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Associate Professor of Fisheries Oceanography named a Cooperative Institute for the North Atlantic Region (CINAR) Fellow – UMass Dartmouth

Gavin Fay was honored by CINAR for his work on sustainable fisheries management

The Cooperative Institute for the North Atlantic Region (CINAR) recently announced five new Quantitative Fisheries and Ecosystems Science Fellows, including Associate Professor Gavin Fay (Fisheries Oceanography). CINAR, which is led by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and the Northeast Fisheries Science Center, is a consortium of research institutions focused on the marine ecosystem in the North Atlantic. CINAR also works closely with the federal National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Fay was chosen for this important fellowship due to his research that utilizes statistical and mathematical models for better ecosystem-based decision making for fisheries and oceans. As a Fellow, he is interested in both developing new methods for statistical modeling, fisheries assessment, and ecosystem-based management; and, how open data science tools can empower communication of scientific results for application to management and policy.

Im thankful to receive this award and support from CINAR, NEFSC, and the NOAA QUEST program. The fellowship will help us expand and strengthen the School for Marine Science and Technologys collaborations with NOAA NEFSC to provide the science (and future workforce) that will support decisions to manage our oceans and fisheries and help sustain thriving coastal communities in the face of regional and global change, said Fay.

According to CINAR, The goal of the fellowship program is to engage early-career scientists in research that supports the training and education of the next generation of stock assessment scientists, ecosystem scientists, and economists, and that improves the assessment and management of living marine resources in the Northeast U.S.

The CINAR fellowship will allow Fay to provide training workshops in quantitative fisheries science at the School for Marine Science and Technology (SMAST) for students from CINAR partner institutions. This opportunity will help connect UMassD students with their regional peer network and agency staff. As a fellow, Fay will also lead a national skills-based conference in quantitative fisheries science, to be targeted towards students at institutions that do not have academic training programs in these methods, to increase the national capability for applying the interdisciplinary advice needed to sustain oceans and fisheries.

Im excited that these activities will engage our students with hands-on learning of state-of-the-art statistical methods and decision support tools and have them interact and learn with their peers at the other CINAR institutions in the Northeast, stated Fay. Im humbled to join this cohort of fellows; Drs Cullen, Nesslage, Stoll, and Wiedenmann are all excellent fisheries scientists and educators. Looking forward to working with them all.

Members of CINAR include the UMass Dartmouth School for Marine Science and Technology (SMAST), the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the Gulf of Maine Research Institute, Rutgers University, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, University of Maine, and the University of Rhode Island.

At SMAST, Fay teaches courses in statistics, ecological population modeling, science communication, and Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management. He currently serves on the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council's Scientific and Statistical Committee, as well as the New England Fishery Management Council's Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management Plan Development Team. He is a scientific advisory NETwork member for Eating with the Ecosystem, a local nonprofit organization working to promote a place-based approach to sustaining New England's wild seafood.

SMAST Fisheries Oceanography, News and Public Information, School for Marine Science and Technology

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Data Science for Social Good Programme helps Ofsted and World Bank – India Education Diary

Data Science for Social Good (DSSGxUK)is a summer programme that has been hosted by theUniversity of WarwickandThe Alan Turing Institutefor the last two years, and will this summer, 2021, be delivered by University of Warwick in collaboration with Ludwig Maximillian University (Munich) under the DSSGx UK chapter of theDSSG Foundation.

DSSG is the brainchild of Rayid Ghani, former Chief Scientist for President Obama, and continues to be run in the US at Carnegie Mellon University. Participants are trained over the summer, and work on data science projects with not-for-profit organisations and governmental bodies, helping them leverage their data to improve their services, interventions and outreach.

This summer, over 2020, a congregation of data scientists from all over the world collaborated virtually, and successfully designed a new prioritisation system forOfsted the Office for Standards in Education, to help them inspect and regulate early years care providers, as well as a new public administration corruption risk identification and analysing system forWorld Bank, an international financial institution who provide loans and grants to the governments of developing countries for the purpose of pursuing capital gains.

