It's free, open source, and no watermark - so QuickChart compares favorably in that regard!
In terms of functionality, ChartURL is also built on Chart.js, so charting capabilities should be roughly equivalent. They've added the nice feature of being able to save your charts to a short URL.
* Engineering Manager - build & lead a team on some of our newest projects. You should be just as excited to solve tough technical challenges & contribute to the codebase.
* Senior Data Scientist - Python3 stack. Lead an exciting new data science project that can impact up to 45,000 companies.
* Technical Program Manager - Program manage various projects that we have with one of our largest partners.
Tesorio is a high-growth, early-stage startup backed by some of the Bay Area’s most prominent Venture Capital firms (First Round, Floodgate, Y Combinator) and the world’s top finance execs (e.g. the ex-CFO of Oracle, the ex-CFO of Yahoo, and the founder of Adaptive Insights).
We built software that applies proprietary machine learning models to help manage a core problem that all Mid-Market businesses face: managing, predicting, and collecting cash. As we’ve taken this solution to market over the last 18 months, we’ve been able to bring on some great clients like Twilio, Spotify, Veeva Systems, WP Engine, Rainforest QA, and many more.
Yeah... HIPAA is definitely tough. I'd check out https://www.aptible.com if you haven't already. It will at least help out with the infrastructure side of things. Although it does seem like Heroku is offering some services that help too (https://blog.heroku.com/announcing-heroku-shield).
It's definitely not enough alone, but at least gets you going on the security & compliance aspects.
I'm in the UK and our rules are different, we don't have anything directly equivalent to HIPAA (I suspect because we don't currently have the huge number of private hospitals/doctors the US has) in fact even finding out the exact standards you'd have to comply with for the UK is a challenge.
GDPR is good in that regard as the standards are high and apply to more than just electronic storage/interchange.
We tried it very early on at our company and it didn't work out. We ended up using Wrike and it has been _much_ better for us. We've been using it for a while now for engineering/project management for our small team of 6 engineers. Unclear if it will scale, but works great so far.
When I worked as an SRE at Stack Overflow we used name.com for all our domains (and R53/GCP/Azure for DNS). Never had any issues, and worth adding to any short list you come up with.
If you do whois lookups against the top 50 websites you'll see a lot of them use a small set of registrar's. But not all of them accept small businesses.
I use name.com for all my personal domains because it's cheap and supports a lot of unusual TLDs. But I would never trust a $100M company to it. Who cares about saving ~ $100/year.
If Elon is guaranteeing a $420/share buyout - are there any downsides to buying as much stock as possible right now? Would the only risk be that this whole plan falls through or that Elon ultimately decides against that price?
As shares are not close to $420 right now, that indicates healthy skepticism that Elon is capable of getting this done. Do you have reason to believe that he is capable of raising $50-80 billion to complete the transaction? If yes, then you have a great arbitrage opportunity.
That's not a negligible risk. It's analogous to thinking bonds have no risk because the issuing company guarantees it (forgetting it might well go bankrupt).
Yeah, I think the price now will end up reflecting what people think is the odds of this happening. If you are 100% sure this will happen, you would be willing to buy shares for $419. If you are 90% sure you may stop at $400 etc.
Thats correct. Which is why you see that the current stock price is currently spiking, as people rush to get the "good" deal for free money.... Which means that as the stock gets closer to 420$, the amount of "free" money quickly goes away.
There are many factors that could affect this. There is no words of the source of the fund, although people believe he already has that secured. And all shareholders have to vote. The last and most important is when this would actually happen.
Tesorio is a cash management platform that streamlines B2B collections, currency exposure analysis, and trade working capital forecasting. Our goal is not to just automate existing workflows but to proactively surface insights which help our clients find better ways to coordinate their teams and de-risk their bottom line.
We are developing machine learning algorithms to understand business cash needs, predictive algorithms to forecast future cash flow, and a sleek UI/UX to make our products enjoyable to work with.
As you can imagine, there are so many interesting data problems we can tackle when we connect to a company’s financial data. We are looking for a Lead Data Scientist that will help define how we do data science and machine learning at Tesorio.
We're funded by top investors including First Round Capital (Uber + Warby Parker), Floodgate Capital (Twitter + Lyft), Fuel Capital (Layer + CoreOS), Red Swan (Coinbase + Buffer), Slow Ventures (early Facebook team), Hillsven Capital (founders of Ariba), and Paul Buchheit (creator of Gmail, YC Partner).
Wow! This is an incredible challenge to tackle. It seems like right now you're planning to cover the U.S. Is your goal to provide this globally or keep it entirely focused on U.S.?