There are thousands of programming languages, but some of them are far more popular than others.
Interest in the R statistics language is soaring, especially for data analysis. Get to know this hot programming option in our beginner’s guide.
With terabytes of data at hand, every business is trying to figure out the best way to understand information about their customers and themselves.
The R Consortium, which is an independent open source foundation that supports the R community and a Linux Foundation project, announced this morning that it is funding seven community projects and the formation of two technical working groups to further advance the R language. READ MORE.
The R Consortium and the Linux Foundation will fund a new open source developer hub for the R programming language called R-Hub, which complements CRAN and R-Forge. READ MORE.
R-Hub, a developing, building, testing and R packages validation service, is the recipient of the first ever R Consortium grant.
The R Consortium has announced its first grant will go to a new service designed for developing, building, testing and validating R packages. READ MORE.
The nonprofit Linux Foundation today announced a new initiative called the R Consortium, a new group to unite the users of the open-source R programming language, which is widely used among data scientists and statisticians.
As more data scientists and researchers embrace the R programming language and statistical computing environment, the Linux Foundation has moved to strengthen the user community and, with it, the development of more business applications through a collaborative development initiative called the R Consortium.
As foreshadowed on Twitter yesterday, a new R Consortium of major vendors launched today aimed at “strengthen[ing] both the technical and user communities,” according to a Linux Foundation announcement.