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by benreesman
326 days ago
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It's a shame that they don't have you writing marketing copy! The docs are indeed a lot more reasonable looking (to me at least). I work for a small proprietary fund and not some Godzilla company these days so maybe I'm just not the audience, but whew, for purchasing decision makers with subject matter background, that home page would have been a back button real fast if it wasn't linked from your thoughtful comment. I'm interested in your opinion as a user on a bit of a new conundrum for me: for as many jobs / contracts as I can remember, the data science was central enough that we were building it ourselves from like, the object store up. But in my current role, I'm managing a whole different kind of infrastructure that pulls in very different directions and the people who need to interact with data range from full-time quants to people with very little programming experience and so I'm kinda peeking around for an all-in-one solution. Log the rows here, connect the notebook here, right this way to your comprehensive dashboards and graphs with great defaults. Is this what I should be looking at? The code that needs to run on the data is your standard statistical and numerics Python type stuff (and if R was available it would probably get used but I don't need it): I need a dataframe of all the foo from date to date and I want to run a regression and maybe set up a little Monte Carlo thing. Hey that one is really useful, let's make it compute that every night and put it on the wall. I think we'd pay a lot for an answer here and I really don't want to like, break out pyarrow and start setting up tables. |
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The one other big thing that Domino isn't, is it's not a database or data warehouse. You pair it with something like BigQuery or Snowflake or just S3 and it takes a huge amount of the headache of using those things away for the staff you're describing. The best way to understand it is to just look at this page: https://docs.dominodatalab.com/en/cloud/user_guide/fa5f3a/us...
People at my work, myself included, absolutely love this feature. We have an incredibly strict and complex cloud environment and this makes it, so people can skip the setup nonsense and it will just work.
This isn't to say that you can't store data in Domino, it's just not a SQL engine. Another loved feature is their datasets. It's just EFS masquerading as an NFS, but Domino handles permissions and mounting. It's great for non-SQL file storage. https://docs.dominodatalab.com/en/cloud/user_guide/6942ab/us...
So, with those constraints in mind, I'd say it's great for what you're describing. You can deploy apps or API endpoints. You can create on-demand large scale clusters. We have people using Spark, Ray, Dask, and MPI. You can schedule jobs and you can interact with the whole platform programmatically.