TigerGraph Launches Million-Dollar Challenge to Inspire Innovative Uses of Graph

Company Tests Global Community of Innovators; Awards $1M in Prizes to Solve Real World Problems with Graph Technology

REDWOOD CITY, Calif., Feb. 09, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — TigerGraph, provider of a leading graph analytics platform, today launched “Graph for All Million Dollar Challenge,” a global search for innovative ways to harness the power of graph technology and machine learning to solve real world problems. The challenge brings together brilliant minds to build innovative solutions to better our future with one question: How will you change the world with graph? Winners across four main categories will be announced this May at the 2022 Graph + AI Summit, the largest open industry event for graph and AI organized by TigerGraph.

“Every day, more than 2.5 quintillion bytes of data are produced — that’s 18 zeroes,” said Dr. Yu Xu, founder and CEO of TigerGraph. “Within this data are answers to critical health, climate, and business-related questions, and graph technology identifies those patterns across and within the data to find the answers. We’re giving one million dollars to innovators who push the boundaries of graph and AI technology to uncover new, transformational ways to solve real world issues. The challenge is officially on and we look forward to seeing thousands of registrants, hundreds of mind-blowing entries, and countless new ideas and concepts.”

Now considered a must-have technology for modern enterprises, graph is making a difference for companies under tremendous pressures brought on by the pandemic. Over the past 18 months alone, TigerGraph’s technology empowered medical providers to make real-time care recommendations to millions of patients, fueled countless COVID-tracking initiatives, and helped businesses save hundreds of millions of dollars by improving their supply chain decisions.

“TigerGraph’s challenge is structured to stretch the imagination of graph enthusiasts and test its limits,” said Usha Rengaraju, Graph for All Million Dollar Challenge Judge. “I’m excited to see teams coming together to create graph solutions that can impact society or shape the future for companies. There is so much data available in the world waiting to reveal patterns and relationships that will solve important global problems.”

Solving Real Problems
Entrepreneurs, academics, engineers, and scientists have the freedom to create and use their own problem statement focused on a topic they are dedicated to or passionate about. Additionally, domain experts from around the world have contributed problem statements that contestants can select. A few examples include:

  • Identify granular concepts that interlink multiple UN Sustainable Development Goals;
  • Model the progression of COVID waves to better predict future waves;
  • Understand patterns of diagnosis and treatment that point to potential off-label usage of drugs;
  • Generate a model for individuals to track their own online information and make better decisions on who has their data, and what is being done with it;
  • Add to the climate change knowledge by producing the time-series analysis for newly generated thermokarst lakes to help understand the impact in the polar regions.

Judging Committee
The judging committee includes the world’s brightest and most recognizable data scientists, professors, PhD’s, distinguished engineers, and founders of global companies focusing on artificial intelligence (AI), analytics, knowledge graph, and other industry experts with deep knowledge of graph technology, graph use cases, and graph deployments. Notable panelists include:

How to Register for the Million Dollar Challenge
The global virtual challenge is open to tech professionals, data scientists, engineers, university students, and researchers interested in discovering what is possible with graph and AI. Notable partners participating in the challenge include Amazon Web Services (AWS), Google Cloud, Google Dev Library, data.world, GitHub, Kubrick Group, Microsoft Azure, Plotly, and Women Who Code.

Registration opens today and the final submission deadline is April 20, 2022. Winners will be announced the week of May 23 at the 2022 Graph + AI Summit, the industry’s only open conference devoted to democratizing and accelerating analytics, AI, and machine learning with graph algorithms, organized by TigerGraph.

How to Win
Contestants will be part of a worldwide competition to solve crucial problems and have an opportunity to share in $1,000,000 in cash prizes.

Entries will be judged based on the project’s impact, creativity, boldness, and adaptability:

  • Most Impactful: The project’s level of impact on social good and the community at large
  • Most Innovative: The project’s level of ingenuity and the ability to identify new, never-imagined uses of graph
  • Most Ambitious: The project’s overall ability to push the boundary of a graph to drive data insights
  • Most Applicable: The project’s relevancy to a wide range of organizations

For complete rules and resources, and to register, click here: https://graphforall.devpost.com/

Helpful Links

· Graph for All Million Dollar Challenge
· Graph for All
· Graph + AI Summit
· Get TigerGraph
· TigerGraph Cloud
· TigerGraph Website
· TigerGraph Blog
· TigerGraph on Twitter
· TigerGraph on LinkedIn

About TigerGraph
TigerGraph is a platform for advanced analytics and machine learning on connected data. Based on the industry’s first and only distributed native graph database, TigerGraph’s proven technology supports advanced analytics and machine learning applications such as fraud detection, anti-money laundering (AML), entity resolution, customer 360, recommendations, knowledge graph, cybersecurity, supply chain, IoT, and network analysis. The company is headquartered in Redwood City, California, USA. Start free with tigergraph.com/cloud.

