Shining a light on dark data
"Dark data are everywhere," says renowned statistician, author, and educator, Sir David Hand.
"Dark data are everywhere," says renowned statistician, author, and educator, Sir David Hand.
Can’t travel for Discovery Summit? Don’t worry. Neither can we. Don’t have budget for this year’s registration fee? Don’t worry. It’ll be free. Can’t afford to invest the time? We can’t help you there. Although we wonder how you can afford not to make the time.
Best practices in teaching statistics from the Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education (GAISE) College Report.
Using real-world problem-solving examples is a both game-changer and fun. Sample success story of academic-industry collaboration
Blending face-to-face learning with online learning and practice gives the student more control regarding time, place, channel and pace. A selection of books integrating JMP
Kickstart your statistics course development with these three types of resources.
Here's why professors like JMP academic resources.
In a recent Technically Speaking webinar, we built a Bootstrap Forest model to predict financial penalty payments. But how do we know if the model is any good? And how do we actually use it to generate predictions?
I demonstrated that overall server reliability was better than any of the individual drives that comprised the server! How can this be?
Ever wondered where the US stands in terms of representation of women in government and labor force participation?
Mike Cramer of McDonald's Corporation has been using JMP for DOE since 2005.
10 cars, 6 lanes, one 5-year-old. Which car will come out on top?
Did the "Frozen" princesses come out on top? Who was crowned the champion?
Real-life data sets usually have all kinds of traps, pitfalls and gotchas. How do we start to handle data cleaning and data preparation tasks?
"Products and processes...more complex than ever," says Professor Peter Goos, University of Leuven and co-author of Optimal Design of Experiments. The notion of doing design of experiments (DOE) initially can be like tasting cilantro for the first time: polarizing, since most people either love it or hate it.
Jon Kishiyama of Nikon most enjoys "finding the answer" in his work.
Dan Fortune of Hexicon, Inc. says JMP's visual capabilities "sells ideas better than numbers alone."
"I have JMP open all day, every day," he says.
"JMP features are like my children: I love them all. But recently, I am in awe of Predictor Screening. It is great for manufacturing problem solving."