ºÝºÝߣshows by User: TirathRamdas / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif ºÝºÝߣshows by User: TirathRamdas / Fri, 12 Jun 2015 13:49:14 GMT ºÝºÝߣShare feed for ºÝºÝߣshows by User: TirathRamdas Big Data in Malaysia: Emerging Sector Profile 2014 /slideshow/big-data-in-malaysia-emerging-sector-profile-2014/49316242 big-data-malaysia-emerging-sector-profile-2014-150612134914-lva1-app6891
Big Data has become part of everyday organisational parlance. Increasingly, this awareness is being transformed into practice. Support for harnessing data to amplify capabilities and achieve organisational objectives at practitioner and senior management levels is becoming aligned. A report by Forrester on Big Data adoption in Asia Pacific in 2013-2014 observed a trend across all industries of ‘using more types of data, from more sources, to enable timelier better-informed insights’. Similarly in Malaysia, there is growing cultural acceptance that Big Data can and should enhance decision-making processes, although pathways for adoption are not uniformly understood. Nevertheless, we are now observing a transition phase from curiosity and enthusiasm to buy-in and action across startup, corporate, and government organisations. This groundswell of interest fuels the basis of Big Data Malaysia, a networking group for professionals with interest in all things Big Data, including NoSQL, Hadoop, data science, visualisation, business use cases, data governance, open data, and more. Our community has welcomed participation from stakeholders ranging from computer scientists to data journalists, reflecting a broad societal interest in Big Data. Our mission is to encourage high caliber knowledge sharing and to provide a space for professionals with different interests to collaborate. This report grew out of a need to understand in more detail the various networks that Big Data Malaysia helps to connect. In order to support the Big Data ecosystem that we see emerging, we identified critical questions that required further investigation, in particular: • What are the opportunities and barriers to Big Data activity in Malaysia? • Who is merely ‘interested’, versus who is actually committed? • What is the current and future capacity for Big Data talent? • Where are the critical gaps in training and skills? • What are the soft inhibitors, including data access, regulation and perception? There are two parts to this report. The first includes results from a questionnaire, while the latter features interviews conducted in-person or via email. In collaboration with various partners, we devised and distributed a questionnaire online across our networks and collected responses during October 2013. In our final sample, we collected responses from 108 individuals over 90 organisations. As our report will show, these viewpoints represent a diversity of organisational stakeholders and industries in the Big Data space. We followed up with interviews of high-profile respondents for richer insight.]]>

Big Data has become part of everyday organisational parlance. Increasingly, this awareness is being transformed into practice. Support for harnessing data to amplify capabilities and achieve organisational objectives at practitioner and senior management levels is becoming aligned. A report by Forrester on Big Data adoption in Asia Pacific in 2013-2014 observed a trend across all industries of ‘using more types of data, from more sources, to enable timelier better-informed insights’. Similarly in Malaysia, there is growing cultural acceptance that Big Data can and should enhance decision-making processes, although pathways for adoption are not uniformly understood. Nevertheless, we are now observing a transition phase from curiosity and enthusiasm to buy-in and action across startup, corporate, and government organisations. This groundswell of interest fuels the basis of Big Data Malaysia, a networking group for professionals with interest in all things Big Data, including NoSQL, Hadoop, data science, visualisation, business use cases, data governance, open data, and more. Our community has welcomed participation from stakeholders ranging from computer scientists to data journalists, reflecting a broad societal interest in Big Data. Our mission is to encourage high caliber knowledge sharing and to provide a space for professionals with different interests to collaborate. This report grew out of a need to understand in more detail the various networks that Big Data Malaysia helps to connect. In order to support the Big Data ecosystem that we see emerging, we identified critical questions that required further investigation, in particular: • What are the opportunities and barriers to Big Data activity in Malaysia? • Who is merely ‘interested’, versus who is actually committed? • What is the current and future capacity for Big Data talent? • Where are the critical gaps in training and skills? • What are the soft inhibitors, including data access, regulation and perception? There are two parts to this report. The first includes results from a questionnaire, while the latter features interviews conducted in-person or via email. In collaboration with various partners, we devised and distributed a questionnaire online across our networks and collected responses during October 2013. In our final sample, we collected responses from 108 individuals over 90 organisations. As our report will show, these viewpoints represent a diversity of organisational stakeholders and industries in the Big Data space. We followed up with interviews of high-profile respondents for richer insight.]]>
