The ABCs of Data Science (Very Young Professionals)
Friday, 16 October 2020

Expose your kids to the world of data! Making the claim "By Real Data Scientists, For Future Data Scientists" author Rikin Mathur follows Data Science Dolphin as she navigates the ABCs to learn about Data Science. Along the way, she meets a few friends such as Analyst Armadillo, Engineer Elephant, and Z-Score Zebra. Together they learn about Histograms, Joint Probability, and even Machine Learning.

<ASIN:1734276304>

The ABCs of Data Science is full of fun illustrations and real data science concepts explained in a simple and kid-friendly way.

Author: Rikin Mathur
Publisher: Very Young Professionals
Date: October 2020
Pages: 31
ISBN: 978-1734276305
Print: 1734276304
Audience: Kids and possibly pointy haired managers
Level: Introductory
Category: Data Science 

abcdata

 

For recommendations of Big Data books for developers and students, see Reading Your Way Into Big Data in our Programmer's Bookshelf section.

 

For more Book Watch just click.

Book Watch is I Programmer's listing of new books and is compiled using publishers' publicity material. It is not to be read as a review where we provide an independent assessment. Some, but by no means all, of the books in Book Watch are eventually reviewed.

To have new titles included in Book Watch contact  BookWatch@i-programmer.info

Follow @bookwatchiprog on Twitter or subscribe to I Programmer's Books RSS feed for each day's new addition to Book Watch and for new reviews.

 

 

Banner
 


Web Design, 7e (In Easy Steps)

Author: Sean McManus
Publisher: Easy Steps, 7th Ed, 2023
Pages: 228
ISBN: 978-1840789850
Print: 1840789859
Kindle: B0C24YV788
Audience:
Rating: 4
Reviewed by: Sue Gee
Web design without a designer - is it possible?



Classic Computer Science Problems in Java

Author: David Kopec
Publisher: Manning
Date: January 2021
Pages: 264
ISBN: 978-1617297601
Print: 1617297607
Audience: Java developers
Rating: 4
Reviewer: Mike James
Getting someone else to do the hard work of converting classic problems to code seems like a good idea. It all depends which problems [ ... ]


More Reviews