Today, both IT and business users alike are facing business scenarios where they need better information to differentiate, innovate, and radically transform their business. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Tag Archives: Big Data
Big Data "A-Ha" Moment?
By Bruno Aziza, None I won’t be going to the TED Conference this week. Instead, I’ll be participating in the Strata Big Data Conference. Nothing against TED; I loved my time there last year. Big Data is about to hit an important inflection point and the Strata conference, brilliantly orchestrated by Tim O’Reilly and his team, is bound to be an opportunity for investors, entrepreneurs and tech observers to discuss the transformation the space is going through. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Revolution in the Big Data and Business Landscape
Dave Rich has an interesting theory explaining the rapidly-growing interest and investment in big data and specifically, in predictive analytics, over the last few years. “When the 2008 recession hit,” he told me recently, “the question was how come we weren’t better prepared with all the money we’ve spent in the last decade on information systems? That has caused a spur of activity that we’ve seen in the last several years, driven by the promise that now it’s technologically possible to have predictive analytics meets performance management at scale in real-time.” …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Big Data Can Save Lives — If Culture and Strategy Let It
Big Data can be a life saver, figuratively and literally. We’ve all heard about how Big Data can save time and money, but 87 percent of federal IT officials think that real-time Big Data could save a significant number of lives each year. Lifesavers aren’t much good if rescuers don’t use them, and a Big Data strategy isn’t much good if an organization’s culture doesn’t support it. But changes in strategy, like putting rescue buoys by the pool, aren’t enough. There must also be a change in culture — make the lifeguards carry the rescue buoys with them. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Survival of the Fittest: Growing a Partnership Ecosystem for the Technology Jungle
By David Roth, Contributor If companies are going to continue to keep the customer as their main focus and deliver what the customer truly needs, a strong and committed partnership ecosystem is more important than ever. Though this article is written about the industry that I know, technology, I believe it is broadly applicable to many industries. As a technology startup CEO and co-founder, I talk every day with CIOs and the folks keeping IT organizations humming. The cloud and ‘Big Data’ analytics are ushering in a whole new economy and providing new and exciting ways for companies to both deliver services and to improve their own operational intelligence, enabling better efficiencies as well as business critical actionable insight. But of course this all comes at a price and enterprises are paying for it with a seemingly endless, insatiable need for efficiency, scale and execution. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
How BYOD and Big Data are Changing Marketing
BYOD Builds Tomorrow’s Big-Data Silos, by @DavidAmerland A chain reaction is a sequence of events causing additional reactions to feed back into the chain, amplifying it. For nuclear physicists, this is hardly news; but it is important for online marketers, whose world is full of search engines and social media. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Scientists develop new materials for board-level photonics
Today at the Photonics West conference, Dow Corning and IBM scientists unveiled a major step in photonics, using a new type of polymer material to transmit light instead of electrical signals within supercomputers and data centers. This new silicone-based material offers better physical properties, including robustness and flexibility, making them ideal for applications in Big Data and for the development of future exascale computers, which are capable of performing a billion billion computations per second.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org
Big Data: Big Hype?
By Eric Savitz, Forbes Staff Guest post written by Mark Barrenechea
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Meeting the Big Data challenge: DON'T be objective
By Darden Guest Post by University of Virginia, Darden School Professor Robert Carraway
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes IT
Sales Pressure Cloud Hype
By Brad Peters, Contributor Thanks to the extraordinary attention given to Big Data in recent months, the infrastructure that powers this process – cloud computing – has become the hottest technology around. Moreover, it is a technology wave that has a vast potential to completely change the way we work. But it’s also at a fragile stage where decisions made today will be cemented and amplified in the future. And therein lies the problem. One of the great unwritten histories of the tech revolution is how hot new industries, prospected by innovative young companies, get hijacked by established companies that merely re-label what they already have to confuse the issue and then triumph through marketing muscle. It is a story that goes all of the way back to minicomputers . . . and, unfortunately, has now struck the world of cloud computing. Thus, even as it is enjoying unprecedented attention and success, cloud computing is beginning to face the temptations of the old ways, and as a result, put the long term brand at risk. And so, while this column should be a celebration of the success of an exciting new industry, it is instead – unfortunately – a cautionary tale. If you follow this column, you know how the biggest company in enterprise software, Oracle Corp., has bought up a number of interesting young cloud companies, created a portfolio that it has no intention of upgrading, and then declared itself a major player in cloud computing. The actual performance of these new units are difficult to verify now that they are hidden by the accounting veil of Oracle, but it’s clear that the scale of Oracle’s customer reach will be the main attraction. It’s also not clear whether the talent in these organizations will remain or how if at all these properties will be stitched together. Moreover, these companies are tiny in comparison to the overall Oracle beast, and it’s doubtful that they will have any impact on the organization’s culture, character, or DNA. It’s likely another buzzword in the Oracle pantheon. As the cloud matures, there are going to be similar temptations to drive down this path. Salesforce.com, the founder and leader of the SaaS movement, built its reputation on providing customers “Success, not Software”. That focus on driving customer value via a new business and deployment