U.C. Berkeley Offers Free "Big Data" Class This Week
pmdubs writes "The U.C. Berkeley AMPLab research group will be hosting a free 'Big Data Bootcamp' on-campus and online, August 21 and 22. The AMP Camp will feature hands-on tutorials on big data analysis using the AMPLab software stack, including Spark, Shark, and Mesos. These tools work hand-in-hand with technologies like Hadoop to provide high performance, low latency data analysis. AMP Camp will also include high level overviews of warehouse scale computing, presentations on several big data use-cases, and talks on related projects."
Now maybe some of the folks here will actually learn how Big Data methodologies work, rather than just spamming links to a strawman argument starring the word "web-scale"...
Aw, who am I kidding... this is Slashdot! A knee-jerk reaction with little forethought is not only the norm, but the mandate!
You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
Can anyone shed some light on whether these technologies are niche/minor technologies, or whether they're actually popular / useful / used technologies?
"I've never heard of AMPLab" means just about nothing, given that I don't really spend a lot of time on Big Data. I recognize Hadoop (and MapReduce, Scala, etc,etc), but most of the technologies used in this class seems to be specific to Berkeley.
(I'm almost afraid to ask, given that there's a grand total of 13 comments and it's already 1/2 down the /. main page :( )