I dunno. Machine Learning as a Service seems like a tough thing to monetize, as most machine learning in practice involves a lot of tweaking which would then imply that practitioners would like to go further down the stack to work directly with an R, Python, ?? module, look at its code, see where it's failing, working etc.
I do like Machine Learning as a Service as a loss leader. e.g. customer walks up to the door, can't really get the problem cracked with an out of the box solution, but instead you sell/him her on an expensive long-term consulting project. i.e. the IBM Model.
Does anyone know how one of the pioneers in the segment, Numenta, is fairing? They've been around for a while and seem to have recently changed their name to Grok Solutions.
Deep Learning as a service seems like something that could work as their are less knobs for the user to fiddle with. That being said, it does not seem like Deep Learning is quite there yet.
I do like Machine Learning as a Service as a loss leader. e.g. customer walks up to the door, can't really get the problem cracked with an out of the box solution, but instead you sell/him her on an expensive long-term consulting project. i.e. the IBM Model.
Does anyone know how one of the pioneers in the segment, Numenta, is fairing? They've been around for a while and seem to have recently changed their name to Grok Solutions.
Deep Learning as a service seems like something that could work as their are less knobs for the user to fiddle with. That being said, it does not seem like Deep Learning is quite there yet.