Nitya Raviprakash was a participant in the programme this summer for the World Bank project, and comments:

DSSGx-UK was a great programme where I picked up many cool technical skills, but the best part about it was the people some of the most genuine and kind people Ive ever worked with (and learned so much from), who really want to make a positive impact on the world. To me, thats what made the experience so beautiful.

Alexandra Habershon from World Bank comments:

We were really impressed with what the team achieved in just a few weeks. They embraced the anticorruption data challenge with enormous enthusiasm, creativity and skill. We came away with new analytic methods, structured data sets, instructions for researchers to take the work further, and insights about gaps in public sector data.All of this will help inform the advice we provide to governments on strengthening their accountability systems. It will also contribute to the World Banks ongoing anticorruption research program with academic and development partners.

James Bowsher-Murray, Head of Early Years and Social Care Data and Insight, from Ofsted, comments:

I was impressed with the modelling and insight that the team were able to produce in such limited time. We are now looking forward to running and testing the model in Ofsted and seeing how it can help improve the quality of early years care that children receive.

After such a successful year the University of Warwick are proud to announce that the programme is returning for summer 2021, in collaboration with the Ludwigs Maximillian University in Germany, with support from The Alan Turing Institute.

The 12-week programme is once again looking for participants, it will run online, due to the pandemic, from June 7thuntil August 27th, and will include lectures and hands-on workshops with mentors from the global data science community.

Graduates and undergraduate students, PhD students, data scientists and researchers have until January 31stto apply for the initiative which, since its inception, has seen more than 200 students spend their summers with the DSSG.

Professor Juergen Branke, Professor of Operational Research & Systems and DSSGxUK co-ordinator comments:

The 2020 DSSGxUK programme was a great success, even with the programme being carried out virtually with participants from Mexico to Romania, our partner organisations were extremely happy with what the teams produced. Just mining the data can help them achieve more with less resources, or even help argue their case with local authorities and the Government.

There are many organisations working hard to do social good who are collecting vast amounts of data in this digital age, but dont have the resources or skills to make the most of it.

The DSSG helps them unleash the potential of their data and the improvement in their services can be truly astounding.

To find out more and to apply for this years programme please visit:https://warwick.ac.uk/research/data-science/warwick-data/dssgx/

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Save 98% off the Complete Excel, VBA, and Data Science Certification Training Bundle – Neowin

Today's highlighted deal comes via our Online Courses section of the Neowin Deals store, where you can save 98% off the Complete Excel, VBA, and Data Science Certification Training Bundle. Kickstarter funded! Be the master of databases and analysis with 55 hours of beginner content on Excel, VBA, Python, Machine Learning, and more.

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Ilia Dub and Jasper Yip join Oliver Wyman’s Asia partnership – Consultancy.asia

Oliver Wyman has strengthened its Asian partnership with two new partners: Ilia Dub and Jasper Yip.

Effective the 1st of January 2021, Ilia Dub is a partner in Oliver Wymans Digital practice, based in Singapore. He brings over a decade of experience serving clients at the intersection of business strategy, data and technology to the partnership, with a focus on digital transformations, data management, data science and agile delivery of technology solutions.

Dub also advises CIOs and CTOs on emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, cloud and internet of things. In his partner role, he leads an interdisciplinary teams of consultants, designers, data scientists and software engineers working across Asia.

Based in Oliver Wymans Hong Kong office, Jasper Yip has been promoted to partner in the Financial Services practice. He covers clients across Greater China and Asia Pacific with a focus on institutions in the capital markets, wealth/asset management and fintech space.

Yips consulting experience spans strategy and business model design, digital transformation, organisation and governance design, operating model optimisation and financial management. Most recently, he supported a financial institution with the formulation of its China onshore strategy and operation plans.

In last years annual promotion round, Oliver Wyman promoted seven new partners based in Asia.

