Join us to learn about Palantir’s products and real world impact they create, straight from the source.
The “Products with Purpose“ virtual tech talk series will introduce you directly to Palantir’s products (Foundry & Gotham) and our engineers who work through a variety of technically complex and privacy-related challenges all for 1 goal — to equip the world’s most important organizations with the platforms to solve data-driven problems.
Commercial, government, and non-profit institutions rely on a solid data foundation to make good decisions fast. And we are thrilled to introduce you to our products and share first-hand accounts of the direct impact our engineers make here at Palantir. Each event will showcase a different Palantir product and customer use case- including our COVID-19 response, how we’re improving public safety power shutoffs, and the ways in which we partner directly with government institutions.
We’ll also have hiring managers join us at each event to share more about what Palantir is looking for in our next generation of engineers, and how you can prepare for the upcoming recruiting season.
Each event will be unique, so please feel free to sign up for as many that interest you and fit your schedule! We look forward to meeting you this summer.
*Please note these events are intended for a student audience.
Palantir Foundry is the world’s leading platform for data-driven operations and decision-making. Built on more than a decade of experience solving complex data challenges, Foundry helps leading institutions manufacture safer cars and planes, discover new drugs, support humanitarian aid projects, and digitize entire industries.
Palantir Gotham is an enterprise software platform for data integration, analysis, and decision making. Originally designed for the US intelligence community, a variety of government organizations now use Gotham to integrate, manage, secure, and analyze their data in service of critical missions. Tools like maps, graphs, and charts help users analyze the movement of illicit goods, vectors of foodborne illness, or flows of payments in fraud schemes, to name a few examples.
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