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Big Data : Does Size Matter?

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Big Data : Does Size Matter?

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What is Big Data, and why should you care? Big data knows where you've been and who your friends are. It knows what you like and what makes you angry. It can predict what you'll buy, where you'll be the victim of crime and when you'll have a heart attack. Big data knows you better than you know yourself, or so it claims. But how well do you know big data? You've probably seen the phrase in newspaper headlines, at work in a marketing meeting, or on a fitness-tracking gadget. But can you understand it without being a Silicon Valley nerd who writes computer programs for fun? Yes. Yes, you can. Timandra Harkness writes comedy, not computer code. The only programmes she makes are on the radio. If you can read a newspaper you can read this book. Starting with the basics - what IS data? And what makes it big? - Timandra takes you on a whirlwind tour of how people are using big data today: from science to smart cities, business to politics, self-quantification to the Internet of Things. Finally, she asks the big questions about where it's taking us; is it too big for its boots, or does it think too small? Are you a data point or a human being? Will this book be full of rhetorical questions? No. It also contains puns, asides, unlikely stories and engaging people, inspiring feats and thought-provoking dilemmas. Leaving you armed and ready to decide what you think about one of the decade's big ideas: big data.

Timandra Harkness

Timandra Harkness Harkness has a BA in Film and Drama with Art from Bulmershe College and a BSc in Mathematics & Statistics from the Open University.[citation needed] Harkness has written about technology for BBC Science Focus magazine,[3][4][5] about statistics for Significance (a popular science magazine published by the Royal Statistical Society),[6] and about motorcycles for The Daily Telegraph.[7] Her work for BBC Radio 4 includes an afternoon play,[8] documentaries,[9][10][11][12] being a roving reporter for The Human Zoo[13] and presenting FutureProofing,[14] a series about the future potential of science. She is the author of the book Big Data: Does Size Matter?[15] In 1999 Harkness co-wrote a comedy with her mother Linda Cotterill, called No Future in Eternity, about an astronomer who shares a flat with two angels.[16] They received a grant from the Astronomer Royal for Scotland, John Campbell Brown, to perform the show at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2000.[17] The show was subsequently broadcast as an afternoon play on BBC Radio 4.[8][18] Since 2004 Harkness has collaborated with Dr Helen Pilcher, as a comedy duo named the Comedy Research Project, writing and performing stand-up shows about science.[19][20][21] In 2012 Harkness and fellow comedian Matt Parker co-wrote a comedy show called Your Days are Numbered: The Maths of Death. They performed the show in Australia, at the Adelaide Fringe and Melbourne International Comedy Festival, on tour around England and in Scotland, at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.[22] Harkness returned to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2019 to perform a one-woman show, called Take a Risk.[23][24] Since 2016, Harkness has chaired the Data Debate for the Alan Turing Institute and the British Library, a series of panel discussions about big data and its implications for society.[25] She has spoken at the Hay Festival,[26][27][28] the Battle of Ideas,[29][30][31][32][33][excessive citations] TEDx,[34] The Scotsman Data Conference[35] and the Cheltenham Science Festival.[36] Harkness is a Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society, a founding member of their special interest group on Data Ethics[37] and a Visiting Fellow at the University of Winchester's Centre for Information Rights.[38]

Title

Big Data : Does Size Matter?

Author

Timandra Harkness

Publisher

Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

Number of Pages

304

Category

  • Knowledge
  • Technology
  • First Published

    JAN 2016

    What is Big Data, and why should you care? Big data knows where you've been and who your friends are. It knows what you like and what makes you angry. It can predict what you'll buy, where you'll be the victim of crime and when you'll have a heart attack. Big data knows you better than you know yourself, or so it claims. But how well do you know big data? You've probably seen the phrase in newspaper headlines, at work in a marketing meeting, or on a fitness-tracking gadget. But can you understand it without being a Silicon Valley nerd who writes computer programs for fun? Yes. Yes, you can. Timandra Harkness writes comedy, not computer code. The only programmes she makes are on the radio. If you can read a newspaper you can read this book. Starting with the basics - what IS data? And what makes it big? - Timandra takes you on a whirlwind tour of how people are using big data today: from science to smart cities, business to politics, self-quantification to the Internet of Things. Finally, she asks the big questions about where it's taking us; is it too big for its boots, or does it think too small? Are you a data point or a human being? Will this book be full of rhetorical questions? No. It also contains puns, asides, unlikely stories and engaging people, inspiring feats and thought-provoking dilemmas. Leaving you armed and ready to decide what you think about one of the decade's big ideas: big data.
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