The eighth annual Defrag event is about to fire up in Denver, and I’m here once more — for my eighth year in a row! Really looking forward to another amazing, mine-expanding program. Watch for more here, and of course at @GraemeThickins throughout the next two days.
Category: Conferences/Events (Page 4 of 80)
One of our largest locally sponsored tech events here in Minneapolis is the MobCon Conference, dubbed “Where Mobile Minds Connect.” The third annual version was held November 13th & 14th, 2014, at the Hyatt in downtown Minneapolis. The event is put on by MentorMate, a large mobile development firm that was recently acquired by Taylor Corp. Sponsors for this year’s MobCon included many local firms, among them such bigcos as Target Corp and USBank.
The highlights for me were three speakers:
I attended the Glue Conference May 21-22 in Broomfield, CO, and a pre-event on May 20 called API Strategy & Practice. It was my sixth Glue in a row, since the event began in 2009. It's been a very popular developer event, and has grown each year — now attracting approximately 650 attendees. There were 70 speakers, selected from some 500 who applied. I've written extensively about each of the six Glue Conferences I've attended. This year, I reported for ProgrammableWeb for the first time. (More about that site below.)
Here are my seven posts from #Gluecon 2014, in chronological order of the particular sessions that I wrote about:
• Developers at Roundtable Ask, ‘Are APIs Copyrightable?’ (863 words)
• ‘API First’ Isn’t Just for Startups Anymore (529 words)
• How to Secure Your REST API the Right Way (411 words)
• 10 Reasons Why Developers Hate Your API (918 words)
• Reverb, Apigee Announce Swagger 2.0 Workgroup (720 words)
• As APIs Proliferate, Can Search Scale to Keep Up? (388 words)
• API Design Should Be About ‘Interactive’ and ‘Tinkering’ (600 words)
I also shot a bunch of photos at the event, as I always do. Here's my Flickr set of Gluecon 2014.
About ProgrammableWeb: As the world's leading source of news and information about Internet-based application programming interfaces (APIs), ProgrammableWeb is known as the Web's defacto journal of the API economy. Since it was founded in 2005, ProgrammableWeb (now based in San Francisco) has been chronicling the daily evolution of the global API economy while amassing the Web's most relied-on directory when it comes to discovering and searching for APIs to use in Web and mobile applications. In 2014, Gartner identified ProgrammableWeb as one of several “Cool Vendors” in Information Innovation. It is also the most widely-cited source of data related to APIs in the mainstream media, conferences, whitepapers, and other forms of research. ProgrammableWeb is where you can keep-up with what's new and interesting in a world where the Web is a programmable platform. When it says "the Web is a platform," it is referring to how Web-based and mobile apps are enabled by Internet-based APIs. For example, the way in which the developers of many location-aware apps are able to incorporate Google Maps into their wares with just a few lines of code (using the Google Maps API). Read more about ProgrammableWeb here.
Well, I’ve now had a chance to catch my breath after a whirlwind few days in NYC at Gigaom’s Big Data event. So, this morning, I got to thinking, after doing our weekly Minnov8 podcast, that I should try to tell you about some of the high points for me at the event — some (but not all) of which are touched on in the 20 previous posts I did from there… 🙂
It was one awesome conference, for sure. One interesting factoid I learned, which came out right near the end of the event, was something that ties into the news of the day, especially here in Minnesota: a company called Dataminr actually alerted its customers about the Target Stores data breach 14 minutes ahead of the financial wires. Pretty impressive. (Here’s how Dataminr describes what it does: “Using powerful, proprietary algorithms, we transform the Twitter stream into actionable alerts, identifying the most relevant information in real-time for clients in Finance, News, and the Public Sector.”) Perhaps only Brian Krebs knew about the impact of the breach before they did?
How fast can humans and algorithms think? We learned that the limit of human decision-making is 1000 milliseconds — lower, and you’re in the algorithmic ecosystem. And that was the crux of a talk that was the best-of-the-best at this conference for me. It was delivered with mega-gusto by New Zealander (and decathlete) Sean Gourley, founder and CTO of Quid. “How humans and machines can team up to solve big problems.”
I know my data geek friends would especially have liked a panel that included data scientists from three of Silicon Valley’s top companies, LinkedIn, Airbnb, and Uber. Well, here it is, guy-geeks and girl-geeks, for your viewing pleasure: “The best websites aren’t just built, they’re calculated.”
No one would argue that Big Data is a complex topic. But what’s the biggest challenge around it in corporate America today? “I wish the problems were just technical,” said Boyd Davis, a VP in Intel’s datacenter software division. “The biggest challenge is getting senior execs to understand how Big Data impacts business models.”
The most moving talk at Structure Data was an interview of Ramona Pierson, cofounder of Declara, by Gigaom’s Mathew Ingram. She began with her incredible personal story — which, I kid you not, literally took our collective breath away! Here’s a retweet I did that captured the feeling as it happened:
“@BigDataWild +1 “@bmkatz: Wow – gobsmacked at @ramonapierson personal story and how it informs what she does now at @declara #gigaomlive.”
