(no title)
BadInformatics | 4 years ago
I think a big part of that is because DS rarely involves writing fast numeric kernels or hot inner loops, i.e. user code that needs to do numeric stuff quickly. This is in large part because very large organizations have poured untold millions into libraries that already handle this (e.g Spark).
In domains where this has not happened or that have more bespoke requirements (e.g. modelling and simulation), something like Julia is far more compelling. That's not to say it's not viable, but unless more practitioners start feeling stuck in a rut [1] I don't see the mindshare changing dramatically.
No comments yet.