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Monday will see US’s most sophisticated aircraft carrier deployed to the Atlantic – Interesting Engineering

"The USS Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group will deploy, integrating with Allies and partners, to demonstrate its unmatched, multi-domain, full-spectrum lethality in the Atlantic," said Adm. Daryl Caudle, commander, U.S. Fleet Forces Command.

"This trans-Atlantic deployment will strengthen our relationships, capacity, and trust to forge a more peaceful and prosperous world by leveraging the 'One Atlantic' Command and Control Concept."

The flagship, which is supposed to set sail on October 3rd, will train in air defense, anti-subsurface warfare, distributed marine operations, mine countermeasures, and amphibious operations with allies and partners, as per the press release.

"The Atlantic is an area of strategic interest," said Vice Adm. Dan Dwyer, commander, U.S. 2nd Fleet.

"Our primary goal is to contribute to a peaceful, stable, and conflict-free Atlantic region through the combined naval power of our Allies and partners. The deployment of USS Gerald R. Ford's carrier strike group is the natural progression of our renewed commitment to the Atlantic."

USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN 78).

Approximately 9,000 personnel from nine different countries, including 20 ships and 60 aircraft, will be involved in the deployment.

"This deployment is an opportunity to push the ball further down the field and demonstrate the advantage that Ford and Carrier Air Wing (CVW) 8 bring to the future of naval aviation, to the region, and to our Allies and partners," said Rear Adm. Gregory Huffman, commander, Carrier Strike Group (CSG) 12.

The nine participating countries are the United States, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden.

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Section’s Distributed GraphQL Hosting Allows Organizations to Quickly Launch and Scale Location-Optimized, Multi-Cloud API Servers – Business Wire

BOULDER, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Section, the leading cloud-native distributed compute provider, today announced its new Distributed GraphQL Service, allowing organizations to quickly launch and easily scale location-optimized, multi-cloud API servers. Organizations can host GraphQL in datacenters across town or around the world to improve API performance and reliability, lower costs, decrease impact on back-end servers, and improve scalability, resilience, compliance, security and other factors all without impacting their current cloud-native development process or tools. Section handles day-to-day server operations, as its clusterless platform automates orchestration of the GraphQL servers across a secure and reliable global infrastructure network.

Distributing API servers and other compute resources makes all the sense in the world for developers, as long as its easy to do, said Stewart McGrath, Sections CEO. Our new Distributed GraphQL service is simple to start, gives you immediate access to a global network, and automates orchestration so developers can simply focus on their application and business logic.

GraphQL is a query language and server-side runtime for cloud APIs that improves the efficiency of data delivery. According to a report by Akamai, API calls represent 83% of all web traffic, and InfoQ considers GraphQL to have reached early majority usage in its 2022 architecture trends report.

With Section, GraphQL servers can be quickly deployed and immediately benefit from multi-cloud, multi-provider distribution. Application users will experience an instant performance boost from reduced latency, while API service availability and resilience is dramatically improved by Sections automated service failure/re-routing capabilities. Organizations will benefit from decreased costs versus hyperscalers or roll-your-own distribution solutions, and can even run other containers alongside the GraphQL Server, such as Redis caches, security solutions, etc., to further improve the costs/performance/availability equation.

Sections distributed cloud-native compute platform allows application developers worldwide to focus only on business logic yet enables their software to behave as if it runs everywhere, is infinitely scalable, always available, maximally performant, completely compliant, and efficient with compute resources and cost. DevOps teams can use existing Kubernetes tools and processes to deploy to Section and set simple policy-based rules to control its clusterless global platform.

Benefits of Sections Distributed GraphQL service include:

To learn more about the benefits of Sections Distributed GraphQL or how to get started, visit: https://www.section.io/blog/turbocharge-graphql/.

About SectionSection is a Cloud-Native Hosting system that continuously optimizes orchestration of secure and reliable global infrastructure for application delivery. Sections sophisticated, distributed and clusterless platform intelligently and adaptively manages workloads around performance, reliability, compliance, cost or other developer intent to ensure applications run at the right place and time. The result is simple distribution of applications across town or to the edge, while teams use existing tools, workflows and familiar rules-based policies. To find out more about how Section is revolutionizing application delivery, please visit section.io.

