You. Are. Awesome. Thank you this is simply great!
Is there any plans to widen the scope of the HTM-Engine to other encoders?
Because from the code it looks like one could as well specify other
encoders in AnomalyParams-File
<https://github.com/numenta/numenta-apps/blob/master/htmengine/htmengine/algorithms/modelSelection/scalarMetricWithTimeOfDayAnomalyParams/5AnomalyEnergyWithTimeCentroids_4_params.json#L42>
 ?

Thanks,

Pascal

On Mon, Jun 8, 2015 at 7:31 PM, Matthew Taylor <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hello NuPIC,
>
> As some of you know, Numenta has been building applications with NuPIC
> for quite awhile now, one commercially available application is "Grok
> for IT Analytics" [1], which monitors server infrastructure on AWS for
> anomalies. We've also been working on another project we're calling
> "Grok for Stocks", which provides anomaly detection on a combination
> of factors for publicly traded large cap stocks. We will be releasing
> Grok for Stocks on the Google Play store as an example application this
> summer.
>
> The source code for both these applications has now been open-sourced
> under the GPLv3.0 license. You can find all the code at
> http://github.com/numenta/numenta-apps.
>
> Both of these apps utilize a server component running NuPIC called the
> HTM Engine. The HTM Engine is an infrastructure for running multiple
> NuPIC anomaly models on a single machine in an easy, scalable way. It
> allows users to simply push timestamped scalar data for multiple
> models to a Graphite-compatible interface directly through a message
> queue. Models will be automatically created and swapped in and out of
> memory as needed. In this way a single server can manage and run
> thousands of HTM models.
>
> Anomaly likelihood scores are made available via message queue (AMQP)
> or MySQL. Grok also exposes a REST API for anomaly retrieval. Stay
> tuned for an upcoming tutorial on using the HTM Engine for your own
> custom projects.
>
> Each app also contains an Android application that acts as a client
> for the server, and data is pushed from the server to the mobile
> client for human consumption.
>
> We hope you find this source code beneficial as an example application
> of NuPIC. You might even decide that you'd like to create something
> commercial based upon these codebases, which would be great! You can
> do so for free under the GPLv3.0 or contact us for a commercial
> license.
>
> I'd also like to take this opportunity to introduce you to Numenta's
> Director of Product Development, Jared Casner [2]. Jared will play the
> role of project manager for these Numenta applications as we continue
> to improve them. If any community members wish to contribute their
> time to work on these products, he'll be involved. I've worked with
> Jared for several years now, and I'm sure you'll find him as
> reasonable and capable as I have.
>
> [1] http://numenta.com/grok/
> [2] https://github.com/jcasner
>
> Regards,
> ---------
> Matt Taylor
> OS Community Flag-Bearer
> Numenta
>
>

Reply via email to