Domino Enterprise MLOps Platform vs. Posit

Overview
ProductRatingMost Used ByProduct SummaryStarting Price
Domino Enterprise MLOps Platform
Score 8.0 out of 10
Enterprise companies (1,001+ employees)
The Domino Enterprise MLOps Platform helps data science teams improve the speed, quality and impact of data science at scale. Domino is presented as open and flexible, to empower professional data scientists to use their preferred tools and infrastructure. Data science models get into production fast and are kept operating at peak performance with integrated workflows. Domino also delivers the security, governance and compliance that enterprises expect. The Domino Enterprise MLOps…N/A
Posit
Score 10.0 out of 10
N/A
Posit, formerly RStudio, is a modular data science platform, combining open source and commercial products.N/A
Pricing
Domino Enterprise MLOps PlatformPosit
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Domino Enterprise MLOps PlatformPosit
Free Trial
YesYes
Free/Freemium Version
NoYes
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
NoNo
Entry-level Setup FeeNo setup feeOptional
Additional Details
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Domino Enterprise MLOps PlatformPosit
Features
Domino Enterprise MLOps PlatformPosit
Platform Connectivity
Comparison of Platform Connectivity features of Product A and Product B
Domino Enterprise MLOps Platform
-
Ratings
Posit
9.3
Ratings
11% above category average
Connect to Multiple Data Sources00 Ratings8.00 Ratings
Extend Existing Data Sources00 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Automatic Data Format Detection00 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Data Exploration
Comparison of Data Exploration features of Product A and Product B
Domino Enterprise MLOps Platform
-
Ratings
Posit
9.0
Ratings
7% above category average
Visualization00 Ratings8.00 Ratings
Interactive Data Analysis00 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Data Preparation
Comparison of Data Preparation features of Product A and Product B
Domino Enterprise MLOps Platform
-
Ratings
Posit
10.0
Ratings
20% above category average
Interactive Data Cleaning and Enrichment00 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Data Transformations00 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Platform Data Modeling
Comparison of Platform Data Modeling features of Product A and Product B
Domino Enterprise MLOps Platform
-
Ratings
Posit
10.0
Ratings
18% above category average
Multiple Model Development Languages and Tools00 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Single platform for multiple model development00 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Self-Service Model Delivery00 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Model Deployment
Comparison of Model Deployment features of Product A and Product B
Domino Enterprise MLOps Platform
-
Ratings
Posit
9.9
Ratings
15% above category average
Flexible Model Publishing Options00 Ratings10.00 Ratings
Security, Governance, and Cost Controls00 Ratings9.90 Ratings
User Ratings
Domino Enterprise MLOps PlatformPosit
Likelihood to Recommend
-
(0 ratings)
10.0
(0 ratings)
Likelihood to Renew
-
(0 ratings)
9.7
(0 ratings)
Usability
-
(0 ratings)
8.0
(0 ratings)
Availability
-
(0 ratings)
9.4
(0 ratings)
Support Rating
-
(0 ratings)
8.9
(0 ratings)
Implementation Rating
-
(0 ratings)
9.3
(0 ratings)
Configurability
-
(0 ratings)
10.0
(0 ratings)
Product Scalability
-
(0 ratings)
8.2
(0 ratings)
User Testimonials
Domino Enterprise MLOps PlatformPosit
Likelihood to Recommend
No answers on this topic
In my humble opinion, if you are working on something related to Statistics, RStudio is your go-to tool. But if you are looking for something in Machine Learning, look out for Python. The beauty is that there are packages now by which you can write Python/SQL in R. Cross-platform functionality like such makes RStudio way ahead of its competition. A couple of chinks in RStudio armor are very small and can be considered as nagging just for the sake of argument. Other than completely based on programming language, I couldn't find significant drawbacks to using RStudio. It is one of the best free software available in the market at present.
Read full review
Pros
No answers on this topic
  • RStudio does an excellent job providing a clean user interface for R or Shiny applications
  • RStudio integrates natively with version control software
  • Users can program with either R or Python
  • RStudio has a command line built in, eliminating the need for a separate program for a REPL
Read full review
Cons
No answers on this topic
  • Ability to scale across the company is limited based on the users license, cannot share a dashboard to the general view of the company.
  • Ability to retain session - not simple method to customize view per user (e.g., once session is ended, the users will return next time to the baseline view).
  • Ability to enable communication between multiple users - leave notes, tag other users, or share specific view.
Read full review
Likelihood to Renew
No answers on this topic
There is no other platform that meets our needs. Even if it was terrible we would still use it but fortunately for us it is a very solid project with a great support team. I hope in the future to expand our use and get more licences as well as upgrade to RStudio workbench but for now we are very happy.
Read full review
Usability
No answers on this topic
For someone who learns how to use the software and picks up on the "language" of R, it's very easy to use. For beginners, it can be hard and might require a course, as well as the appropriate statistical training to understand what packages to use and when
Read full review
Reliability and Availability
No answers on this topic
RStudio is very available and cheap to use. It needs to be updated every once in a while, but the updates tend to be quick and they do not hinder my ability to make progress. I have not experienced any RStudio outages, and I have used the application quite a bit for a variety of statistical analyses
Read full review
Support Rating
No answers on this topic
Since R is trendy among statisticians, you can find lots of help from the data science/ stats communities. If you need help with anything related to RStudio or R, google it or search on StackOverflow, you might easily find the solution that you are looking for.
Read full review
Implementation Rating
No answers on this topic
We did it at the individual level: anyone willing to code in R can use it. No real deployment involved.
Read full review
Alternatives Considered
No answers on this topic
RStudio was provided as the most customizable. It was also strictly the most feature-rich as far as enabling our organization to script, run, and make use of R open-source packages in our data analysis workstreams. It also provided some support for python, which was useful when we had R heavy code with some python threaded in. Overall we picked Rstudio for the features it provided for our data analysis needs and the ability to interface with our existing resources.
Read full review
Scalability
No answers on this topic
I think that RStudio scales pretty well based on the size of the datasets I'm using. It has multithreading capabilities unlike some other statistical analysis programs which is very useful in cutting down on time. The format of RStudio's syntax also makes it very easy to replicate regardless off the scale of the analysis and data set
Read full review
Return on Investment
No answers on this topic
  • Using it for data science in a very big and old company, the most positive impact, from my point of view, has been the ability of spreading data culture across the group. Shortening the path from data to value.
  • Still it's hard to quantify economic benefits, we are struggling and it's a great point of attention, since splitting out the contribution of the single aspects of a project (and getting the RStudio pie) is complicated.
  • What is sure is that, in the long run, RStudio is boosting productivity and making the process in which is embedded more efficient (cost reduction).
Read full review
ScreenShots

