Domino Data Lab Teams With MathWorks To Streamline MLOps Development
Under the alliance announced Tuesday Domino Data Lab’s data science and machine learning platform is integrated with MathWorks’ MATLAB and Simulink programming and simulation tools to accelerate model development – particularly for large-scale digital transformation and cloud migration projects. By Rick Whiting May 04, 2021, 10:22 AM EDT
Domino Data Lab and MathWorks have formed a strategic relationship under which Domino’s MLOps platform will be used to manage and accelerate model development in MathWorks’ flagship MATLAB and Simulink cloud-based development and simulation environments.
The two companies say the alliance will benefit their system integration partners, including Accenture, Deloitte and TCS, who use each company’s products in large scale development and data science projects – particularly in such areas as life sciences and financial services.
Domino Data Lab and MathWorks Partner to Enhance MATLAB and Simulink Cloud Offerings
Joint solution enables scientists and engineers with scalable infrastructure and shared knowledge to accelerate research and model development
SAN FRANCISCO – May 4, 2021 Domino Data Lab, provider of the leading Enterprise MLOps platform trusted by over 20% of the Fortune 100, today announced at MATLAB EXPO a partnership and joint solution enabling accelerated model development in MATLAB® and Simulink®, the world’s easiest and most productive engineering and scientific design environment from MathWorks.
This joint solution, based on newly expanded integrations, gives users access to powerful, scalable cloud resources for a modern, web-first data science experience, to avoid the limitations of desktop hardware or using a remote desktop to reach a shared server. IT teams gain greater control over compute usage and cost optimization by drastically reducing the footprint where MATLAB and Simul
Seeq announces $50m funding round led by Insight Partners
RIYADH, May 3, 2021 software, has closed a $50 million Series C funding round, led by global venture capital and private equity firm Insight Partners. It included participation from existing investors Saudi Aramco Energy Ventures, Altira Group, Chevron Technology Ventures, Cisco Investments and Second Avenue Partners. This round brings Seeq’s total funding since inception to approximately $115 million. Headquartered in Seattle, Seeq enables engineers and scientists in process manufacturing organizations to rapidly analyse, predict, collaborate, and share insights to improve production and business outcomes. Seeq customers include companies in the oil and gas, pharmaceutical, chemical, energy, mining, food and beverage, and other process industries.
What does the future of work look like?
Wednesday, 28th April 2021, 9:19 am
That’s the key question posed in a new podcast series by The Scotsman, in partnership with Skills Development Scotland dedicated digital skills and careers website
How will we work? Where will we work? Will the future be dominated by technology - and will robots take our jobs?
Experts and industry leaders share their insights, with Professor Heather McGregor, Executive Dean of Edinburgh Business School at Heriot Watt University saying in the first podcast: “The future of work will be unbelievably flexible. We will work in different ways and in different places. It will not be one continual line of employment.”
The Maya Forest is the second-largest continuous rainforest in Latin America after the Amazon. And like so many other tropical forests around the world, it’s disappearing.
Since 2000, the forest has shrunk by 15%. The good news is that there’s still a lot of forest left: the Maya Forest spans 35 million hectares of land sprawling across Belize, Guatemala, and southeastern Mexico. However, the size of the forest also makes it difficult for any one government agency or NGO to protect.
It’s hard to overstate how important forests are. They’re a critical part of mitigating climate change, developing new medicines, and protecting biodiversity and a vital source of employment for millions of people. We lost 4.2 million hectares of primary rainforest tree cover in 2020 according to data from the University of Maryland about the landmass of The Netherlands and 12% more than we lost in 2019. These staggering losses make protecting the vast amounts of forest that remain so important.