Media Contacts:

North America
Tanya Carlsson
Offleash PR
tanya@offleashpr.com
+1 (707) 529-6139

EMEA
Anne Harding
The Message Machine
anne@themessagemachine.com
+44 7887 682943

APJ
Audrey McGagh
McGagh Communications
audrey.mcgagh@mcgaghcomms.com
+65 6570 9139

VIETTEL GROUP ANNOUNCES MR. TAO DUC THANG AS CHAIRMAN CUM GENERAL DIRECTOR

HANOI, Vietnam, Feb. 9, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — Viettel Group officially announces Mr. Tao Duc Thang as Chairman cum General Director, following Mr. Le Dang Dzung’s retirement in January 2022. Mr. Tao Duc Thang is the eighth to hold the top position of Viettel Group since its establishment in 1989.

Mr. Tao Duc Thang, Chairman cum General Director, Viettel Group

Being the youngest to hold Viettel’s top position, Mr. Tao Duc Thang leads Viettel as Vietnam’s largest corporation in industry, technology, and telecommunications with approximately 50 thousand employees. The group has investments in 10 countries on three continents.

Under previous leaderships, Viettel popularized telecommunications service in Vietnam and other developing countries; expanded into new industries including digital services, cyber security, manufacturing…; brought Vietnam up to pace with the world’s technological advancement; pioneering and leading the creation of the digital society.

At the handover ceremony in Hanoi on February 8th, 2022, Mr. Tao Duc Thang underlines his commitment to fortifying Viettel’s pioneering and leading spirit, the market leader position in Vietnam, and the group’s strategies.

Mr. Tao Duc Thang said: “I am aware of the responsibility as Chairman and General Director of Viettel Group. Together with my colleagues, we will do our best to create the sustainable and long-term development of Viettel and countries where Viettel is present”.

Resume of Mr. Tao Duc Thang

Before being appointed as the Chairman cum General Director of Viettel Group, Mr. Tao Duc Thang held various key positions at Viettel Group: Vice General Director of Viettel Group (2015-2021), General Director of Viettel Global (2014-2015), General Director of Viettel Network (2013-2014), Director of Viettel Network (2010-2013), and Vice Director of Viettel Telecom (2008-2010).

Mr. Thang joined Viettel in 2005 as a Technical Manager in Viettel Telecom. From 2005 to 2008, he worked as the Vice Director of Mobile Center, 1st Area and Vice Director of Technical Control Center, Viettel Telecom. Previously, he worked in Hanoi Telephone Company and Hanoi Post from 1995-2005.

Having managed Viettel Network in several terms, Mr. Tao Duc Thang had a crucial role in constructing Viettel’s telecommunications network, which serves tens of millions of customers and as the foundation for the booms of mobile and broadband services in Vietnam.

At Viettel Global, Mr. Tao Duc Thang contributed to the globalization of Viettel Group. As a result, Viettel became the largest corporation in Vietnam to go global with ten international brands, among which are five market leaders.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1743067/Mr__Tao_Duc_Thang___Chairman_cum_General_Director__Viettel_Group.jpg

Marsel Khaliullin nommé directeur des activités d’Aftermarket Services Russia & CIS, de Nikkiso Industrial Russia

TEMECULA, Californie, 08 févr. 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group (le Groupe) de Nikkiso Cryogenic Industries, une filiale de Nikkiso Co., Ltd (Japon), a le plaisir d’annoncer la nomination de Marsel Khaliullin au poste de directeur des activités de Aftermarket Services Russia & Cryogenic Industries Service pour Nikkiso Industrial Russia (NIR).

Basé en Russie, il gèrera et soutiendra les services après-vente, sous la direction d’Ayman Zeitoun chez NIR et de Jim Estes pour CIS.

Marsel possède plus de 20 ans d’expérience à divers postes dans le secteur de l’entretien et de l’ingénierie en lien avec les équipements rotatifs, ayant notamment passé les six dernières années dans l’industrie pétrolière et gazière en Iraq et 10 ans au sein de sociétés internationales. Au cours des deux dernières années, Marsel a géré l’atelier dédié aux équipements rotatifs pour SPM Oil & Gas, une société de Caterpillar.

« L’expérience et la connaissance du secteur de Marsel seront très bénéfiques pour NIR, et nous nous réjouissons de ses contributions positives », a déclaré Ayman Zeitoun, vice-président et directeur général des opérations en Russie.

Avec cet nomination, Nikkiso poursuit son engagement d’avoir une présence à la fois locale et mondiale pour ses clients.

