sanjay
Large Scale Machine Learning Via SQL On Google BigQuery w/ BQML
The health & safety of our attendees & speakers is our primary concern. While this currently proves to be a tricky time for public gatherings, Dataiku is still committed to providing great tech content & facilitating discussions in the data science space. As such, weve decided to pivot towards online webinars via our partner platform, BrightTalk. Google 2:45pm: Q&A Talk Abstract: In this talk, Sanjay will discuss how to perform machine learning using SQL for a variety of model types & the flexibility of using BQML to import & export models. Speaker bio: Sanjay Agravat is a Machine Learning Specialist for Google Cloud based out of Atlanta, GA.
Artificial intelligence will soon predict onset of diseases - Times of India
CHANDIGARH: Twitter and other social media websites, meant for the medical community, will soon be used extensively as a part of teaching artificial intelligence at the PGI. Artificial intelligence (AI) can be used specifically in the radiology to predict the onset of any disease in advance. As per the doctors, the technique is necessary for the health care system. "We are having collaborations with some of the IITs for this. But there is no full time course and none from the faculty knows about the AI. We will soon propose to our director to start the course here," said Prof M S Sandhu, head, department of radiodiagnosis, PGI.
- Asia > India > Chandigarh (0.63)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Bristol (0.07)
- Health & Medicine > Nuclear Medicine (0.85)
- Health & Medicine > Diagnostic Medicine > Imaging (0.85)
The Friendship That Made Google Huge
One day in March of 2000, six of Google's best engineers gathered in a makeshift war room. The company was in the midst of an unprecedented emergency. In October, its core systems, which crawled the Web to build an "index" of it, had stopped working. Although users could still type in queries at google.com, the results they received were five months out of date. More was at stake than the engineers realized. Google's co-founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, were negotiating a deal to power a search engine for Yahoo, and they'd promised to deliver an index ten times bigger than the one they had at the time--one capable of keeping up with the World Wide Web, which had doubled in size the previous year.
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (0.36)
- Information Technology > Hardware (0.32)