Fri, 12 Jun 2015 13:49:14 GMT /slideshow/big-data-in-malaysia-emerging-sector-profile-2014/49316242 TirathRamdas@slideshare.net(TirathRamdas) Big Data in Malaysia: Emerging Sector Profile 2014 TirathRamdas Big Data has become part of everyday organisational parlance. Increasingly, this awareness is being transformed into practice. Support for harnessing data to amplify capabilities and achieve organisational objectives at practitioner and senior management levels is becoming aligned. A report by Forrester on Big Data adoption in Asia Pacific in 2013-2014 observed a trend across all industries of ‘using more types of data, from more sources, to enable timelier better-informed insights’. Similarly in Malaysia, there is growing cultural acceptance that Big Data can and should enhance decision-making processes, although pathways for adoption are not uniformly understood. Nevertheless, we are now observing a transition phase from curiosity and enthusiasm to buy-in and action across startup, corporate, and government organisations. This groundswell of interest fuels the basis of Big Data Malaysia, a networking group for professionals with interest in all things Big Data, including NoSQL, Hadoop, data science, visualisation, business use cases, data governance, open data, and more. Our community has welcomed participation from stakeholders ranging from computer scientists to data journalists, reflecting a broad societal interest in Big Data. Our mission is to encourage high caliber knowledge sharing and to provide a space for professionals with different interests to collaborate. This report grew out of a need to understand in more detail the various networks that Big Data Malaysia helps to connect. In order to support the Big Data ecosystem that we see emerging, we identified critical questions that required further investigation, in particular: • What are the opportunities and barriers to Big Data activity in Malaysia? • Who is merely ‘interested’, versus who is actually committed? • What is the current and future capacity for Big Data talent? • Where are the critical gaps in training and skills? • What are the soft inhibitors, including data access, regulation and perception? There are two parts to this report. The first includes results from a questionnaire, while the latter features interviews conducted in-person or via email. In collaboration with various partners, we devised and distributed a questionnaire online across our networks and collected responses during October 2013. In our final sample, we collected responses from 108 individuals over 90 organisations. As our report will show, these viewpoints represent a diversity of organisational stakeholders and industries in the Big Data space. We followed up with interviews of high-profile respondents for richer insight. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/big-data-malaysia-emerging-sector-profile-2014-150612134914-lva1-app6891-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Big Data has become part of everyday organisational parlance. Increasingly, this awareness is being transformed into practice. Support for harnessing data to amplify capabilities and achieve organisational objectives at practitioner and senior management levels is becoming aligned. A report by Forrester on Big Data adoption in Asia Pacific in 2013-2014 observed a trend across all industries of ‘using more types of data, from more sources, to enable timelier better-informed insights’. Similarly in Malaysia, there is growing cultural acceptance that Big Data can and should enhance decision-making processes, although pathways for adoption are not uniformly understood. Nevertheless, we are now observing a transition phase from curiosity and enthusiasm to buy-in and action across startup, corporate, and government organisations. This groundswell of interest fuels the basis of Big Data Malaysia, a networking group for professionals with interest in all things Big Data, including NoSQL, Hadoop, data science, visualisation, business use cases, data governance, open data, and more. Our community has welcomed participation from stakeholders ranging from computer scientists to data journalists, reflecting a broad societal interest in Big Data. Our mission is to encourage high caliber knowledge sharing and to provide a space for professionals with different interests to collaborate. This report grew out of a need to understand in more detail the various networks that Big Data Malaysia helps to connect. In order to support the Big Data ecosystem that we see emerging, we identified critical questions that required further investigation, in particular: • What are the opportunities and barriers to Big Data activity in Malaysia? • Who is merely ‘interested’, versus who is actually committed? • What is the current and future capacity for Big Data talent? • Where are the critical gaps in training and skills? • What are the soft inhibitors, including data access, regulation and perception? There are two parts to this report. The first includes results from a questionnaire, while the latter features interviews conducted in-person or via email. In collaboration with various partners, we devised and distributed a questionnaire online across our networks and collected responses during October 2013. In our final sample, we collected responses from 108 individuals over 90 organisations. As our report will show, these viewpoints represent a diversity of organisational stakeholders and industries in the Big Data space. We followed up with interviews of high-profile respondents for richer insight.
Big Data in Malaysia: Emerging Sector Profile 2014 from Tirath Ramdas
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Fri, 22 Mar 2013 01:05:33 GMT /slideshow/bigdatamy-v/17493092 TirathRamdas@slideshare.net(TirathRamdas) V TirathRamdas <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/bigdatamyv-130322010533-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br>
V from Tirath Ramdas
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-TirathRamdas-48x48.jpg?cb=1588950270 A career centered on the design and implementation of computer systems (in areas like operating systems, endpoint security, databases, and scientific computing) at all layers of the stack (from custom hardware to workflow GUIs), with some non-profit strategy consulting work thrown in for good measure. https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/big-data-malaysia-emerging-sector-profile-2014-150612134914-lva1-app6891-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/big-data-in-malaysia-emerging-sector-profile-2014/49316242 Big Data in Malaysia: ... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/bigdatamyv-130322010533-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/bigdatamy-v/17493092 V