harried data scientist
DataRobot Becomes A Unicorn By Selling AI Toolkits To Harried Data Scientists
"We lived and breathed data science," DataRobot CEO Jeremy Achin says of himself and his cofounder ... [ ] Tom de Godoy. "And we asked ourselves, 'How would we automate our jobs?'" DataRobot wants to make machine learning so simple that a business analyst with basic training can run predictive models without breaking a sweat. The Boston-based startup just raised a $206 million Series E funding round led by Sapphire Ventures to expand the business, which sells software that helps companies across industries develop and deploy in-house AI models. The billion-dollar valuation makes it the highest-ranking of the "picks-and-shovels" startups featured on Forbes' inaugural AI 50 list (meaning the companies that provide tools to help their customers develop their own AI).
DataRobot Becomes A Unicorn By Selling AI Toolkits To Harried Data Scientists
"We lived and breathed data science," DataRobot CEO Jeremy Achin says of himself and his cofounder Tom de Godoy. "And we asked ourselves, 'How would we automate our jobs?'" DataRobot wants to make machine learning so simple that a business analyst with basic training can run predictive models without breaking a sweat. The Boston-based startup just raised a $206 million Series E funding round led by Sapphire Ventures to expand the business, which sells software that helps companies across industries develop and deploy in-house AI models. The billion-dollar valuation makes it the highest-ranking of the "picks-and-shovels" startups featured on Forbes' inaugural AI 50 list (meaning the companies that provide tools to help their customers develop their own AI).
DataRobot Becomes A Unicorn By Selling AI Toolkits To Harried Data Scientists
"We lived and breathed data science," DataRobot CEO Jeremy Achin says of himself and his cofounder Tom de Godoy. "And we asked ourselves, 'How would we automate our jobs?'" DataRobot wants to make machine learning so simple that a business analyst with basic training can run their own predictive models without breaking a sweat. The Boston-based startup just raised a $206 million Series E funding round led by Sapphire Ventures to expand the business, which sells software that helps companies across industries develop and deploy their own in-house AI models. The billion-dollar valuation makes it the highest ranking of the "picks-and-shovels" startups featured on Forbes' inaugural AI 50 list (meaning the companies that provides tools to help their customers develop their own AI).