I’ve recently been getting pretty far into the weeds about what the future of data programming is going to look like. I use pandas and dplyr in python and R respectively. But I’m starting to see the shape of something that’s interesting coming down the pike. I’ve been working on a project that involves scatterplot visualizations at a massive scale–up to 1 billion points sent to the browser. In doing this, two things have become clear:
Чи припинить «танці з Путіним» нова антикорупційна ініціатива Байдена? radiosvoboda.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from radiosvoboda.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
NationofChange
A spinoff of a forthcoming book from Johns Hopkins Press about the value of the liberal arts.
Last month, many disappointed applicants to the University of California received rejection letters, thousands of them, with 250,000 competing for 46,000 spots. Mary McNamara, writing in the
Los Angeles Times, voiced the dismay of parents whose qualified kids got turned down, pointing out that she and other Californians pay hefty state taxes. (4/14/21). But disgruntled taxpayers should know how little of California’s budget actually goes to higher education. According to a recent report by the Policy Analysis for California Education, “Over the past four decades…spending on politics and corrections has nearly tripled and spending on health and hospitals and public welfare has more than quadrupled. As a result, the percentage of overall state and local spending…on higher education has decreased from 11 to 9 percent.” (10/20)
Wochenduell: Abstiegskampf im Schweizer Fussball – Braucht die Super League den FC Sion? bazonline.ch - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bazonline.ch Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
New RoadBotics Tool Allows Asset Management Via Smartphone
The company’s new software, AgileMapper, gives users the ability to log an item by taking a photo of it. Artificial intelligence can then identify the object and add it to a larger inventory.
May 05, 2021 •
RoadBotics
RoadBotics, a startup that’s made its name offering a way to use smartphones to find cracks and potholes in roads, is making a leap into a larger class of software: asset management.
The company’s new product, AgileMapper, shares a mobile focus with its previous work with a smartphone, users will be able to take photos of infrastructure such as signs and sidewalks and the app will use AI to figure out what’s in the image. With the objects tagged, AgileMapper can then build an inventory of assets to help manage them.