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Server And Storage Spending Moves The Sticks Out Through 2026 – The Next Platform

There is a very interesting technical side to IT infrastructure, which we are obviously very keen on exploring here at The Next Platform. But there is an economic side that we also watch like a hawk.

We have always believed at server and storage spending are leading indicators of the global economy, and that if spending is boisterous then companies are optimistic or terrified about the future or both at the same time. The dot-com boom was one such bubble that combined optimism about the possibilities for transforming applications as well as giving companies anxiety about not being able to compete with their compute. The AI revolution is another one.

And so, when we can get our hands on some infrastructure spending data, we pull it apart and plot out the trends. We have just done this with the cloud and bare server and storage spending numbers released by IDC today to give you a sense of what is happening, how it compares with the past, and what the most recent spending forecast is from the market researcher.

Last year, much to our chagrin, IDC stopped providing statistics for raw server sales to the public and this converged server-storage dataset is all it talks about that gives us a sense of spending. The bad news is that we have lost access to a dataset that goes back to 1995, but the good news is that this converged server and storage data has eliminated double counting. This new way of doing things also breaks serving and storing infrastructure into three buckets: shared cloud (what many call public clouds), dedicated cloud (which can be hosted in a co-lo, in a cloud, or on premises within a company), and non-cloud (what we would have called bare metal perhaps, but that is not exactly precise either because there are some virtualized systems that are not precisely cloudy.

We take our datasets as we can get them, and do what we can to make them useful.

It takes along time to pull this data together, which is why we are getting Q2 2022 figures on server and storage spending just as Q3 2022 is ending.

In the period ending in June, spending on cloudy infrastructure that has utility pricing for all capacity and that is either shared on a cloud like capacity is on Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, IBM Cloud, Alibaba Cloud, and so forth, or is dedicated on a cloud, a hosting provider, a co-lo, or on corporate premises through mechanisms like AWS Outposts, Hewlett Packard Enterprise GreenLake, Dell APEX, or Lenovo TruScale. In the second quarter, all cloud server and storage spending rose by 22.4 percent to $22.6 billion, and of this $7 billion was for dedicated cloud infrastructure (up 46.3 percent, showing how this part of the infrastructure market is growing very fast) and $15.6 billion was for shared cloud infrastructure (up a still healthy 18.9 percent). Of the dedicated cloud revenues, $3.2 billion of the $7 billion spent was for infrastructure that was installed on company premises, and this was up 45.7 percent year on year. Dedicated server and storage infrastructure running outside of the corporate premises drove $3.8 billion in sales, up 46.9 percent. So these two pieces of the dedicated cloud part of the part are both growing at about the same rate according to IDC.

Spending on non-cloud infrastructure meaning servers and storage that are literally acquired or sold under a lease but not a rental model that lets customers dial capacity up and down and that is probably bare metal or containerized but not heavily virtualized rose by 15.2 percent to $17.3 percent.

For those of you who like to see the raw data, here is the model that we have built over the past two years using the IDC data, including revisions as we are aware of them in prior data:

It is interesting to note that spending by service providers what we would call hyperscalers, cloud builders, service providers, and telcos grew by 19.7 percent to $22.6 billion in the quarter and comprised 56.7 percent of total sales. The rest of the infrastructure was bought or rented by enterprises, government agencies, or academic institutions, amounting to $17.3 billion, up 18.5 percent. The service provider pack crossed above 50 percent of the total back when the coronavirus pandemic was roaring, and it is not going to go back if the forecast by IDC comes true.

Here is IDCs forecast chart out to 2026:

This is not a particularly useful chart in that it really only shows you one thing, namely what portion of sales will be shared cloud, dedicated cloud, or non-cloud. So we took all of IDCs statements past and present and built this much more useful table showing past sales and forecasts, including for service providers and everyone else:

Here is the interesting bit: Service provider sales (in the largest sense meant by IDC) will have a compound annual growth rate of 10.9 percent over the 2022 through 2026, reaching 130.2 billion at the end of the period. If you do the math on that, the service provider share will account for 66 percent of all server and storage buying, and enterprises, governments and schools will only account for the remaining 34 percent share, absolutely pancake flat compared to sales of servers and storage in 2022 for this collection of customers.

