Gone are the days where companies can survive on existing products
and services. The need to continually innovate to stay ahead in a fluid world,
requires a change in direction. Many articles have been written, in both
academic research and Industry, to try to predict what will be the future state
of data technology and what will be this year's trends.
Currently research meets industry in a rebirth of industry-based
research teams consisting of organisational only teams or industry
collaborating with universities. Guzdial shares his thoughts in the Communicationsof ACM March 2018 journal that "for the majority of new computer science
PhD's, the research environment in industry is currently more attractive".
Particularly the need within industry to continually innovate cries out for
more research divisions in industry. Part of this change is due to the rapid
expansion of emerging technology but also the realization, of what data science
and artificial intelligence (AI) can add to a business. Data science requires
collaboration between people, teams and organisations as interdisciplinary
skills are needed to solve today’s problems.
There is an emerging trend whereby more research institutes have
been created or existing ones hiring more staff. Microsoft have created a new
organization, Microsoft Research AI (MSR AI), to pursue game-changing advances
in artificial intelligence. The research team combines advances in machine
learning with innovations in language and dialog, human computer interaction,
and computer vision to solve some of the toughest challenges in AI.
AI machine learning intelligence, based on big data, is a complex
problem to solve, to empower people for the future. In the current world there
is the need for collaboration. Greengard in the Communications of ACM March 2018
journal, raised a concern that "mountains of data produce incremental
gains, and coordinating all the research groups and silos is a complex
endeavour". Managing data is
complex and the key areas that I think will define the next revolution are in
the graph.
Telling stories from the data is increasingly important in this ever-changing
holistic environment. Skills need to be developed in this area as communicating
the meaning of data is crucial. Aiming for improvement in business, science,
robotics, space and health can initially appear through intelligent automation
and can produce further actionable insights.
Data visualization is a key component to telling the story and
seeing anomalies. Parameswaran discussed at SIGMOD 2018, that it is the scale
that brings databases and visualisation together. He highlighted two problem
areas, too many tuples and too many visualisations. It is an interesting point
to consider how to address the excessive data points and how to appropriately
find the right visualization for the data, to gain insight at speed.
Innovation is key to the next step. I believe that is by making
beneficial discoveries by design through scientific experiments from quality
data in a continuous and autonomous fashion. I call this Serendipitous Data Management. This improvement and innovation will
come from having sound practices for big data management that enable actionable
data insights at speed.
Another trend I am seeing in research and industry is looking at
how data is processed in centralised data lakes and moving that processing to
the edge, particularly for IOT at the moment. As well as this increasing
security, if the data can remain at source, it also reduces the volume of data
transit which is currently unsustainable. How to consolidate these distributed
data sources and produce analysis across disparate systems is an interesting
challenge to solve. In conclusion the system built on data creates a rapidly
changing landscape of which I see as the key components in defining
revolutionary changes to society and culture.
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