11.21.2012

data & stats round-up 2012 Nov 21

1. http://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/technology-and-learning/locating-haystack-full-needles [snippet]
A Haystack Full of Needles: Cutting Through the Clutter of the Online World to Find a Place, Partner or President (TED Books) by Jim Hornthal
 Published in October of 2012. 61 pages, $2.99.

 Orbitz and Expedia may have killed the travel agency business, but my family desperately needs a skilled trip advisor to plan our next vacation. (The number of travel agents has dropped from over 110,000 in 2001 to about 77,000 today).  
 iTunesU (and Napster) destroyed Tower Records, but I have no idea how to get a better playlist for my morning run.
 Amazon and Netflix put Borders and Blockbuster out of business (Blockbuster is limping along out of bankruptcy), but it is doubtful that our new way of finding books and movies is resulting in us reading and watching better books and movies. (Although Long Tail enthusiasts may disagree).
Jim Hornthal thinks that we are about to enter the second wave of consumer Internet platforms. The new platforms will be based less on community content (Facebook), or cloud applications (Gmail) - but on personalization via algorithms and massive data analysis.   
 His canonical example is Pandora's Music Genome Project. Pandora breaks each song in its database into 450 discrete musical characteristics. The system then learns your musical tastes by how you rate different songs, and by building on ratings from all Pandora listeners (over 51 million), the site can predict which music (from a catalogue of almost 1 million songs) that you are likely to enjoy...
2. http://www.insidehighered.com/blogs/just-visiting/coursesmart-analytics-bad-idea [snippet]
I am a little late to this story, but apparently digital textbook provider CourseSmart will be introducing a new tool that, in the words of my parent publication, "could make identifying unprepared students even easier, and, the creators hope, improve outcomes and retention."
 The idea is that CourseSmart Analytics can quantify student interactions with the text. The software "tracks students’ engagement with their e-textbooks and provides and allows professors and colleges to evaluate the usefulness of learning materials and to track student work."
 The theory, as I understand it, is that this additional data will help universities “prove” their students are learning, presumably by showing how much and in what ways they interact with their reading.
 ... will not be using this tool because I have a better way of measuring their engagement. I call it “their grade.”
3. http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2012/11/19/165498842/matching-dna-with-medical-records-to-crack-disease-and-aging [snippet]

   Researchers weren't sure how they were going to extract genetic information from the saliva until a company called Affymetrix came along with a new system that could process lots of samples really quickly.
   The National Institutes of Health provided grant funding of nearly $25 million, which allowed Affymetrix and the Kaiser team to process the saliva samples in just 15 months.
   Then came another daunting task: matching each participant's genetic information with detailed health information in Kaiser's electronic records, which go back to 1995. The records include diagnoses, procedures, prescriptions and results of medical tests. For people who sent in saliva, Kaiser also has information on smoking and drinking habits, body mass measurements, and even geographic information that could be used to estimate exposure to certain chemicals in the air or water...

10.17.2012

on informatics

job announcement hints at scope: ...Department of Informatics with emphasis on teaching telecommunications law and policy courses to networking, web design, information assurance and media studies undergraduate and graduate students.

Job Description
Full time tenure track position in the Department of Informatics with emphasis on teaching telecommunications law and policy courses to networking, web design, information assurance and media studies undergraduate and graduate students. The preferred candidate for this position will have professional as well as teaching experience in law and policy areas including but not limited to: state and federal legislation, state and federal regulation, intellectual property, and business transactions in cyberspace, cybercrime, competition and economic policy, universal service, and an understanding of constitutional considerations for freedom of speech, search and seizure, and privacy as related to society’s interaction with networks and cyberspace.

By comparison, here is Wikipedia on INFORMATICS

10.08.2012

data points & future outlined

Data biz, 
After failing to predict the Arab Spring, intelligence officials are now exploring whether Big Data, the combing of billions of pieces of disparate electronic information, can help them identify hot spots before they explode. The intelligence community has always been in the business of forecasting the future. The question is whether tapping into publicly available data — Twitter and news feeds and blogs among other things — can help them do that faster and more precisely.
Enter a Swedish-American start-up company called Recorded Future. The company has developed algorithms that chew through huge volumes of information to find relationships between people and organizations. Then its visualization software spits out that information in the form of a giant searchable timeline....

10.01.2012

job blurb "data warehouse"

DATA WAREHOUSE FUNCTIONAL ANALYST/FINANCIALS  
Home Department =Application Support & Dev - OIT  

Position Summary:

The Data Warehouse Functional Analyst's role is to elicit, analyze, specify, and validate the business needs of data warehouse users. This includes interviewing stakeholders and gathering and compiling user requirements for the design and implementation of financial reports and visualizations. The Data Warehouse Functional Analyst assists or leads data modeling and ETL initiatives of financial data. This includes gathering data requirements, developing and maintaining ETL processes and dimensional data models, and promoting best practices in data warehousing to the organization.

This position focuses on the delivery of business intelligence solutions including: dashboards, scorecards, reports, user interfaces, and associated database design and data structures using Microsoft and SAP technologies, applications and tools.

The individual will apply proven communication skills, problem solving skills, and knowledge of best practices to guide the development team on issues related to design, development and deployment of CMU Core and mission-critical software systems.
 

Required Qualifications

Bachelor's degree (preferably in Computer Science, Mathematics or Information Systems) or equivalent
Two years experience working with a leading ERP platform
Familiarity with Enterprise Financial modules
Demonstrated experience gathering requirements
Excellent technical aptitude
Excellent communication (oral/written) skills with respect to team members, peers, and staff at all levels of the organization.
Ability to concisely, logically, and accurately present issues verbally and in written format.
Strong problem-solving skills
Good interpersonal skills that can foster, demonstrate, and promote excellence in a team environment.
Reliable, self-motivated, and focused on high quality delivery of work products; willing to accept responsibility and accountability
 

Preferred Qualifications:

Experience with Project Management
Experience gathering requirements for complex systems
Experience with SAP ERP, preferably within the FI module
Experience with ETL process
Experience with Microsoft Integration Services and Reporting Services
Experience with Microsoft SharePoint
Knowledge of University reporting needs
Extensive programming experience
Strong preference for data warehousing experience
Strong preference for dashboard development Experience