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Poor data flows hampered governments Covid-19 response, says the Science and Technology Committee – ComputerWeekly.com

Poor data flows and a failure to capitalise on UK strengths in data science have bedevilled the governments response to the Covid-19 pandemic, a House of Commons Science and Technology Committee has found.

The committees 92-page report, The UK response to Covid-19: use of scientific advice, published 8 January, is focused on how the government has obtained and made use of scientific advice during the pandemic.

It notes that the remarkable achievement of developing and being in a position to deploy multiple vaccines against a deadly and virulent virus that was completely unknown a little over a year ago ranks as one of the most outstanding scientific accomplishments of recent years.

It recollects that the first two cases of Covid-19 were confirmed in the UK, in England, on 31 January 2020, less than a year ago. The first death from Covid-19 in the UK, in England, was announced on 5 March. As of 18 December, the total number of deaths since then, where Covid-19 is mentioned on the death certificate, is 82,624. On 06 January, another 1,041 deaths were reported.

The committee, chaired by Conservative MP Greg Clark, said in its report: A fully effective response to the pandemic has been hampered by a lack of data. For a fast-spreading, invisible, but deadly infection, data is the means of understanding and acting upon the course of the virus in the population.

The early shortage of testing capacity restricting testing only to those so ill that they were admitted to hospital had the consequence of limiting knowledge of the whereabouts of Covid-19. The ONS Infection survey did not begin until May, and the fragmentation of data across public organisations has impeded the agility and precision of the response.

The report laments the failures in data management in the governments response to the pandemic, and notes these are all the more damning given a national comparative advantage in the field.

Given the UKs strengths in statistical analysis and data science, it is regrettable that poor data flows, delays in data-sharing agreements and a general lack of structuring and data integration across both the health and social care sectors have throttled timely data sharing and analysis.

For example, it is unacceptable that detailed public health data was only made available to modellers from March. The potential consequences of this will undoubtedly include slower and less effective decision-making.

It finds solace in the establishment of the Joint Biosecurity Centre as an effort to centralise data flows to manage the pandemic, but notes it is unfortunate that no central mechanism to coordinate data was in place at the start of the pandemic.

The committee exhorts the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) to set out an action plan that describes what efforts have been made, and will be made, during the pandemic to address the poor data access issues raised by the scientific community and Sage [the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies] and its sub-groups.

This plan should, said the report, cover agreements and incentives for data sharing and data integration across the health and social care sectors and across the four nations of the UK.

The early shortage of testing capacity restricting testing only to those so ill that they were admitted to hospital had the consequence of limiting knowledge of the whereabouts of Covid-19 The Science and Technology Committee

The report points out that the line between advice and decision-making was tested on one signally important occasion, when the Prime Minister announced plans for a second stay at home order on 31 October.

Although the chief medical officer and government chief scientific adviser presented modelling data at the press conference alongside the Prime Minister, the data underlying this was only made public three days later and was subject to extensive criticism, including that the data was out of date, it added.

More positively, the report stated: The Office for National Statistics [ONS] is now conducting a very important sampling exercise in which data on the prevalence of Covid-19 in the UK population will be gathered and reported twice-weekly.

It is of great importance in providing data on the spread of diseases, its impact on the different demographic groups and geographies, the incidence of asymptomatic transmission and even the reproduction or R number which the government has made key to easing some social distancing restrictions.

In evidence to the committee, the national statistician, Ian Diamond, gave an impressive account of the speed in which his team had been able to organise and implement a significant testing programme.

The report quotes Diamond as having said: The fact that we came into it on a Thursday and, with the University of Oxford, put together the design and protocoland put it to medical ethics the following Monday and data ethics on Tuesday, with letters out to potential participants on the Wednesday, seems to me to be one of the most rapid surveys I have ever in my life seen go into the field.

However, he also told the committee that the request to put together such a testing programme was made only on 17 April 2020.

It was also drawn to the committees attention that data on the ethnicity of those dying from Covid-19 was not systematically collected.

