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10:17
posted on May 16, 2019 by Jonathan Freeman

Last week we took a first look at React-vis, the open-source charting library, and built up our first bar chart using the City of New York Popular Baby Names data set. This week, we’ll expand on our initial example and show how we can begin to incorporate basic interactions. As a refresher, our data set includes rows of data that look like this:To read this article in full, please click here (I

posted on May 16, 2019 by Andy Patrizio

Big data projects are, well, big in size and scope, often very ambitious, and all too often, complete failures. In 2016, Gartner estimated that 60 percent of big data projects failed. A year later, Gartner analyst Nick Heudecker‏ said his company was "too conservative" with its 60 percent estimate and put the failure rate at closer to 85 percent. Today, he says nothing has changed.To read this

11:05
posted on May 16, 2019 by Anthony Ha

TodayTix, a mobile ticketing company that makes it easy and relatively affordable to go to Broadway shows and other live performances, is announcing a new $73 million round of funding led by private equity firm Great Hill Partners. The company was founded in 2013, and it served initially as the mobile equivalent of New York’s […]

 
3 hours later…
13:59
posted on May 16, 2019 by Brian Heater

Samsung’s been mostly quiet on the Fold front after recalling review units and indefinitely delaying the phone’s release. Understandably so. It couldn’t have been easy going back to the drawing board with one of buzziest handsets in recent memory. While we’ve been waiting word, the company has been exploring fixes and attempting to determine the […]

 
2 hours later…
15:53
posted on May 16, 2019 by Josh Constine

Instagram’s pivot to Stories continues with an overhaul of Explore designed to let users dig deeper into their niche interests. Stories are now eligible to show up in the Explore tab for the first time, giving creators a way to get discovered through their intimate, silly, behind-the-scenes content instead of just their manicured feed posts. […]

posted on May 16, 2019 by Josh Constine

Facebook is updating the News Feed ranking algorithm to incorporate data from surveys about who you say are your closest friends and which links you find most worthwhile. Today Facebook announced it’s trained new classifiers based on patterns linking these surveys with usage data so it can better predict what to show in the News […]

16:17
posted on May 16, 2019 by Brian Heater

With 5G, when it rains, it pours. A few hours after Verizon officially started selling the Samsung Galaxy S10 5G, Sprint announced that it will be offering two 5G devices for its network by the end of the month. For now, it still feels like manufacturers are putting the cart before the horse here. There’s […]

 
4 hours later…
20:41
posted on May 16, 2019 by Devin Coldewey

Reports emerged a year ago that all the major cellular carriers in the U.S. were selling location data to third party companies, which in turn sold them to pretty much anyone willing to pay. New letters published by the FCC show that despite a year of scrutiny and anger, the carriers have only recently put to end this practice.

 
2 hours later…
22:41
posted on May 16, 2019 by Brian Heater

Premium smartphone manufacturers have moved the needle on pricing, but 2019 may well go down as a kind of golden age for budget flagships. Apple, Google and Samsung are all in that business now, and OnePlus has once again shown the world how to offer more for less. And then there’s the new Zenfone. It’s […]

22:59
posted on May 16, 2019 by Paul Krill

Microsoft is previewing an open source extension to its Visual Studio Code editor for building full-stack web applications. Called Microsoft Web Template Studio (WebTS),  the extension is intended to make it easy to build a cloud-based web app. Developers can use WebTS to generate boilerplate code for a web application, choosing between different front-end and back-end frameworks, Microsoft

23:35
posted on May 16, 2019 by Brand Post

Accelerating scikit-learn with Intel’s accelerated Python requires absolutely no code changes, thereby giving us a nearly effortless way to enhance performance. However, scikit-learn is designed for machine learning operations on in-memory homogeneous data. Fortunately, there is good news for extending beyond those limitations: daal4py. Think of it as “scikit-learn meets MPI (Message Passing


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