We can’t wait to reveal the finished product! This was a super fun project, stay tuned!!
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We can’t wait to reveal the finished product! This was a super fun project, stay tuned!!
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Did you know, less than 10% of experiments test 4 or more variants, yet they’re twice as impactful compared to A/B? By testing more variants, you will see lots of positive change, from taking more risks safely to creating a more open-minded program. Learn what else you can do to can take your experimentation program to the next level in our Evolution of Experimentation report: https://ow.ly/qN3H50RopEr?
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Completed the course "Variables, Constants and Arguments in Studio"
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Reservoir Engineer | Lead Computational Scientist | Data Scientist | Digital Twin Expert | BackEnd Developer |
In this article, I am taking my audience through the memory lane of how we developed a robust and industry efficient nonlinear system solver at Cyphercrescent. https://lnkd.in/dmaX5Bme Please click the link above and enjoy the ride.
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Completed The Course "Variables, Constants and Arguments in Studio"
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Did you know, less than 10% of experiments test 4 or more variants, yet they’re twice as impactful compared to A/B? By testing more variants, you will see lots of positive change, from taking more risks safely to creating a more open-minded program. Learn what else you can do to can take your experimentation program to the next level in our Evolution of Experimentation report: https://ow.ly/2vMr50Rssj8?
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Understanding leadership and acting according to it, is what makes organisations better
It’s simple, really! 🩷✌🏼
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Today I came across a very interesting problem that caught my attention! 💡 The task was to capture regions in a 2D board surrounded by 'X' and convert any surrounded 'O' regions into 'X'. What I liked was the intuition behind solving it: by starting from the boundary and marking reachable 'O's, we can efficiently identify the regions that shouldn't be flipped. This approach involved BFS (breadth-first search) using a queue to track boundary-connected 'O's, and flipping the rest of the 'O's to 'X' in the final pass. It was fascinating how logical this process turned out to be, providing both an optimal solution and a deeper understanding of grid traversal techniques. Feel free to check out the solution I implemented, and let me know how you'd approach it! 🚀
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Did you know, less than 10% of experiments test 4 or more variants, yet they’re twice as impactful compared to A/B? By testing more variants, you will see lots of positive change, from taking more risks safely to creating a more open-minded program. Learn what else you can do to can take your experimentation program to the next level in our Evolution of Experimentation report: https://ow.ly/os6c50RzA1L?
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