The committee is recommending that government should consider how ethnicity data on those dying as a result of Covid-19 could be systematically recorded, and it notes that there are significant unexplained differences in the death rates in the UK of Black, Asian and minority ethnic [BAME] groups compared to the population as a whole.

The report also brings out a structural over-emphasis on epidemiological data, as opposed to broader data about the impact of the pandemic on the economy, mental health and other areas.

The report adduces public comments made by Mark Woolhouse, a professor and one of the epidemiologists advising the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling (SPI-M) and the Scottish Government Covid-19 Advisory Group, that he thought scientific advice was driven far too much by epidemiology.

Speaking to the committee in June, Woolhouse said: In the early stages of the epidemic, before we had large amounts of [public health] data, [advice] was largely on the basis of modelling, and that is all right and proper and as it should be, but we are looking literally at only one side of the equation when we do that.

He suggested, according to the report, that the other side of the equation included the harms done by lockdown, including impacts on mental health and social wellbeing, the education of our children, and our economy.

The report noted: While the experience of no country is perfectly comparable with others, it will be important to understand the reasons for [comparatively poor performance in relation to peer nations] to learn lessons for the future.

In this report, there are questions of how quickly scientific analysis could be translated into government decisions; whether full advantage had been taken of learning from the experience of other countries; and the extent to which scientific advice took as a given operational constraints, such as testing capacity, or sought to change them.

For any emergency situation, data systems need to be in place up front to be able to give the information to make the analysis and make the decisions Patrick Vallance, Government Office for Science

Patrick Vallance, the governments chief scientific adviser, told the committee, in registering the importance of data: One lesson that is very important to learn from this pandemic, and for emergencies in general, is that data flows and data systems are incredibly important. You need the information to be able to make the decisions. Therefore, for any emergency situation, those data systems need to be in place up front to be able to give the information to make the analysis and make the decisions.

He told the committee that this was not limited to testing data, but also encompassed basic information flows around patients in hospital, rates of admission and rates of movement.

The report added that Vallance suggested that a principal issue in managing the pandemic was that at the beginning, there were definitely times when we would have liked data that was difficult to getdata flows are getting much better now, but the NHS does not have centralised data flows on everything you need.

As an example, comprehensive data on Covid-19 in care homes were not available to the government in the early months of the pandemic. At a Sage meeting on 15 March, it was noted that because of a 5 to 7 day lag in data provision for modelling, Sage now believes there are more cases in the UK than Sage previously expected at this point, and we may therefore be further ahead on the epidemic curve.

The committee is calling on the government to publish the advice it has received on indirect effects of Covid-19 (including impacts on mental health and social wellbeing, education and the economy) and work to improve transparency around the operation of the Joint Biosecurity Centre.

Measures taken to contain the pandemic [have] had wider and indirect effects, such as on peoples livelihoods, educational progress and mental and emotional wellbeing, said the committee.

The assessment of these wider impacts was and remains much less transparent than the epidemiological analysis; the people conducting the analysis and giving advice are less visible than epidemiological modelling advisers; and its role in decision-making opaque.

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Healthcare Innovations: Predictions for 2021 Based on the Viewpoints of Analytics Thought Leaders and Industry Experts | Quantzig – Business Wire

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Quantzig, a leader in delivering scalable analytics solutions and data science services, announced the completion of its recent article that unravels the healthcare innovations set to transform the healthcare industry in 2021.

The use of technology in healthcare skyrocketed in 2020 as hospitals, health systems, and patients increasingly relied on digital health technologies for care delivery during the pandemic, setting the stage for continued growth and innovation. With several new healthcare innovations paving their way into the health-tech landscape, analytics thought leaders at Quantzig got out their crystal balls to predict and share their views on the most promising healthcare innovations and medical breakthroughs impacting the healthcare industry in 2021 and beyond.

