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Augur is a decentralized prediction market platform built on the Ethereum blockchain. [1] Augur is developed by Forecast Foundation, which was founded in 2014 by Jack Peterson, Joey Krug, and Jeremy Gardner. [2] Forecast Foundation is advised by Ron Bernstein, founder of now-defunct company Intrade, and Ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin. [3]
Origin is a proprietary computer program for interactive scientific graphing and data analysis. It is produced by OriginLab Corporation , and runs on Microsoft Windows . It has inspired several platform-independent open-source clones and alternatives like LabPlot and SciDAVis .
For its creation and development of the Ripple protocol (RTXP) and the Ripple payment/exchange network, the magazine MIT Technology Review listed Ripple Labs as one of 2014s "50 Smartest Companies" in its February 2014 issue. The criteria for the recognition revolved around "whether a company had made strides in the past year that will define ...
Average forecast from analysts put bitcoin reaching north of $100,000 in 2024, though some warn of history repeating itself Bitcoin price prediction model running ‘like clockwork’ as crypto ...
One of the big movers in the crypto market today is NEAR Protocol (CCC:NEAR-USD). This altcoin has gained significant traction of late as a proof-of-stake blockchain with a unique value ...
The Extended UTXO (EUTXO) model is an advanced iteration of the traditional Unspent Transaction Output (UTXO) model. It expands on the fundamental UTXO model, incorporating enhanced features to increase flexibility and utility while maintaining the model's inherent advantages in security, predictability, and parallelizability.
The first clinical prediction model reporting guidelines were published in 2015 (Transparent reporting of a multivariable prediction model for individual prognosis or diagnosis (TRIPOD)), and have since been updated. [10] Predictive modelling has been used to estimate surgery duration.
In finance, the binomial options pricing model (BOPM) provides a generalizable numerical method for the valuation of options.Essentially, the model uses a "discrete-time" (lattice based) model of the varying price over time of the underlying financial instrument, addressing cases where the closed-form Black–Scholes formula is wanting, which in general does not exist for the BOPM.