Domino Enterprise MLOps Platform Screenshots

Screenshot of The Domino Enterprise MLOps Platform helps data science teams improve the speed, quality and impact of data science at scale.Screenshot of The Self-Service Infrastructure Portal makes data science teams more productive with access to their preferred tools, scalable compute, and diverse data sets. By automating time-consuming DevOps tasks, data scientists can focus on the tasks at hand.Screenshot of The Integrated Model Factory includes a workbench, model and app deployment, and integrated monitoring to rapidly experiment, deploy the best models in production, ensure optimal performance, and collaborate across the end-to-end data science lifecycle.Screenshot of The System of Record has a reproducibility engine, search and knowledge management, and integrated project management. Teams can find, reuse, reproduce, and build on any data science work to amplify innovation.Screenshot of Model monitoring capabilities ensure that all production models maintain peak performance. Automated alerts provide notification when data and quality drift occurs so users can re-train, rebuild, and re-publish the model.Screenshot of Nexus is a single pane of glass to run data science and ML workloads across any compute cluster — in any cloud, region, or on-premises. It unifies data science silos across the enterprise, providing one place to build, deploy, and monitor models.

Posit Screenshots

Screenshot of Posit runs on most desktops or on a server and accessed over the webScreenshot of Posit supports authoring HTML, PDF, Word Documents, and slide showsScreenshot of Posit supports interactive graphics with Shiny and ggvisScreenshot of Shiny combines the computational power of R with the interactivity of the modern webScreenshot of Remote Interactive Sessions: Start R and Python processes from Posit Workbench within various systems such as Kubernetes and SLURM with Launcher.Screenshot of Jupyter: Author and edit Python code with Jupyter using the same Posit Workbench infrastructure.