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Tony Searl

Big data in real time is no fantasy - Cloud Computing News - 2 views

  • It will never be what we call “next click,”
    • Tony Searl
       
      why?
  • thanks to various Hadoop optimizations, complementary technologies and advanced algorithms, real-time analytics are becoming a real possibility
  • react promptly to sensor readings or analyze web logs as they are generated because that type of information becomes quickly obsolete.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • But the most interesting thing about it might be that it was hardly even possible a few years ago
  • the evolution from batch processing to real-time processing has happened quickly.
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    Among the greatest innovations might be the advent of real-time analytics, which allow the processing of information in real time to enable instantaneous decision-making.
Tony Searl

Learning Analytics: Time Series Visualization | iterating toward openness - 4 views

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    My goal with practical learning analytics is to provide access to data in ways that an average teacher, with no special training, can leverage in order to help her students succeed. This is, of course, an extremely tall order
hansdezwart

Book Excerpt: The Numerati by Stephen Baker - BusinessWeek - 0 views

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    BusinessWeek's 2006 Cover Story, "Math Will Rock Your World," announced a new age of numbers. With the rise of new networks, the story argued, all of us were channeling the details of our lives into vast databases. Every credit-card purchase, every cell-phone call, every click on the computer mouse fed these digital troves. Those with the tools and skills to make sense of them could begin to decipher our movements, desires, diseases, and shopping habits-and predict our behavior. This promised to transform business and society. In a book expanding upon this Cover Story, The Numerati, Senior Writer Stephen Baker introduces us to the mathematical wizards who are digging through our data to decode us as patients, shoppers, voters, potential terrorists-even lovers.
hansdezwart

A special report on managing information: Data, data everywhere | The Economist - 0 views

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    Information has gone from scarce to superabundant. That brings huge new benefits, says Kenneth Cukier (interviewed here)-but also big headaches
hansdezwart

NodeXL: Network Overview, Discovery and Exploration for Excel - 0 views

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    NodeXL is a template for Excel 2007 and 2010 that lets you enter a network edge list, click a button, and see the network graph, all in the Excel window. You can easily customize the graph's appearance; zoom, scale and pan the graph; dynamically filter vertices and edges; alter the graph's layout; find clusters of related vertices; and calculate a set of graph metrics. Networks can be imported from and exported to a variety of data formats, and built-in connections for getting networks from Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, and your local email are provided.
hansdezwart

YouTube - What is Hadoop? Other big data terms like MapReduce? Cloudera's CEO talks us ... - 0 views

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    Cloudera is a company that helps developers with big database problems. Here the CEO Mike Olson gives us a tour through the major database changes that are hitting lots of startups now.
hansdezwart

The original proposal of the WWW, HTMLized - 0 views

  • Non requirements Discussions on Hypertext have sometimes tackled the problem of copyright enforcement and data security. These are of secondary importance at CERN, where information exchange is still more important than secrecy. Authorisation and accounting systems for hypertext could conceivably be designed which are very sophisticated, but they are not proposed here. In cases where reference must be made to data which is in fact protected, existing file protection systems should be sufficient.
  • In a complex place like CERN, it's not always obvious how to divide people into groups. Imagine making a large three-dimensional model, with people represented by little spheres, and strings between people who have something in common at work.
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    This document was an attempt to persuade CERN management that a global hypertext system was in CERN's interests. Note that the only name I had for it at this time was "Mesh" -- I decided on "World Wide Web" when writing the code in 1990.
hansdezwart

HP Labs' Central Nervous System for the Earth project aims to build a planetwide sensin... - 0 views

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    In the first commercial application of CeNSE technology, HP and Shell will build a wireless sensing system to acquire high-resolution seismic data. By vastly improving the quality of seismic imaging, the new system will allow Shell to more easily and cost-effectively explore difficult oil and gas reservoirs.
hansdezwart

DataShop > Home - 0 views

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    A data analysis service for the learning science community
hansdezwart

YouTube - Hans Rosling's 200 Countries, 200 Years, 4 Minutes - The Joy of Stats - BBC Four - 1 views

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    Hans Rosling's famous lectures combine enormous quantities of public data with a sport's commentator's style to reveal the story of the world's past, present and future development. Now he explores stats in a way he has never done before - using augmented reality animation. In this spectacular section of 'The Joy of Stats' he tells the story of the world in 200 countries over 200 years using 120,000 numbers - in just four minutes. Plotting life expectancy against income for every country since 1810, Hans shows how the world we live in is radically different from the world most of us imagine.
hansdezwart

Week 3 LAK11 - Slackers report » Dave's Educational Blog - 0 views

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    Ah… the semantic web. The saviour of the internet, and the evil empire enforcing its evil standardization upon my freedom. I've always been a little suspicious of this particular topic. Not that I'm opposed to any kind of stardardization, railroads and the lack of standardizations with bank cards at grocery stores come to mind (grrr…) But the semantic web and how data is 'linked' is pretty important to analytics. time to dive in.
hansdezwart

SEO, the Semantic Web and Information Discovery - 0 views

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    The father of the World Wide Web, Tim Berners-Lee defines the Semantic Web as "a web of data that can be processed directly and indirectly by machines."
Sylvia Currie

BBC - Wildlife Finder - Homepage - 0 views

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    Shared by Sheila MacNeill during January 25 web conference with Dragan Gasevic. "another great site taking linked data approach from the BBC" 
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