À PROPOS DE CRYOGENIC INDUSTRIES
Cryogenic Industries, Inc. (aujourd’hui membre de Nikkiso Co., Ltd) et ses entreprises membres fabriquent des équipements et de petites usines de traitement du gaz cryogénique pour les secteurs du gaz naturel liquéfié (GNL), des services d’entretien de puits et du gaz industriel. Fondée il y a plus de 50 ans, Cryogenic Industries est la société-mère d’ACD, de Cosmodyne et de Cryoquip, ainsi qu’un groupe administré en commun comptant une vingtaine d’entités opérationnelles.

Pour tout complément d’information, veuillez consulter les sites www.nikkisoCEIG.com et www.nikkiso.com.

Contact auprès des médias :
Anna Quigley
+1.951.383.3314
aquigley@cryoind.com

Marsel Khaliullin Nomeado Gerente de Linha de Negócios de Serviços de Aftermarket para a Rússia e CIS, da Nikkiso Industrial Russia

TEMECULA, Califórnia, Feb. 08, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — O Clean Energy & Industrial Gases Group (Grupo) da Nikkiso Cryogenic Industries, subsidiária da Nikkiso Co., Ltd (Japão), tem o prazer de anunciar a nomeação de Marsel Khaliullin como Gerente de Linha de Negócios de Serviços de Aftermarket para a Rússia e Indústrias Criogênicas da Nikkiso Industrial Russia (NIR).

Da Rússia ele irá gerenciar e apoiar os Serviços de Aftermarket, reportando-se a Ayman Zeitoun da NIR e Jim Estes da CIS.

Marsel tem mais de 20 anos de experiência, tendo ocupado vários cargos nas áreas de manutenção e engenharia de equipamentos rotativos, incluindo os últimos seis anos na indústria de petróleo e gás no Iraque e 10 anos em empresas internacionais. Nos últimos dois anos, Marsel gerenciou o workshop de Equipamentos Rotativos da SPM Oil & Gas, uma empresa da Caterpillar.

“A experiência e o conhecimento da indústria de Marsel serão de grande benefício para a NIR e estamos ansiosos por suas contribuições positivas”, disse Ayman Zeitoun, Vice-Presidente e Diretor Administrativo de Operações – Rússia.

Com esta adição, a Nikkiso dá continuidade ao seu compromisso de ser uma presença global e local para seus clientes.

SOBRE A CRYOGENIC INDUSTRIES
A Cryogenic Industries, Inc. (agora membro da Nikkiso Co., Ltd.) fabrica equipamentos de processamento de gás criogênico projetados e plantas de processo de pequena escala para as indústrias de gás natural liquefeito (GNL), serviços de poços e gás industrial. Fundada há mais de 50 anos, a Cryogenic Industries é a empresa controladora da ACD, Cosmodyne e Cryoquip, e de um grupo comumente controlado de aproximadamente 20 entidades operacionais.

Para mais informação, visite www.nikkisoCEIG.com e www.nikkiso.com.

CONTATO COM A MÍDIA:
Anna Quigley
+1.951.383.3314
aquigley@cryoind.com

Satellite Losses Show Threat Solar Storms Pose to Tech

As if we didn’t have enough to worry about: Some scientists are warning about the inevitable catastrophic effects on modern life from a super-sized solar storm.

These outbursts from the sun, which eject energy in the form of magnetic fields and billions of tons of plasma gas known as “flares,” are unpredictable and difficult to anticipate.

The Earth suffers a devastating direct hit every century or two, according to recent analysis of scientific data and historic accounts. In the past, these were mainly celestial events with spectacular aurora light shows but scant impact on humanity. Modern technology, however, is vulnerable to the shocks from extreme solar storms.

“It’s not as rare as an asteroid or a comet hitting the Earth, but it’s something that really needs to be dealt with by policymakers,” said Daniel Baker, distinguished professor of planetary and space physics at the University of Colorado. “Certainly, in the longer term, it’s not a question of if but when.”

Astrophysicists estimate the likelihood of a solar storm capable of causing catastrophe to be as high as 12% in a decade.

“It’s just a matter of time,” according to professor Raimund Muscheler, chair of quaternary sciences in the geology department of Lund University in Sweden. “One has to be aware of it and one has to calculate the risks and be prepared as much as possible.”

A new study of ancient ice samples conducted by the Swedish scientist concludes that a previously unknown, huge solar storm about 9,200 years ago would have crippled communications if it had hit Earth in modern times.

“A failure in one kind of sector can propagate through the system and affect a lot of other things, and I think that’s probably the thing that worries me most about storms is that they can be widespread and can have consequences in all kinds of systems that that we might not otherwise think about,” Baker said.

