversees the California-based Mesosphere as the company’s founder and CEO. Florian Leibert maintains membership with the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), which will hold the upcoming ACM/IEEE Symposium on Architectures for Networking and Communications Systems in conjunction with the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).

The international forum brings together computing professionals to explore the importance of research on the co-designing of computer and network systems and identify issues as a result of computer and network architecture interactions. Presenters facilitate discussion on original research involving the interactions between algorithms and data communication network architectures. Participants also examine the hardware and software components used to build these networks through theoretical and experimental analysis. 

ACM and the IEEE will jointly hold the Symposium on Architectures for Networking and Communications Systems on July 23-24, 2018, at the Ithaca Marriott Downtown on the Commons in Ithaca, New York. Acceptance notifications for paper abstracts submitted for presentation will go out on May 17, and ACM will continue to accept poster submissions until May 25.

Thursday, December 21, 2017

Mesosphere Set to Achieve Sustainable Revenue in $50 Million Range


Utilizing open-source Apache Mesos technologies, Florian (“Flo”) Leibert directs Mesosphere, Inc., and introduces efficiencies and cost savings for “webscale" enterprises seeking to optimize their cloud infrastructure. A recent Business Insider article brought attention to the success of Florian Leibert’s company, which famously declined a Microsoft acquisition offer valued at $150 million.

Mr. Leibert described his company as one that is on track to achieve $50 million in annual revenue, contrary to the expectations of Silicon Valley insiders who wrote off Mesosphere as defunct.

Launched in 2013, the company relies on the same open-source Mesos software that Apple used to create Siri. Developed at the University of California, Berkeley, the software was brought to Twitter by Ben Hindman at a time when he and the other Mesosphere cofounders were working at the social media app company.

To date, Mesosphere has raised $122 million in venture capital funding from investors that include Microsoft, Khosla Ventures, and Hewlett Packard Enterprise. With revenue tripling year by year, the company is on a trajectory to become self-sustaining, although an IPO or additional funding round may be necessary.

Thursday, April 6, 2017

The Key Features of Mesosphere’s Marathon


From his base in San Francisco, Florian “Flo” Leibert oversees the operations of Mesosphere, Inc. – a technology firm – as the company’s chief executive officer. In this role, Florian Leibert maintains relationships with the firm’s funding partners, which include Andreessen Horowitz and Vinod Khosla, in addition to writing software. An example of the software he has crafted is Marathon, which is a container orchestration platform for use with DC/OS and the Apache Mesos open-source platform.

Marathon’s key features include the following:

1. Capable of multiple container runtimes offering support to Docker and Linux containers.

2. The ability to bind storage volumes to an application, allowing for databases including PostgreSQL and MySQL to run while Mesos handles storage.

3. Numerous health check features utilizing TCP and HTTP to evaluate the health of an application.

4. The ability to use an HTTP endpoint to create notifications.

5. The running of an active/passive cluster featuring leader election, which contributes to Marathon’s 100 percent runtime. 

6. Constraints, such as only running a single application instance per node, rack, etc.