News
        
        No-Code, NLP Machine Learning Platform Launches
        
        
        
			- By John K. Waters
- 02/19/2020
 Predictive analytics company Obviously AI this week launched a solution it is describing  as the first no-code, natural language machine learning (ML) platform. 
The  company's namesake product was designed "to put the power of machine learning  and analytics in the hands of non-technical business users," the company said.
 The Berkeley, Calif.-based company's solution was  designed to enable non-technical users to access information and data  predictions by asking questions in natural language. It employs natural  language processing (NLP) to "break apart" a user's question, interpret it, and  find the right data. It then runs hundreds of machine learning algorithms in  parallel and evaluates each one for accuracy to find the right algorithm for the  dataset. It then identifies top attributes that impact the outcome the user is  trying to predict, and delivers its results in under a minute.
 "We realized that business users truly cared  about getting decision-making insights about their customers, products and its  usage," said Nirman Dave, co-founder and CEO of Obviously AI. "This has often  meant writing frustrating SQL queries and waiting on web engineers who would  try to figure out machine learning algorithms… It's amazing what marketers,  salespeople and other non-technical business users can learn when they use our  platform."
  Obviously AI's no-code tool allows users to upload  their datasets from CSV, databases, or CRMs to summon a Google-like search bar in  which to ask a question in natural language. For predictive questions, such as  "Which customers are likely to cancel their subscriptions?" the platform will  understand what the user is asking, find the right data, and build a machine  learning algorithm on the fly, the company said. It also shows users what  factors drove the results. The platform was also designed to answer analytical  questions that look for existing patterns in data, such as "What is the average  daily foot traffic for my retail stores?" Users do not need any familiarity  with writing SQL queries or working with programming languages to code  regressions, neural networks, and other ML algorithms, the company said.
 The company is promoting the platform for small  and medium sized businesses or small departments of larger companies that don't  have their own data science team. 
 Obviously AI was founded on the belief that  business users should be able to get insights from their data, without waiting  on an engineer. Our mission is to make data science effortless by enabling  anyone to run complex data predictions and analytics, simply by asking  questions in natural language with no code, no hassle and no waiting. It is the  only platform to use simple Natural Language questions for data prediction,  delivering predictions and analytics in less than a minute. For more  information, visit obviously.ai.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    John K. Waters is the editor in chief of a number of Converge360.com sites, with a focus on high-end development, AI and future tech. He's been writing about cutting-edge  technologies and culture of Silicon Valley for more than two  decades, and he's written more than a dozen  books. He also co-scripted the documentary film Silicon  Valley: A 100 Year Renaissance, which aired on PBS.  He can be reached at [email protected].