We shall see how this plays out.

[Raising a hand] Hey, IDC. How do you count acquisitions of bare metal servers by service providers that are then turned around and sold as cloud infrastructure to end user customers? Have you ever read If You Give A Mouse A Cookie?

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Acquia Named a Leader in DXP, DAM, Web Content Management, and Web Hosting by G2 Users – Business Wire

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Acquia today announced that its Drupal Cloud and Acquia DAM (formerly Widen Collective) solutions have been named as market Leaders by G2, the worlds largest software marketplace, in its Fall Grid Reports.

This recognition is based on responses from real users to questions about digital experience platforms (DXPs), digital asset management (DAM), web content management (WCM), and web hosting featured in the G2 review forms. Corresponding products are Acquia Open DXP, Acquia DAM, Acquia CMS and Code Studio devops tools for Drupal, and Acquia Cloud Platform, respectively. Acquia Marketing Cloud was also named a High Performer in the Mid-Market Grid Report for Marketing Automation.

Hearing the voices of real users is critical not only to Acquia, but to any organization evaluating digital experience solutions, said Deanna Ballew, SVP of DXP Products at Acquia. G2 responses bring to light how products and services are really being used so technology buyers and users can easily weigh their advantages.

Acquia products achieved Leader recognition in 20 G2 reports including the Enterprise Grid Report for Web Hosting | Fall 2022 and the Enterprise Relationship Index for Digital Asset Management | Fall 2022 by receiving positive reviews from verified users compared to similar products. For inclusion in the report a product must have received 10 or more reviews.

Rankings on G2 reports are based on data provided to us by real software buyers, said Sara Rossio, Chief Product Officer at G2. Potential buyers know they can trust these insights when researching and selecting software because theyre rooted in vetted, verified, and authentic reviews.

Learn more about what real users have to say, or leave your own review of Acquias products, on G2s review pages:

About G2

G2 is the world's largest and most trusted software marketplace. More than 60 million people annually including employees at all of the FORTUNE 500 use G2 to make smarter software decisions based on authentic peer reviews. Thousands of software and services companies of all sizes partner with G2 to build their reputation, manage their software spend, and grow their business including Salesforce, HubSpot, Zoom, and Adobe. To learn more about where you go for software, visit http://www.g2.com and follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn.

About Acquia

Acquia empowers the worlds most ambitious brands to create digital customer experiences that matter. With open source Drupal at its core, the Acquia Digital Experience Platform (DXP) enables marketers, developers, and IT operations teams at thousands of global organizations to rapidly compose and deploy digital products and services that engage customers, enhance conversions, and help businesses stand out. Learn more at https://acquia.com.

All logos, company, and product names are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.

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FirePower Capital spins out Spearhead Corporate Development, a human-first, tech-driven buy-side advisory service, and backs it with an initial US$3.2…

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--FirePower Capital (FirePower), an M&A advisor, lender and investor to mid-market companies, today announced the spin-out of its specialized buy-side advisory service under the Spearhead Corporate Development (Spearhead) name.

Spearhead provides the luxury of choice in deal sourcing for M&A to its clients (large corporate strategics and private equity investors) on a global basis.

Spearhead builds M&A deal funnels at scale, providing both research, outreach, and advisory. In effect, it helps its clients close more deals by becoming an extension of their corporate development function.

Under FirePower, Spearhead launched in early 2020. It has since arranged 652 highly vetted meetings between our clients and our targets, worth US$12.8 billion of enterprise value as of today. During the same period, our efforts have led to 12 closings, with many more to come.

For example, HostPapa, a large strategic in the web and cloud hosting sector, acquired Cloud 9 Hosting in early 2022. Jamie Opalchuk, Founder and CEO of HostPapa, said, We could not have closed Cloud 9 without Spearhead, but they have meant a lot more to us than that: they are a strategic advisor helping us refine our M&A efforts, for over two years now.

