Systems | Development | Analytics | API | Testing

Machine Learning

Handling Large Datasets in Data Preparation & ML Training Using MLOps

Data science has become an important capability for enterprises looking to solve complex, real-world problems, and generate operational models that deliver business value across all domains. More and more businesses are investing in ML capabilities, putting together data science teams to develop innovative, predictive models that provide the enterprise with a competitive edge — be it providing better customer service or optimizing logistics and maintenance of systems or machinery.

Lessons Learned on Operationalizing Machine Learning at Scale with IHS Markit

According to Gartner, over 80% of data science projects never make it to production. This is the main problem that enterprises are facing today, when bringing data science into their organization or scaling existing projects. In this session, Senior Data Scientist Nick Brown will share his lessons learned from operationalizing machine learning at IHS Markit. He will discuss the functional requirements required to operationalize machine learning at scale, and what you need to focus on to ensure you have a reliable solution for developing and deploying AI.

The Importance of Data Storytelling in Shaping a Data Science Product

Artificial intelligence and machine learning are relentlessly revolutionizing marketplaces and ushering in radical, disruptive changes that threaten incumbent companies with obsolescence. To maintain a competitive edge and gain entry into new business segments, many companies are racing to build and deploy AI applications.

The road to data quality: Getting to customer 360 faster with Machine Learning

Read Part 1 here > Data analytics is a complex process that demands time and effort from data scientists. From cleaning and prepping data to performing data analysis, data scientists go through an extensive procedure to uncover hidden patterns, identify trends, and find correlations in data to make informed business decisions. The task of integrating, cleaning, and organizing data assets often take up the bulk of the data scientist’s time.

Top 10 AI & Data Podcasts You Should Be Listening To

With the speed of change in artificial intelligence (AI) and big data, podcasts are an excellent way to stay up-to-date on recent developments, new innovations, and gain exposure to experts’ personal opinions, regardless if they can be proven scientifically. Great examples of the thought-provoking topics that are perfect for a podcast’s longer-form, conversational format include the road to AGI, AI ethics and safety, and the technology’s overall impact on society.

How to Build Real-Time Feature Engineering with a Feature Store

Simplifying feature engineering for building real-time ML pipelines might just be the next holy grail of data science. It’s incredibly difficult and highly complex, but it’s also desperately needed for multiple use cases across dozens of industries. Currently, feature engineering is siloed between data scientists, who search for and create the features, and data engineers, who rewrite the code for a production environment.

Enabling The Full ML Lifecycle For Scaling AI Use Cases

When it comes to machine learning (ML) in the enterprise, there are many misconceptions about what it actually takes to effectively employ machine learning models and scale AI use cases. When many businesses start their journey into ML and AI, it’s common to place a lot of energy and focus on the coding and data science algorithms themselves.

Democratizing Machine Learning Capabilities With Qlik Sense and Amazon SageMaker

The ability to discover insights from past events, transactions and interactions is how many customers currently utilize Qlik. Qlik’s unique approach to Business Intelligence (BI) using an in-memory engine and intuitive interface has democratized BI for typical business users, who usually have little to no technical savvy. But, for many years, organizations have only been able to analyze metrics or KPIs of “what has happened” (i.e., descriptive analytics).