With COVID-19 vaccination trials rolling out this year, next-gen solutions for patient monitoring and virtual healthcare will witness high demand in 2021, says an analytics expert at Quantzig.

Partnering with Quantzig can help you adopt a progressive approach to innovation, with continuous guidance and support from analytics and healthcare industry experts. Request a FREE proposal to get started.

Key highlights-

2021 will witness innovations transforming how healthcare researchers aggregate and analyze big data, making data a powerful tool for drug development, lifestyle studies, and research

With the proliferation of advanced technologies, it is now possible for businesses to leverage the power of AI and ML to gain a leading edge

Quantzig is at the forefront of enabling healthcare innovation to drive better healthcare outcomes and improved patient experiences. Contact us to learn more about how you can benefit by focusing on tech-driven innovations.

Innovation is key to drive growth and profitability across sectors, and healthcare is no exception. But implementing new, innovative technologies can be challenging from a technical standpoint. However, the need of the hour is to strengthen your understanding and leverage technology to drive outcomes and offer personalized experiences for patients across the healthcare continuum. Though the benefits of healthcare innovations are widespread, building the necessary skills and capabilities to identify and capitalize on them is not an easy task. At Quantzig, we suggest adopting a progressive approach with guidance and support from big data and analytics experts to test and find loopholes prior to organization-wide implementation. Request more information from our experts to find out how we can help you.

Healthcare Innovations That Will Transform Healthcare in 2021

Few of these healthcare innovations have been a transformative force in reshaping and disrupting the healthcare industry in the past. As such, the new healthcare innovations hold tremendous potential in driving future healthcare outcomes by delivering a personalized, spontaneous, and cohesive experience to both payers and providers in the healthcare ecosystem. Quantzigs team of 550+ seasoned analytics experts and data science professionals have the expertise and skill it takes to design and build systems tailored to the particular needs of your business and equip you with data-driven, actionable insights for prudent decision-making. Request a FREE pilot project to learn more about our proprietary analytics platforms and core capabilities.

Additional Resources:

Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter to keep abreast of the upcoming trends in analytics.

About Quantzig

Quantzig is the world's foremost full-service advanced analytics and business intelligence solution provider, turning clients' complex, unstructured data into intelligent, actionable insights that enable them to solve complex business problems and inspire innovation, change, and growth.

Over the past 16 years, our insights have helped over 120 clients spanning across industries and sectors like Pharmaceutical and Life Sciences, Retail and CPG, Food and Beverage, and more. We have successfully delivered 1500 in-depth solutions in areas like Marketing Analytics, Customer Analytics, Supply Chain Analytics, and more. For more information on our engagement policies and pricing plans, visit: https://www.quantzig.com/request-for-proposal.

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AI Update: Provisions in the National Defense Authorization Act Signal the Importance of AI to American Competitiveness – Lexology

The newly enacted National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) contains important provisions regarding the development and deployment of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning technologies, many of which build upon previous legislation introduced in the 116th Congress. The most substantial federal U.S. legislation on AI to date, these provisions will have significant implications in the national security sector and beyond. The measures in the NDAA will coordinate a national strategy on research, development, and deployment of AI, guiding investment and aligning priorities for its use.

President Trump had vetoed the NDAA after its initial passage in December, but the $740 billion NDAA became law over the objection of President Trumps veto with a rare New Years Day Senate vote, 81-13. The House voted to override President Trumps veto on December 28, on a 322-87 vote.

This post highlights some of the key AI provisions included in the NDAA.

I. Establishment of the National Artificial Intelligence Initiative

Building on concepts set forth in prior legislation, including the National Artificial Intelligence Initiative Act of 2020 (S. 1558, H.R. 6216) introduced in the 116th Congress, Title E of the NDAA mandates the establishment of a National Artificial Initiative, for the purpose of:

In support of those goals, the AI Initiative activities will include:

To implement the AI Initiative, the NDAA mandates the creation of a National Artificial Intelligence Initiative Office under the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) to undertake the AI Initiative activities, as well as an interagency National Artificial Intelligence Advisory Committee to coordinate federal activities pertaining to the AI Initiative. In addition, the Secretary of Commerce, in consultation with other government officials, will establish a National Artificial Intelligence Advisory Committee comprised of members who collectively will provide a broad range of expertise and perspectives. The statute requires the Advisory Committee to establish a subcommittee on AI and law enforcement.

