Data management, security and compliance have long been a mainstay of IT's remit, but it's only recently that they are starting to be able to use big data.
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Businesses of the past operated like a rookie playing darts, throwing something and hoping it sticks.
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Whether the response to this latest viral meme is a change of direction or a bump in the road, it's too early to tell. But it's definitely an awakening of sorts. For the first time, Big Tech might not have its hands so firmly on the steering wheel. The thing is, though, no-one else does either.
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People used to think that big data was only for big business. They were wrong.
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Today we typically equate "big data" and "social media" but that is largely because of social data's widespread machine-friendly availability, yet this over reliance has constrained the questions we can ask about human society. With a bit of creativity, news media can become truly "big data."
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In this special guest feature, Gabe Batstone, Co-founder and CEO for contextere , suggests that rather than provide workers with as much data as possible, it may be better to make Big Data small. This means harnessing the power of Artificial Intelligence (AI) to generate actionable insights a worker needs in that moment to complete the task at hand. Making Big Data small, keeping it both consumable and actionable, will empower workers to be more productive, safer and have less equipment downtime.
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Armed with a healthy sense of skepticism, ULI Greenprint members are evaluating a range of tech-based approaches to augment savings already achieved through Greenprint’s shared-data benchmarking.
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