Social Media and Machine Learning Transform Self-service Data Prep
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Social media and machine learning concepts are transforming self-service data prep into a collaborative data marketplace.Data http://ift.tt/2ifIaMc October 16, 2017 at 07:30PM
Blockchain is the technology that tracks and authenticates cryptocurrency transactions. Many other industries have started adopting blockchain as well, including social networking sites. Social media marketers need to understand the changes blockchain has created and adapt their strategies accordingly. What Does Blockchain Mean for Social Media Marketing? Over the past couple of months, many social media marketing experts have pondered the role blockchain will play in their future business models. Here are some of the opportunities and challenges they will need to prepare for. Minimizing Censorship Issues with Decentralization In the early days of social media, users were promised platforms free of censorship. Over the last couple of years, Facebook, Twitter and other platforms have curtailed those promises . Facebook makes money by catering to certain demographics, which means they have an incentive to censor content that alienates them. Therefore, they have started censoring mor
(This article was first published on rOpenSci Blog , and kindly contributed to R-bloggers) In this occasional series, we interview someone using a loosely defined set of interview questions for the purpose of “Demystifying the Creative/Development Process of the R Community”. This interview was conducted and prepared by Kelly O’Briant as part of an rOpenSci unconf17 project. David Smith is a Blogger and Community Lead at Microsoft. I had the chance to interview David last May at rOpenSci unconf17. We spoke about his career, the process of working remote within a team, community development/outreach and his personal methods for discovering great content to share and write about. KO: What is your name, job title, and how long have you been using R? DS: My name is David Smith. I work at Microsoft and my self-imposed title is ‘R Community Lead’. I’ve been working with R specifically for about 10 years, but I’d been working with S since the early 90s. KO: How did you transi
Good morning. Many years ago, as a graduate student at the London School of Economics, I was taught that economic expansions don't die of old age. They die from policy mistakes. And the executioner is usually the Federal Reserve. My professor at the time was Janet Yellen, who now holds the ax. She will testify today and tomorrow about her plans to keep the current expansion alive. She is in a tough position, fighting against two ghosts--inflation and recession--even though there is no economic evidence that either is imminent. Yet with the economic expansion now entering its ninth year, history suggests that, despite the economists’ adage, odds of recession may be growing. My former colleague Greg Ip of The Wall Street Journal --who, for my money, is the best journalist writing about economics today-- penned an interesting piece last week saying all the "preconditions for recession" are now in place--a labor market at full strength, frothy asset prices, tightening cen
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