Spearhead is led by Managing Partners & Co-Heads Sebastien Douville and Cameron Vernest. Sebastien Douville is a 16+ year M&A advisory veteran and has been FirePowers COO for 7 years. Cameron Vernest is a former Shopify, BlackBerry and TradeGecko ($100m+ exit in 2020) B2B revenue leader having scaled teams globally from infancy to 70+.

Spearheads traction has been exciting, says Sebastien Douville. Spearhead lives at the fascinating but challenging intersection of the democratization of big data/ML/AI, the sheer amount of M&A activity (which remains a human-first exercise), and the rapid datafication of best practices in revenue generation.

Cameron Vernest added, Spearheads vision is to define a new segment of investment bankingCorporate Development as a Service, or CDaaS. We are set to change the way deals are originated and won.

The US$3.2 million investment by FirePower will support Spearheads platform expansion globally from its three offices in Toronto, Johannesburg, and Bengaluru, as well as major technology, database and process/workflow investments, and other strategic initiatives. Over 30 FirePower staff will migrate under the Spearhead brand. The worldwide scope of Spearheads current and future mandates, its significant technology and language requirements, and the belief that talent can be found globally, called for a brand distinct from FirePowers.

About Spearhead Corporate Development

Spearhead Corporate Development provides the luxury of choice in deal sourcing for M&A: our team of 30+ seasoned dealmakers and researchers enable active strategics and PE firms to see more off-market opportunities and close more deals, with more certainty.

Our approach is human-first: our interactions are personalized, thoughtful and memorable. AI/ML, big data, and tech helps drive scale in what we do. With offices in Toronto, Johannesburg and Bengaluru, Spearhead is backed by FirePower Capital, a mid-market private capital and advisory firm that has completed over 125 transactions since inception in 2012. http://www.spearheadcorpdev.com

About FirePower Capital

FirePower Capital is the M&A advisory and private capital firm built for Canadas entrepreneurs. Our team of 60+ professionals help mid-market businesses complete mission-critical transactions, by advising them or investing in their companies directly. It is a member of Mergers Alliance, a global network of 18 M&A advisory firms with offices in 30 countries. http://www.firepowercapital.com

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The Merge: blockchain sheds its toxic reputation – Finextra

Many businesses that would benefit from the blockchain have been avoiding it. Its carbon footprint, expense, and links to volatile cryptocurrencies contributed to blockchain harbouring a toxic reputation that it couldnt shake, and businesses wouldnt touch.

That was until the Merge. This now widely used term references the restructure of the worlds largest programmable blockchain: Ethereum. Put simply, this September the cryptography driving the system has been switched from proof of work (PoW) to proof of stake (PoS). This essentially replaced the huge, energy-intensive computers that were the networks core validators, with individuals and companies. It is expected to reduce the energy consumption of Ethereum by 99% and reduce the global use of energy by 0.02%, according to Vitalik Buterin, improving its sustainability significantly. The Surge, the epilogue to the Merge, will eventually increase capacity and lower fees on the network.

Its clearly a significant step towards bringing Ethereum into the mainstream and it marks an evolution of blockchain technology. But what does blockchains improved reputationreally mean for institutional use?

Press coverage has focused on more widespread crypto usage; however, the real impact will be on the institutional side particularly within financial services. Now the stage is set for innovations, it is likely that parts of the industry may turn towards decentralised infrastructure. Blockchain can offer safe and secure transaction processing at a fraction of the cost, particularly when compared to the enormous expense and burden of todays systems.

This has never been more relevant. The digital asset market is maturing significantly just as its traditional counterpart enters a period of turmoil and uncertainty. As the world hurtles towards another recession, businesses will be examining how to save money and cut costs. A greener, more cost-efficient blockchain could form part of the answer and reduce the institutions huge IT expenditures.

If implemented correctly, blockchain could save billions in infrastructure and associated IT costs. Rather than paying for service level agreements, data centres, cloud hosting and other services, financial institutions can and will leverage blockchain infrastructure at a fraction of the cost of running the same transactions in-house. Cost efficiencies aside, tokenisation could improve several areas within asset management specifically, such as issuance, exchange and servicing as well as simplify processes involving a host of intermediaries. Potential benefits include improved access to, and personalisation of, investment solutions.