Her company is building an impressive platform that creates a CognitiveGraph™ to give every individual their own personalized learning path. (Investors include Peter Thiel and Data Collective.) Here’s the interview: “Why the future of social search is semantic.”
Some more tidbits from the conference for my data geek friends:
• Spark seems to be the next big thing out there in Big Data after Hadoop. (Hint: because it runs faster.) Gigaom says it’s increasingly replacing MapReduce in next-generation Big Data applications. Check out DataBricks, the first company to certify applications for Spark.
• Met Life is hiring 1000 data professionals in Raleigh NC (Research Triangle Park). And Ford already has 300 people working in data analytics. (Both companies had on-stage presenters at the conference.)
• Dennis Crowley, CEO of Foursquare, was interviewed by Mathew Ingram. The big question at the end was, "Will we get to the point when we don't even have to check in — just walk into a place?" Crowley's (non) answer: "That's a good question: what will a Foursquare app look like that doesn't require a checkin?" Hmmm. Here’s the full interview: “How does Foursquare think about data, and what are the technical approaches?”
A couple of cool exhibitor companies I talked to:
• Brainspace – A new beta launched at SXSW creates meaningful connections between people and ideas, accelerating the flow of knowledge, discovery, and innovation. Tap into the collective intelligence of the web to discover and connect with the best content and people related to your interests. “Stop stockpiling bookmarks you’ll never see again.” Amen to that!
• SpaceCurve – “If you can’t get the data in, how can you get the answers out?” A real-time platform for organizations that want to turn big data into value as quickly as it is created. It concurrently ingests, fuses, and analyzes Internet of Things, Industrial Internet, spatial, sensor, weather, social media, historical and other data to deliver immediately actionable intelligence at petabyte scales.
How did my conference reporting experiment go?
You know, the one I talked about in my post before I left? ("Big Data Storms the Big Apple This Week") In that, I talked about how I was going to post on my blog, then flip those posts as I wrote them into my Flipboard mag (“Big Data in the Wild”), and then also tweet on my new Twitter account for the magazine (@BigDataWild). I’ve reported from a ton of conferences in my day, but I’d never tried anything as crazy, wacko as this! —- i.e., managing my blog, a magazine, and two Twitter accounts (I also tweeted a bit on my main account), and, um, cross-posting between them. It was all I could do to keep everything straight! But, hey, I like to push the envelope.
Adding to the merriment, I had to use three different devices to pull this off: my iPhone 5S to shoot pix, and my MacBook Air and iPad Air to write the blog posts and tweets. Oh, wait, I also was tweeting from the iPhone. I have an app for my blog platform on the iPad, so I could post from that, and I think I even posted from the same app on my iPhone, too. I had to juggle between devices for another reason: there were no power strips in the main conference room! (Nor the breakout rooms.) That was my only real bitch about this event: all the power strips they had were five or six on one table outside the main room… for 1000+ attendees! What? (Major fail, Gigaom.) But somehow I muddled through, because I had varying degrees of power on my three devices and managed to switch between them. Thank God battery life on the iPad is so good!
As I said above, I did 20 blog posts while there, and I counted about 65 tweets I did on my new account. I now have about 200 followers there, a really great group of data gurus, many of whom were at the event. My Flipboard magazine is rockin’ along, too — now with almost 4800 subscribers, more than 92,000 page flips, and 337 articles.
A couple things I learned: First, posting from my iPhone or iPad blog app, the post title shows up in the Flipboard mag as "Graeme Thickins posted an entry" — what? Bad app!! Second, using iPhone photos in my blog posts looked fine there, but, even though I chose the largest JPG file size, they looked like hell on the Flipboard mag — they want really high-res files, it seems. So, just for kicks, I switched on the second day to using PNG screen grabs of speaker photos from the Gigaom event site — and, for some weird reason, even though they weren’t big files either, they looked fine in the mag. Go figure.
Speaking of photos…
Here’s my Flick set from the event.
Hell yes, video is data, according to Steve Russell, CEO and Founder, Prism Skylabs. He began by reminding us that there's a ton of video out there — something like 200 times the amount of video that's uploaded to YouTube every day is recorded out in the real world, just for surveillance in industries like retail, for example, every single day.
What are the barriers to more video being uploaded to the Internet and made use of? He cited four: access, computation, privacy, actionability (like mobile apps and data visualization). One application his company is particularly focused on is what in-store video can do for retailers. Gigaom says: "By leveraging customer data, online retailers have vastly improved the shopping experience. Until recently, brick-and-mortar retailers have been unable to similarly optimize at the same speed or scale. With new cloud technology, physical retailers now have the ability to mirror the strategies of their online counterparts, enabling them to critically understand store execution and optimize everything from merchandising to promotions."
Steve Russell is a Silicon Valley veteran with 15 years’ experience in building and managing video technology companies. His latest company is developing applications in marketing, branding, and visual merchandising. He believes privacy and insight can go hand-in-hand using "adaptive computer vision."
He closed with this point: "Sensors are now everywhere and are going to drive more video — it's an exciting future."
Recent Comments