Data Radicals
Un pódcast de Alation
Categorías:
57 Episodo
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The AI Echo of Saul Alinsky's Legacy
Publicado: 6/3/2024 -
Vector Databases 101 with Edo Liberty, CEO & Founder of Pinecone
Publicado: 21/2/2024 -
Meshy Data Orgs: Data Teams in a Product-Thinking World with Sanjeevan Bala, Group Chief Data & AI Officer at ITV
Publicado: 7/2/2024 -
The Impact of Analytics in a Zero-Sum Game with Ari Kaplan, Head of Evangelism at Databricks
Publicado: 24/1/2024 -
Beyond Frictionless Living with Nate Anderson, Deputy Editor at Ars Technica
Publicado: 10/1/2024 -
AI Supply & Demand with Guy Scriven, U.S. Technology Editor at The Economist
Publicado: 13/12/2023 -
Hard Filters and Nuanced Intuition with Scott Hartley, Author of The Fuzzy and the Techie
Publicado: 29/11/2023 -
The Precision Prescription with Maddy Want, VP of Data, Betting & Gaming at Fanatics, Inc.
Publicado: 8/11/2023 -
Everything You Wanted To Know About LLMs, but Were Too Afraid To Ask with Matthew Lynley, Founding Writer of Supervised
Publicado: 25/10/2023 -
Measuring the (Data) Culture of Medicine with Dr. Bapu Jena, Joseph P. Newhouse Professor at Harvard Medical School
Publicado: 11/10/2023 -
Mastering Your Own Destiny with Andy Palmer & Dr. Michael Stonebraker, Co-founders of Tamr
Publicado: 27/9/2023 -
The Human Side of Data Leadership
Publicado: 13/9/2023 -
Competing Apart, Sharing Together with Michael James
Publicado: 30/8/2023 -
Frameworks and the Art of Simplification with Dave Kellogg
Publicado: 16/8/2023 -
Perfect is The Enemy of The Good with Ameen Kazerouni
Publicado: 2/8/2023 -
Don’t Say Data Literacy with Wendy Batchelder
Publicado: 19/7/2023 -
Asking the Right Questions with Frank Farrall
Publicado: 5/7/2023 -
Building the Company You Wish You Could Buy From with Mike Capone
Publicado: 21/6/2023 -
Start with Stories, End with Data with Ashish Thusoo
Publicado: 7/6/2023 -
The Bazaar in the Cathedral with Matei Zaharia
Publicado: 24/5/2023
Some people can see things that nobody else can. They seem to be able to peer around corners and into the future. These seemingly super powers come from being able to synthesize the data all around us. They approach problems with a curious and rational mind. They think differently and encourage others to embrace data culture. We call them “data radicals” because they transform themselves and the world around them In this podcast, we talk to these Data Radicals to understand what makes their approach so unique and how it can be replicated.