For private equity, blockchain could enable fractional ownership and decentralised funds, which will not only increase transparency, but create more flexibility around liquidity for what could previously only be long-term, locked-in investments.

However, there is still a missing piece of the puzzle to be considered: interoperability. For true mainstream adoption of blockchain to occur within businesses, users need to be able to transact across multiple networks. Currently, it is not particularly easy to share information from one blockchain to another. To put this into context, if interoperability within email communication had never been achieved, Outlook users wouldnt be able to send messages to Gmail accounts and vice versa.

Even if widespread adoption did occur as a result of the Merge, until different blockchains including Ethereum can communicate with one another effectively, the full benefits of the technology for businesses will not be unlocked.

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Local IT Expert Named As Official Host Of Small Business Tech Day Event For Small Business Owners To Be More Productive, Profitable and Protected -…

Local CEO Matt Jones of Freedom Tech will be hosting a FREE event with Shark Tanks Kevin OLeary, former FBI operative Eric ONeill and best-selling author and entrepreneur Mike Michalowicz, to help businesses with the best technology available to increase productivity and protect against threats.

Raleigh, North Carolina, United States - September 28, 2022

Matt Jones, CEO and founder of Freedom Tech, an IT services company serving small business owners in the Triangle & Sandhills areas of North Carolina, is officially a host of the first annual Small Business Tech Day happening December 15th.

This FREE online event includes celebrities like Shark Tanks Kevin OLeary, former FBI counter-terrorism and counterintelligence operative Eric ONeill and best-selling author and entrepreneur extraordinaire Mike Michalowicz.

The event is designed to help small businesses equip themselves with the best technology and practices available today to increase productivity and profitability and protect them against online threats.

With companies relying on work-from-anywhere solutions, cloud computing and needing access to everything from anywhere at any time, its more important than ever to make sure small businesses know whats available to them in a quickly changing landscape. They and their employees can improve their quality of life while increasing productivity and profitability if they have the right tools, software and support, said Matt Jones, chief executive officer for Freedom Tech. Its also important they know how small businesses and their employees can be targets of online scams, theft or ransom and have the security to ensure they dont become victims.

The first-of-its-kind international event will feature well-known business leaders, tech experts and leading minds showing small businesses how to compete and succeed in many aspects of their business with a concentration on utilizing technology to be more productive, profitable and protected. For more information about Small Business Tech Day, go to https://www.smallbusinesstechday.com or call 919-874-5255 and let them know youd like information on the FREE local event happening on December 15th.

About the Author

Matt Jones has served businesses throughout the Carolinas for more than 10 years specializing in helping legal, medical, financial, construction, automotive, manufacturing, & government sectors with all of their IT support needs. Matt and his team have worked to help more than 100 small businesses to integrate technology into their business to maximize growth and opportunities and protect them from online threats.

About Us: Freedom Tech has provided expert IT support since 2011, helping hundreds of businesses increase productivity and profitability by making IT a streamlined part of operations. Our mission is to deliver the latest technology consulting, services, maintenance, and support as a highly cost-effective IT solution in order to maximize our client's productivity and profitability.

Contact Info: Name: Matt JonesEmail: Send EmailOrganization: Freedom TechAddress: 555 Fayetteville St, Suite 201, Raleigh, NC 27601Phone: 9198745255Website: https://www.freedomtech.us

Release ID: 89082292

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Data Science | University of Notre Dame

The power of big data doesnt stem from an algorithmit comes from talented data scientists who understand why, how, and when to use it. In the hands of well-trained data scientists, data can inform critical business decisions, shape social discourse, and change the world for the better.

Become a part of that change with Notre Dames data science online programs. Youll develop essential mathematical and technical skills and learn to combine them with critical thinking. Gain a deep understanding of how your work impacts the world we live in and learn data science online in a flexible format. At Notre Dame, we prioritize creating the community and networking opportunities you need to give you a leading edge in the data science field.

Prepare for rapid career growth and long-term success as a data scientist in our data science online masters program. Complete rigorous graduate study in a personalized online learning environment and work on real-world data science projects for Notre Dames industry partners.

