Remove 2001 Remove Interactive Remove Statistics Remove Visualization
article thumbnail

A history of tech adaptation for today’s changing business needs

CIO Business Intelligence

The company has been on a continuous journey to adapt its internal and external processes to new business needs and opportunities since 2001.” Following this, in 2002, it began delivering its knowledge to customers in online format, using dashboards and interactive reports that provided easier and faster access to data and analysis.

article thumbnail

Data Science, Past & Future

Domino Data Lab

He was saying this doesn’t belong just in statistics. He also really informed a lot of the early thinking about data visualization. It involved a lot of work with applied math, some depth in statistics and visualization, and also a lot of communication skills. I can point to the year 2001. All righty.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Reclaiming the stories that algorithms tell

O'Reilly on Data

Each of the classroom’s library books has a color coded sticker on its spine reflecting its Lexile score—a visual announcement of its official complexity level, and thus of which students might be officially ready to read it. This whole scoring system also changes the story about who librarians and teachers are.

Risk 355
article thumbnail

Themes and Conferences per Pacoid, Episode 5

Domino Data Lab

In terms of teaching and learning data science, Project Jupyter is probably the biggest news over the past decade – even though Jupyter’s origins go back to 2001! If you haven’t seen R2D3 ’s excellent A visual introduction to machine learning series, part 1 and part 2 … run, do not walk, to your nearest browser and check that out!

article thumbnail

Themes and Conferences per Pacoid, Episode 12

Domino Data Lab

He’s been out of Wolfram for a while and writing exquisite science books including Elements: A Visual Explanation of Every Known Atom in the Universe and Molecules: The Architecture of Everything. Consider the following timeline: 2001 – Physics grad students are getting hired in quantity by hedge funds to work on Wall St.

article thumbnail

Data Science at The New York Times

Domino Data Lab

In 2001, Bill Cleveland writes this article saying, “You are doing it wrong.” Here is a picture of The New York Times on its birthday in 1851, and for the vast majority of its lifespan this is pretty much what the user experience of interacting with The New York Times looks like. Editors can interact with this bot.