Getting back to writing this blog after really long. What happened in the middle? Well, I got lazy and I got somewhat busy.
But obviously the world has not stood over this period. The
topic of my previous set of posts, Tesco, came and now has declared its
intention to leave the US.
Big Data has become, well, really big though my skepticism still is quite
intact. And then there was the small matter of a presidential election where
analytics and data modeling really came into its own.
So there’s plenty to catch up on, for the inactivity of my
past several months. But hey, New Year resolutions are there for a reason and
so it is my commitment to be a lot more regular and disciplined about my posts.
My first post is on big data, as this is clearly going to be
an important part of analytics and related infrastructure for the next several
years. As you readers probably know, I started out from a place of a little bit
of skepticism. My understanding has evolved a little bit over the last few
months and I think I am in a much better place to articulate, primarily for
myself why big data does make sense – mostly in a business sense and less in a
purely tech-geeky sense. So I will try and do that over the next few posts.
But let me first start off with a reference to a post by
Bill Franks, Big Data evangelist and Chief Analytics Officer for Teradata
Alliances. Bill has spoken about big data extensively and most recently, has
mused whether big data is all hype.
His take is interesting, in that he does not think the big
data story is built on an empty premise. There are genuine underlying business
problems that need solving and genuine underlying technologies that provide a
set of viable options to solve the problems. But he does believe that there are
a multitude of technology options coming out – almost on a daily basis and that
a shakeout amongst the players is imminent. Also, organizations will realize
that just installing a Hadoop cluster is not the Big Data destination. The
destination is a analytics and data infrastructure solution that is fast, cheap
and scalable which does exist today, but which is “potential that can only be
extracted with a concerted, focused, and intelligent effort”.
My own quest has been to define for myself why does big data
make sense from a business standpoint. Especially for a big Fortune 500
company, with the underlying assumption that there are different sets of
economic motivators for big organizations vs. start-ups. I have been trying to
educate myself through building up a detailed understanding of the underlying
technologies, speaking to industry experts and practitioners and attending
industry seminars. I will share my findings over the next few posts.
2 comments:
I've been surfing online more than 3 hours today, yet I never found any interesting article like yours. It is pretty worth enough for me. In my opinion, if all website owners and bloggers made good content as you did, the web will be a lot more useful than ever before.
Feel free to visit my web-site - nokia e5 specification
Nice blog Thank you.
analytics companies in bangalore
top analytics companies in india
google analytics service provider
Post a Comment