Go To Master's Program

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Investigating at the interface of data science and computing – MIT News

A visual model of Guy Breslers research would probably look something like a Venn diagram. He works at the four-way intersection where theoretical computer science, statistics, probability, and information theory collide.

There are always new things to do be done at the interface. There are always opportunities for entirely new questions to ask, says Bresler, an associate professor who recently earned tenure in MITs Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS).

A theoretician, he aims to understand the delicate interplay between structure in data, the complexity of models, and the amount of computation needed to learn those models. Recently, his biggest focus has been trying to unveil fundamental phenomena that are broadly responsible for determining the computational complexity of statistics problems and finding the sweet spot where available data and computation resources enable researchers to effectively solve a problem.

When trying to solve a complex statistics problem, there is often a tug-of-war between data and computation. Without enough data, the computation needed to solve a statistical problem can be intractable, or at least consume a staggering amount of resources. But get just enough data and suddenly the intractable becomes solvable; the amount of computation needed to come up with a solution drops dramatically.

The majority of modern statistical problems exhibits this sort of trade-off between computation and data, with applications ranging from drug development to weather prediction. Another well-studied and practically important example is cryo-electron microscopy, Bresler says. With this technique, researchers use an electron microscope to take images of molecules in different orientations. The central challenge is how to solve the inverse problem determining the molecules structure given the noisy data. Many statistical problems can be formulated as inverse problems of this sort.

One aim of Breslers work is to elucidate relationships between the wide variety of different statistics problems currently being studied. The dream is to classify statistical problems into equivalence classes, as has been done for other types of computational problems in the field of computational complexity. Showing these sorts of relationships means that, instead of trying to understand each problem in isolation, researchers can transfer their understanding from a well-studied problem to a poorly understood one, he says.

Adopting a theoretical approach

For Bresler, a desire to theoretically understand various basic phenomena inspired him to follow a path into academia.

Both of his parents worked as professors and showed how fulfilling academia can be, he says. His earliest introduction to the theoretical side of engineering came from his father, who is an electrical engineer and theoretician studying signal processing. Bresler was inspired by his work from an early age. As an undergraduate at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, he bounced between physics, math, and computer science courses. But no matter the topic, he gravitated toward the theoretical viewpoint.

In graduate school at the University of California at Berkeley, Bresler enjoyed the opportunity to work in a wide variety of topics spanning probability, theoretical computer science, and mathematics. His driving motivator was a love of learning new things.

Working at the interface of multiple fields with new questions, there is a feeling that one had better learn as much as possible if one is to have any chance of finding the right tools to answer those questions, he says.

That curiosity led him to MIT for a postdoc in the Laboratory for Information and Decision Systems (LIDS) in 2013, and then he joined the faculty two years later as an assistant professor in EECS,a member of LIDS, and a core faculty member in the Institute for Data, Systems, and Society (IDSS). He was named an associate professor in 2019.

Bresler says he was drawn to the intellectual atmosphere at MIT, as well as the supportive environment for launching bold research quests and trying to make progress in new areas of study.

Opportunities for collaboration

What really struck me was how vibrant and energetic and collaborative MIT is. I have this mental list of more than 20 people here who I would love to have lunch with every single week and collaborate with on research. So just based on sheer numbers, joining MIT was a clear win, he says.

Hes especially enjoyed collaborating with his students, who continually teach him new things and ask deep questions that drive exciting research projects. One such student, Matthew Brennan, who was one of Breslers closest collaborators, tragically and unexpectedly passed away in January, 2021.

The shock from Brennans death is still raw for Bresler, and it derailed his research for a time.

Beyond his own prodigious capabilities and creativity, he had this amazing ability to listen to an idea of mine that was almost completely wrong, extract from it a useful piece, and then pass the ball back, he says. We had the same vision for what we wanted to achieve in the work, and we were driven to try to tell a certainstory. At the time, almost nobody was pursuing this particular line of work, and it was in a way kind of lonely. But he trusted me, and we encouraged one another to keep at it when things seemed bleak.

Those lessons in perseverance fuel Bresler as he and his students continue exploring questions that, by their nature, are difficult to answer.

