Everyone wants to be efficient. Everyone wants to do a good job. And yet, inefficiency abounds. Islands of efficiency are set up when individual goals of a person or location override the efficiency of the whole network. In the "intended island of efficiency" each person or persons, working in their little
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![SAS loves stats: Mark Bailey](https://blogs.sas.com/content/sascom/files/2013/04/Bailey_Mark-2010-10-06-small-2.jpg)
Statistics. Should this branch of study call its home with mathematics or the sciences? Mark Bailey is a self-proclaimed science enthusiast, so you can guess which way he leans. As a full-time instructor with JMP, Mark use statistics in his job to help customers decipher their data. That means a
![Once a geek, always a geek – and by the way geeks are totally cool!](https://blogs.sas.com/content/sascom/files/2013/05/mccafree.jpg)
I’m a geek at heart – I always have been and I always will be. I love technology and I love math. I love that my job combines both. But you know what is even better? In today’s world of big data and data visualization, it is totally fashionable to
![The first data visualisation?](https://blogs.sas.com/content/sascom/files/2013/05/timeline1-702x336.jpg)
As a boy growing up in the 1970s, I was fascinated in particular by dinosaurs. I knew all their names, Tyrannosaurus Rex, Diplodocus, Triceratops etc. And I could also remember in which geological time period they lived, and on which continent; and what they ate, often each other of course!
![Mount Mayon Eruption reminds me that mobile phones have changed lives](https://blogs.sas.com/content/sascom/files/2013/05/Mt-Mayon-Ken-Ben-compressed-336x336.jpg)
Aboard a scuba diving boat off the east coast of Tico Island in the Philippines, my eyes kept turning to gaze upon Mount Mayon, reputed to be the world’s most perfectly cone-shaped volcano. Although I was enjoying diving in the warm tropical water, I was looking forward to climbing Mt
![Innovation in infrastructure – pairing possibility with return](https://blogs.sas.com/content/sascom/files/2013/05/Rotterdam-container-702x336.jpg)
A question was recently put to me by everyone’s favorite futurist – Thornton May: “Most people don't put innovation and infrastructure in the same sentence. They simply tend to view savings derived from optimized infrastructure as a funding source for “other” innovation investments. My thoughts?” My thoughts initially circled in
![What is the future of big data in health care?](https://blogs.sas.com/content/sascom/files/2017/01/Analytics-1-702x336.png)
Big data might be daunting, but Matthew J. Becker, Senior Director and Global Head of Statistical Programming at inVentive Health Clinical, says the goal remains simple for those in health care and life sciences: cure disease and improve health outcomes. Speaking last week at SAS Global Forum, Becker noted that
![Big names talk big products](https://blogs.sas.com/content/sascom/files/2017/01/Analytics-1-702x336.png)
When users attend SAS Global Forum, they often look forward to hearing from the big names of SAS. To name a few: CEO Jim Goodnight, VP and CMO Jim Davis, and Co-Founder John Sall. Inside SAS Global Forum caught up with these busy executives on the demo floor to talk about SAS
![Discover something interesting and useful: A data mining overview](https://blogs.sas.com/content/sascom/files/2017/01/Analytics-1-702x336.png)
A contract instructor for SAS since 1981 and an NC State University professor, David A. Dickey has a passion for statistics and sharing that passion with others. On Tuesday at SAS Global Forum he gave a general overview of data mining, touching on decision trees, regression trees, logistic regression, neural
It’s usually hard to draw a big crowd for the final session of a four-day conference, especially when it starts at 8 a.m. But this year, SAS Global Forum attendees set their alarms and got up early to hear how Roger Craig used statistics to help him win the Jeopardy!