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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source:https:\/\/techcrunch.com\/2023\/06\/28\/snowflake-databricks-data-machine-learning\/<\/a><\/br> Snowflake and Databricks<\/span> are surely similar companies. While each positions itself a bit differently, both provide data storage, processing and governance in a cloud context. Both are holding customer conferences this week, and both are looking for ways to help customers build generative AI and other intelligent applications on top of the data stored in these platforms.<\/p>\n If that wasn\u2019t clear before, it became even more apparent this week when Databricks announced it was acquiring MosaicML<\/a> for a cool $1.3 billion. That\u2019s a lot of money for a startup, even a well-capitalized one<\/a> like Databricks. The move came weeks after the company announced it was releasing Dolly<\/a>, an open source LLM, and another acquisition<\/a> in AI governance tool Okera.<\/p>\n Snowflake announced last month that it was buying Neeva<\/a>, giving it a search tool and some high-end AI engineering talent. The company also bought Streamlit last year<\/a>, which lets companies build applications from the data stored in Snowflake, and on Wednesday, it announced a new container service and partnership with Nvidia, giving customers a way to build generative AI applications and run them on Nvidia GPUs.<\/p>\n All of these moves (and others) are designed with one thing in mind: to use the data stored in these services as fuel for machine learning models, especially large language models. Both companies want to help customers take advantage of all this data stored on their platforms.<\/p>\n
\nSnowflake and Databricks are putting the data stored in their services to work<\/br>
\n2023-06-29 22:36:24<\/br><\/p>\n