One area hes worked in on-and-off for over a decade involves learning graphical models from data. Models of certain types of data, such as time-series data consisting of temperature readings, are often constructed by domain experts who have relevant knowledge and can build a reasonable model, he explains.

But for many types of data with complex dependencies, such as social network or biological data, it is not at all clear what structure a model should take. Breslers work seeks to estimate a structured model from data, which could then be used for downstream applications like making recommendations or better predicting the weather.

The basic question of identifying good models, whether algorithmically in a complex setting or analytically, by specifying a useful toy model for theoretical analysis, connects the abstract work with engineering practice, he says.

In general, modeling is an art. Real life is complicated and if you write down some super-complicated model that tries to capture every feature of a problem, it is doomed, says Bresler. You have to think about the problem and understand the practical side of things on some level to identify the correct features of the problem to be modeled, so that you can hope to actually solve it and gain insight into what one should do in practice.

Outside the lab, Bresler often finds himself solving very different kinds of problems. He is an avid rock climber and spends much of his free time bouldering throughout New England.

I really love it. It is a good excuse to get outside and get sucked into a whole different world. Even though there is problem solving involved, and there are similarities at the philosophical level, it is totally orthogonal to sitting down and doing math, he says.

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Virtual event addresses the importance of women working in data science – Virginia Tech Daily

Whether it is a doctor diagnosing and treating a complex medical condition, a financial institution determining who qualifies for a loan, or even your favorite streaming service suggesting what movie you should watch next, data science influences many of the decisions that impact our lives.

With data at the heart of nearly everything we do every day, the field of data science is booming. Still, women remain woefully underrepresented among data science workers, in the United States and worldwide. According to a 2021-22 report from data and analytics recruiting company Harnham, just 27 percent of professionals in the industry are women.

So how can we change the representation of women in data science and why does it even matter?

That is the topic of discussion for Inspiring Diversity in Data Science: A Worldwide Movement, the next event in the Northern Virginia Technology Council Data Science Speaker Series. Held in partnership with Virginia Tech, the event is scheduled for Thursday, Sept. 29, at 1 p.m. Registration is required.

This virtual event features keynote presenter Judy Logan, co-director of the Women in Data Science (WiDS) Conference at Stanford University. Logan will discuss why she and her colleagues at Stanford started the Women in Data Science initiative and how the WiDS worldwide community is working to increase the representation of women in the field.

Aiming to inspire and educate data scientists nationwide regardless of gender and to support women in the field, Women in Data Science started as a one-day technical conference in 2015. It has since grown into a global movement with a number of worldwide initiatives, including a datathon, a podcast series, an education outreach program, and a workshop series.

The signature initiative of Women in Data Science is its worldwide conference, which features over 200 regional events in more than 60 countries, reaching 100,000 participants annually. Virginia Tech joined the movement in 2019, with the first Women in Data Science Blacksburg Conference held that spring. Planning for the 2023 WiDS Blacksburg event is in the works.

Following Logans presentation, a group of panelists all women working in data science will provide further discussion about progress they have seen in the field, what they view as keys for success, and challenges yet to be addressed.

Angie Patterson, who serves as the co-director of the Computational Modeling and Data Analytics Capstone program at Virginia Tech and became a WiDS ambassador in 2021, will moderate the event.

Also joining the panel discussion are Poornima Ramaswamy, chief transformation officer at Qlik, and Radha Sambasivan, vice president of software development at Mastercard.

Throughout my 30-year career in industry, I became comfortable often being the sole female team member, but then finally started asking myself: What is wrong with this picture? said Patterson. Professional development of women in STEM fields became a personal passion, and now, as a professor in the Department of Statistics, helping build the pipeline of future statisticians and data scientists has my attention.

The NVTC Data Science Speaker Series launched in 2021 in partnership with the Virginia Tech Academy of Data Science to showcase the impact of data science in the modern era. Previous topics have included the reality and future of data science and the sports analytics revolution.

Virginia Tech is very pleased to be partnered with the Northern Virginia Technology Council in presenting this latest event in their Data Science Speaker Series, said Tom Woteki, director of the Academy of Data Science, which was founded in 2020. We are proud to be able to highlight the contributions of women in all STEM fields, including data science.

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