A relatively minor solar storm, that caused a disturbance in the Earth’s magnetic field, is blamed for the loss of as many as 40 of the 49 Starlink internet-access satellites launched February 3 from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Phases of disturbance

When the sun shoots out energy, it affects Earth in phases. The first occurs here eight minutes after the solar event 150 million kilometers away, the time it takes light to travel from the sun.

The initial trouble occurs on the daylight side of the planet from the early arriving X-rays, which dramatically disrupt the ionosphere — where the Earth’s atmosphere meets space — and radio communications. They also create additional drag on some satellites, degrading their orbits, which is what happened to the Starlink satellites.

In subsequent minutes and hours, highly charged particles unleash a radioactive storm, posing a danger to astronauts in orbit.

The third phase, known as the coronal mass ejection — gas and magnetic field explosions on the surface of the sun — disturbs the planet’s magnetosphere, lighting up the sky and inducing electrical currents on the surface, which can overload power grids and speed corrosion of pipelines.

“The geomagnetic storm can actually cause transformers to burn through if they are not adequately protected,” said Muscheler of Lund University.

The power industry in North America has taken steps in recent years to harden its infrastructure to protect from the dangerous surges. U.S. government agencies have a program to deploy emergency transformers to replace those that would fail.

“Although the U.S. government has estimated the cost of a severe space weather event to be in the billions, this worst-case scenario is typically not considered by most policy planners,” said Sangeetha Abdu Jyothi, assistant professor in the computer science department at the University of California, Irvine. “In short, the risk is well-known, but not always considered during design and planning in most cases.”

Long-distance fiber-optic and submarine telecommunications cables at higher latitudes, where the Earth is more exposed, can also suffer serious damage.

“The U.S. is highly susceptible to disconnection from Europe,” Jyothi wrote in a recent research paper. “Europe is in a vulnerable location but is more resilient due to the presence of a larger number of shorter cables. Asia has relatively high resilience with Singapore acting as a hub with connections to several countries.”

The sun frequently hurls big flares at Earth, but most are not large enough to wreak havoc or don’t strike the planet directly. But, as SpaceX experienced this week, even some of the less severe flares can neutralize satellites.

“The timing is unfortunate for SpaceX,” said Bill Murtagh, program coordinator for the Space Weather Prediction Center of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. He added that the 1,500 SpaceX satellites already in orbit were not affected.

Any major solar storm poses a threat to Global Positioning System satellites, which provide accurate time signals and precise navigation, technology critical in modern life from agriculture to aviation.

A big storm can also trigger ozone depletion, meaning there are possible effects on the terrestrial climate, according to atmospheric scientists.

Previous disruptions

The societal reactions to the solar outbursts of past centuries now seem quaint, although they were sensational events at the time.

When an intense geomagnetic storm hit the Earth in September 1859, known as the Carrington Event, telegraph systems across North America and Europe failed and some operators reported receiving electrical shocks.

A solar storm in March 1989 caused power failures in Quebec, Canada.

The Halloween Storms of 2003 affected more than half of the orbiting satellites, and disrupted aviation for more than a day because planes could not be accurately tracked. Electrical service was also knocked out in parts of Europe for several hours, and transformers in South Africa were permanently damaged.

Since the Carrington Event, state-of-the-art communication has gone from the telegraph to the internet.

“Are we ready for a Carrington class event? No, we still have work to do,” Murtagh of NOAA told VOA.

“While the frequency of climate disasters is increasing gradually, we will be caught by surprise by an extreme solar event that causes significant disruptions. Most people alive today have never experienced an extreme space weather event that has a global impact during our lifetime,” Jyothi of University of California-Irvine told VOA.

She also warned that solar superstorms could cause large-scale internet outages covering the entire globe and lasting several months.

The geomagnetic storms tend to happen more frequently when there are more sunspots (each such freckle on the sun being about the size of Earth). The sun is heading into a new cycle, meaning there is an increasing likelihood of disruptive events as this cycle ramps up to its predicted peak in July 2025.

“We’re going to see more sunspots, more solar flares, more eruptions and consequently more effects on technology here on Earth,” Murtagh said.

Intensity levels

One bit of good news: Solar scientists predict this cycle will be less intense than the most active cycles of past centuries.

Society in the 21st century, however, seems unprepared for the consequences of cascading inter-connected technological failings likely to be caused by future major storms.

“The sun is the giver of life, but it can be cruel too — especially on the technology we rely on for so much of what we do today,” Murtagh said.

Congress passed a bill in 2020 directing the National Science Foundation, NASA and the Defense Department to continue supporting basic research related to space weather.

Some other governments seem less focused on the issue.

Baker recalls a letter he received from a concerned woman in France who contacted officials there for advice on how to prepare for a major geo-magnetic storm.

“We suggest you buy a chocolate cake, eat it and wait for the end of the world,” she was told, according to Baker.

Source: Voice of America