II. Development of Frameworks through the National Institute of Standards

Building on provisions of several pieces of legislation introduced in the 116th Congress, including the National Artificial Intelligence Initiative Act of 2020 (S. 1558, H.R. 6216) and Advancing Artificial Intelligence Research Act of 2020 (S. 3891), the NDAA directs the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) to support the development of relevant standards and best practices pertaining to both artificial intelligence and data sharing. To support these efforts, Congress has appropriated $400 million to NIST through FY 2025.

Specifically, the statute directs NIST to:

In addition, the legislation also grants the Director of NIST the discretion to:

Furthermore, NIST is instructed to (1) develop, in collaboration with public and private organizations, a voluntary risk management framework for trustworthy AI, (2) participate in the development of AI standards and specifications, (3) develop, in collaboration with public and private organizations, guidance to assist with voluntary data sharing among a range of organizations, and (4) develop, in collaboration with public and private sector organizations, best practices for datasets used to train AI, including with respect to documentation.

III. Department of Defense Artificial Intelligence Provisions

The NDAA has several AI-related provisions pertaining to the Department of Defense (DOD). Most notably, in relation to the Joint Artificial Intelligence Center (JAIC), the new law:

Other notable DOD AI provisions include:

IV. Department of Energy AI Research Program

The NDAA authorizes $1.2 billion through FY 2025 for a Department of Energy (DOE) artificial intelligence research program, identifying seven key areas for research grants, including the analysis and development of standardized data sets and development of trustworthy AI systems. To support this program, the Energy Secretary is directed to take certain actions, including making infrastructure, hardware, and software investments and collaborating with many stakeholders. In carrying out the program, DOE is also directed to support technology transfers of artificial intelligence systems in support of society and United States economic competitiveness.

V. Other Provisions Expanding Research, Development and Deployment of AI

The NDAA includes several other provisions pertaining to AI. For example, it allocates $4.8 billion to the National Science Foundation, which, among other things, will form a task force, in coordination with OSTP, to investigate the establishment of a National AI Research Resource. These provisions follow those in last sessions National AI Research Resource Task Force Act / National Cloud Computing Task Force Act (H.R.7096, S.3890) , and contemplate that the National Artificial Intelligence Research Resource, if established, among other things, may create a shared computing infrastructure for researchers throughout the United States. Similar to provisions of last sessions National Artificial Intelligence Initiative Act of 2020 (S. 1558, H.R. 6216), the NDAA also authorizes NSF to support the development of a network of inter-disciplinary AI research hubs or institutes to focus on challenges for AI systems such as trustworthiness or that focus on particular economic or social sectors.

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AI Update: Provisions in the National Defense Authorization Act Signal the Importance of AI to American Competitiveness - Lexology

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Inflectra Expands Its Cloud Hosting to India – PRNewswire

WASHINGTON, Jan. 11, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --Inflectra - a leading provider of software test management and enterprise-level IT portfolio management platforms, announced the expansion of its global cloud hosting infrastructure to include the Indian subcontinent. All India-based users of Inflectra's SaaS systems - SpiraPlan, SpiraTeam, and SpiraTest can now benefit from the improved speed and performance and will be in tighter compliance with existing national data protection laws (ITA 2000, SPDI & PI Rules, 2011).

"Many of our customers in India are using Inflectra's suite of software products to manage highly complex systems in regulated industries. With Atlassian's announcement of Jira Server discontinuing starting in Feb 2021, our customers are asking for more business options, including cloud hosting in India," said Adam Sandman, Director of Technology at Inflectra.

