Data Radicals
En podcast af Alation - Onsdage
61 Episoder
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Asking the Right Questions with Frank Farrall
Udgivet: 5.7.2023 -
Building the Company You Wish You Could Buy From with Mike Capone
Udgivet: 21.6.2023 -
Start with Stories, End with Data with Ashish Thusoo
Udgivet: 7.6.2023 -
The Bazaar in the Cathedral with Matei Zaharia
Udgivet: 24.5.2023 -
From the Outskirts to the Center with Jitendra Putcha
Udgivet: 10.5.2023 -
Get Out of the Building! with Tricia Wang
Udgivet: 26.4.2023 -
The Scientific Integrity Crisis with Dr. Elisabeth Bik
Udgivet: 12.4.2023 -
Data Governance: Any “Dummy” Can Do It! with Dr. Jonathan Reichental, Author & Founder of Human Future
Udgivet: 29.3.2023 -
Humanizing AI: Authentic Storytelling with Jepson (Ben) Taylor, Chief AI Strategist, Dataiku
Udgivet: 15.3.2023 -
Your RFP is Useless with Paul Leonardi, Duca Family Professor of Technology Management, UCSB
Udgivet: 1.3.2023 -
Premature Enumeration with Tim Harford, Senior Columnist, The Financial Times and Author of The Data Detective
Udgivet: 15.2.2023 -
Season 2 Trailer
Udgivet: 8.2.2023 -
Data Governance 101: All You Need to Know (But Were Afraid to Ask)
Udgivet: 18.1.2023 -
How Extreme Focus Launched the Modern Data Stack with George Fraser and Taylor Brown, Founders of Fivetran
Udgivet: 23.11.2022 -
DataOps and the Data Catalog with Guest Speaker Michele Goetz, Vice President and Principal Analyst, Forrester
Udgivet: 9.11.2022 -
Turning Librarians Into Supercomputers with Deb Seys, Senior Director of Learning & Communities, Alation
Udgivet: 26.10.2022 -
From Data Strategy to Execution with Steve Pimblett, CDO, The Very Group
Udgivet: 12.10.2022 -
Multiple Sources of Truth: Decentralization and the Data Mesh with Zhamak Dehghani, Creator of the Data Mesh
Udgivet: 28.9.2022 -
Truth, Data and FAIRness with Francesco Marzoni, Chief Data and Analytics Officer, Ingka Group
Udgivet: 14.9.2022 -
Using Data to Fight for Human Rights with Tarak Shah, Data Scientist, Human Rights Data Analysis Group
Udgivet: 31.8.2022
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.