Remove 2001 Remove Management Remove Reporting Remove Statistics
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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.

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IT leaders turn to HBCUs for future IT talent

CIO Business Intelligence

They point to statistics that highlight challenges in IT workforce recruitment and diversity. Yet, despite strong opportunities in the profession, reports consistently confirm that Black professionals remain underrepresented. Each of the eight students was brought into NCDIT for 40 hours of paid work over eight weeks during the summer.

IT 137
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Reclaiming the stories that algorithms tell

O'Reilly on Data

These scores go on student report cards, and are a frequent topic at parent-teacher conferences. In 2001, just as the Lexile system was rolling out state-wide, a professor of education named Stephen Krashen took to the pages of the California School Library Journal to raise an alarm.

Risk 355
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Self-Service BI vs Traditional BI: What’s Next?

Alation

Reports required a formal request of the few who could access that data. The 1980s ushered in the antithesis of this version of computing — personal computing and distributed database management — but also introduced duplicated data and enterprise data silos. Days/weeks old, backward-looking reports that no one used?

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Themes and Conferences per Pacoid, Episode 12

Domino Data Lab

That’s a can-o-worms that exposes problems with Silicon Valley product management culture not entirely comprehending the real-world issues of MLOps. Consider the following timeline: 2001 – Physics grad students are getting hired in quantity by hedge funds to work on Wall St. But I have a hunch that was not entirely the problem.

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Data Science, Past & Future

Domino Data Lab

He was saying this doesn’t belong just in statistics. It involved a lot of interesting work on something new that was data management. It involved a lot of work with applied math, some depth in statistics and visualization, and also a lot of communication skills. Tukey did this paper. It’s a great read.

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Data Science at The New York Times

Domino Data Lab

I do not want a product manager being the information bottleneck between people who are supposed to do some research and develop a product that is useful and somebody who’s going to be the end user. In 2001, Bill Cleveland writes this article saying, “You are doing it wrong.” We can monetize that.”