"For existing SaaS customers with operations in India, Inflectra already put out a call offering to move their instances to the new hosting facilities. For Inflectra's on-premise customers in India, help is available to migrate these instances to the cloud locally," said Thea Maisuradze, Head of Business Development at Inflectra.

Inflectra manages a cloud-hosting network that covers a variety of geographies - USA, Canada, Europe, and Australia. With no price differentiation in the company's hosting options all over the globe, Inflectra's many customers will be able to choose a hosting region that makes better business sense and still pay the standard service fees.

For more information on Inflectra's Cloud Services, please refer to the Cloud Services section on our website.

About Inflectra CorporationFounded in 2006, Inflectra is a market leader in software test management, test automation, application lifecycle management, and enterprise portfolio management space. The company is headquartered in the USA but has offices in over 10 countries. Known globally for its legendary customer support, Inflectra makes turn-key solutions that address many challenges in software testing and QA, test automation, and product lifecycle management. Its methodology agnostic software tools are used in regulated industries where portfolio management, requirements traceability, release planning, resource management, document workflow, baselining, and enterprise risk analysis are required. The company uses a concurrent pricing model for all its tools with unlimited products, projects, sprints, tests, API calls, included in a single price. All Inflectra products have a 30-day free trial.

Contact Person: Thea Maisuradze

Email: [emailprotected]

Phone: 202 558 6885

SOURCE Inflectra

https://www.inflectra.com

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Department of Education to Seek Cloud Hosting and Website Support and Development – MeriTalk

The Department of Education said it anticipates releasing a solicitation seeking cloud hosting, system administration, and website support and development for the Institute of Education Sciences (IES), according to a recent Beta.Sam.gov posting.

IES is an independent, non-partisan statistics, research, and evaluation arm of the Department of Education. The presolicitation notice explained IES currently maintains a virtual data center, which consists of approximately 60 virtual servers.

The department said the primary function of the data center is to host survey collection and dissemination websites in support of IES mission.

This includes web servers, database servers, a vast array of websites and data-driven web applications, a system management and web development environment, terminal servers housing analytical and statistical software, and other system support servers, the presolicitation said. Support for all aspects of IES web operations, including system administration, website administration and development, and user, staff and developer support, is provided by a team within IES which is comprised of government and contractor staff.

The Department of Education said the eventual award will require contractors that can pass high-risk background checks.

The department anticipates releasing a request for proposal at some point this month. The eventual contract will include a 12-month base period and four 12-month option periods. The department did not list the anticipated contract amount, but in a questions and answers document, Education said the contract does not have ceiling value.

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ServerWhere Launched Failover Cloud Servers in the U.S. and Europe – PRUnderground

ServerWhere.com (SW), the worlds premier provider of Cloud services based on cryptocurrencies, announced 10-gigabit Failover Cloud Servers, both as Private and Public IT infrastructure.

ServerWhere provisions Failover Cloud Server hosting services from various U.S. and European data centers. The Failover function offers increased IT service availability and reduces application downtime. SW provides cost-effective protection against a failure of the underlying physical infrastructure or the Cloud servers Operating System downtime. In case of an outage, the Failover server automatically restarts the server and restores workflows within less than 1 minute. All technology services delivered from the server resume automatically. There is no need for a manual server reboot.

ServerWhere.com also provisions 10-gigabit Dedicated Hosting services. The company hosts 10 Gbps the 10 Gbps connected Dedicated Servers in a data center based in London, UK.

The SWs Failover Cloud infrastructure increases technology service availability and reduces application downtime. It is a service for all U.S. and European Cloud Servers delivered by ServerWhere, active by default, at no additional cost, for all clients of the companys Public, Private & Hybrid Cloud Server services.

About ServerWhere.com

ServerWhere.com is a new generation Cloud Infrastructure service provider. SW increases the value of the cryptocurrencies. The company charges its customers for the IT infrastructure services it provides only in cryptocurrencies and does not use fiat currencies.

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