Remove 2005 Remove Reporting Remove Risk Remove Statistics
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ChatGPT, Author of The Quixote

O'Reilly on Data

It’s ironic that, in this article, we didn’t reproduce the images from Marcus’ article because we didn’t want to risk violating copyright—a risk that Midjourney apparently ignores and perhaps a risk that even IEEE and the authors took on!) To see this, let’s consider another example, that of MegaFace. joined Flickr.

Modeling 274
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Burnout: An IT epidemic in the making

CIO Business Intelligence

The 2023 IT salary report from Robert Half reinforces these findings. For IT professionals who report high levels of burnout, 42% are considering quitting their company within the next six months, according to survey data from Yerbo. Moreover, 30% reported that they feel inefficient at work.

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Modernize Using The BI & Analytics Magic Quadrant

Rita Sallam

Or when Tableau and Qlik’s serious entry into the market circa 2004-2005 set in motion a seismic market shift from IT to the business user creating the wave of what was to become the modern BI disruption. After five minutes of seeing these products back then, I just knew they would change everything! What Happened to Tradition BI?

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New Thinking, Old Thinking and a Fairytale

Peter James Thomas

Of course it can be argued that you can use statistics (and Google Trends in particular) to prove anything [1] , but I found the above figures striking. Computerworld – Gartner: Customer-service outsourcing often fails , Scarlet Pruitt, March 2005. For example in 20 Risks that Beset Data Programmes. . [7].

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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 work with applied math, some depth in statistics and visualization, and also a lot of communication skills. You see these drivers involving risk and cost, but also opportunity. Tukey did this paper. It’s a great read. You know what?