model helped fuel the early days of Cloud computing and established a customer-focused ethos that is still present in most Cloud companies. Salesforce.com is now at an interesting crossroads and how it proceeds will tell us all a great deal about the future of Cloud computing. As a public company, Salesforce.com is under pressure to continue its remarkable growth. This is intensified by the pressure not just from Oracle who claims cloud supremacy, but also SAP and Microsoft. Each of these behemoths has done its own acquisitions and, in combination, they are building intense pressure on others to do so as well. The challenge is that sustaining growth and innovation through acquisition is good when the goal is to address real customer problems but not when the goal is the more cynical goal of merely selling yet another product through an existing sales channel to an existing customer base. It is hard to determine how profitable Salesforce.com’s recent acquisitions of Buddy Media and Radian6 have been for the company – and its promotion of its non-GAAP numbers don’t help matters here – but, the goal in both cases seems to be enhancing its customers’ experience and not a cynical fleecing of the customer base. It is important that, as Salesforce.com continues to make strategic acquisitions, it maintains that focus on customer success and does not succumb to the temptation to merely drive revenue growth by cross-selling its existing customers. As a big Salesforce.com customer for both Sales and Service Cloud, I obviously hope the company stays focused on delivering success to its customers. I also hope that, while Salesforce.com is clearly a great marketing company, it continues to resist the temptation to rely on that marketing muscle alone to drive growth (like Oracle and SAP) instead of continuing to focus on product and service excellence. If the broader Cloud community can sustain that customer-centric view despite the growing competitive and financial pressures, I predict continued growth and adoption for the platform. However, if not, what looks like a cloud could, in fact, be merely a puff of smoke.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
SalesForce, SalesHype
By Brad Peters, Contributor Thanks to the extraordinary attention given to Big Data in recent months, the infrastructure that powers this process – cloud computing – has become the hottest technology around. Moreover, it is a technology wave that has a vast potential to completely change the way we work. But it’s also at a fragile stage where decisions made today will be cemented and amplified in the future.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
How Walmart and Heineken Will Use Shoppercetion to Put Your In-store Experience in Context
By Shel Israel, Contributor [NOTE—I am writing a book with Robert Scoble, called Age of Context. It reports on the convergence of five forces: mobile, social media, Big Data, sensors and location to create an entirely new technology era, one in which context will shape business, marketing, advertising, our health, entertainment and our relationships with connected devices. I am posting notes and early chapter versions here to promote interest and to get feedback.]
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Combating the Big Data skills shortage
By Ben Woo, Contributor OK, so you and your company have decided that this Big Data is more than a buzzword, and that you’re going to jump feet first into this. You’ve worked with various business leaders, planned out a pilot project, and set aside a budget. But then things come to a grinding halt! Where do you find the skills to actually deploy this?
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Understanding the "Big" in Big Data
By Ben Woo Yesterday, January 16, 2013, I had the honor of having lunch with Dr. Konstantin V. Shvachko. Among other things, Konstantin was the lead developer and committer for the Apache Hadoop Framework project. He is responsible for the name node portion of the project (i.e. he is the guy responsible for the name node!!!)
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Technology
Tech Pros Weigh-In On Facebook's Graph Search
By Tom Taulli, Contributor Facebook’s (NASDAQ:FB) announcement of the launch of Graph Search has sent shockwaves across the tech world. Just look at the plunges in share prices of companies like Yelp (NYSE:YELP). Graph Search is essentially a massive Big Data play, which involves the search of huge amounts of information on over 1 billion […]
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Big Data: Getting Ready For The 2013 Big Bang
By Eric Savitz, Forbes Staff Guest post written by David Selinger David Selinger is founder, CEO and data scientist at RichRelevance, a provider of personalized shopping experiences. Dave Selinger Big Data is the business challenge of the 21st century, and 2012 was the year that the Big Data revolution rocked the C-suite. After Nate Silver’s massive coup predicting […]
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Seeking CMOs: Must Know Big Data and Digital Marketing
By Bruce Rogers, Forbes Staff The most sought after marketers today are experts in Big Data and Digital Marketing. I recently spoke with Dick Patton and Rory Finlay of Egon Zehnder to find out how marketers should navigate this new playing field. Bruce Rogers: Can you give some recent examples of how Big Data has been a […]
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
REBOOT HADOOP?
By Bruno Aziza, None By now, I’m sure that you have read all the predictions New Year’s aficionados have come up with. 2012 was a special year for Big Data and predictions; Nate Silver won big with Obama’s re-reelection, while on the other extreme, the Mayans visions didn’t pan out (thankfully!). Big Data has caught so much attention in the past year that many have predicted 2013 would be “The Year of Big Data”.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
How to Use Big Data to Make Faster and Better Business Decisions
Big Data is clearly a disruptive technology, but using it successfully is as much art as it is science. The key is integrating Big Data with traditional BI to create a data ecosystem that allows you to generate new insights while executing on what you already know.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Computerworld Latest
5 Ways Big Data Will Change Lives In 2013
By SAP Guest, AdVoice Aadhar enrollment center By Siddarth Taparia, Senior Director, Portfolio and Strategic Marketing, SAP Recently, I saw firsthand how a new “universal identification” program called Aadhar is taking shape in India. It has potential to improve the lives of millions of poor people via Big Data. Aadhar is an ambitious government Big Data project aimed at becoming the […]
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest