Episódios
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I had an interesting conversation yesterday with a young gentleman upgrading my Google Fiber. While he was originally pursuing a career as a software developer, he and his friends decided against it after seeing the progress of ChatGPT over the last couple of years.
As a father of two teenage boys, I often think about the nature of work, including whether writing code will be relevant for future generations. Here, I rant at least part (not all) of what's on my mind. This is a big topic, and you'll see me ranting more about it.
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Tiankai Feng joins me to chat about the people side of data, aligning on the value of data strategy, and much more.
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This morning, a great article came across my feed that gave me PTSD, asking if Iceberg is the Hadoop of the Modern Data Stack?
In this rant, I bring the discussion back to a central question you should ask with any hot technology - do you need it at all? Do you need a tool built for the top 1% of companies at a sufficient data scale? Or is a spreadsheet good enough?
Link: https://blog.det.life/apache-iceberg-the-hadoop-of-the-modern-data-stack-c83f63a4ebb9
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Health insurance denials are a big topic in America right now. Holden Karau joins me to talk about using AI to appeal health claim insurance denials.
Fight Health Insurance: https://fighthealthinsurance.com/
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I’ve been asked many questions about building a personal brand for the last few weeks. Perhaps it’s the uncertain job market, people wanting to branch out, or something else. I’m unsure what’s in the air right now.
In this episode, I share some thoughts on building a personal brand.
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Hannes Muhleisen is the creator of DuckDB and CEO of DuckDB Labs. We finally got a chance to meet in person at the Forward Data Conference in Paris. We hit it off immediately, and at times, I felt like I was talking with my long lost brother. Hannes is a very cool guy!
While at the conference, we recorded a chat about all things DuckDB, the challenges of data lakehouses and open table formats, local-first tech, and much more. 🦆 🐥
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Regular guest Gordon Wong joins me for a half hour to chat about tech stacks for analytics, semantic layers, and much more.
Gordon's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gordonhwong/
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Bill Inmon is considered the father of the data warehouse. I just got back from spending a couple of days with Bill, and we discussed the history of the data industry and the data warehouse. On my flight back, I realized people could benefit from a short version of our conversation.
In this short chat, we discuss what a data warehouse is (and is not), Kimball and Inmon, the origins of the data warehouse, and much more.
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Valentin Becerra and I chat about DJing, AI, space engineering, and much more.
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Multi-tenancy in databases is very difficult to pull off at scale. Gwen Shapira and I chat about multi-tenant databases at Nile (and elsewhere), AI, RAG, and much more.
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While at lunch with a friend today, the question came up of whether he should invest his time into content (videos and courses) or consulting. Having run a consultancy (and exiting the consulting game), I quipped that consulting often has a negative net present value. What do I mean? Listen on...
Note - I'm trying out a new format where I'll record and post episodes whenever I feel like it (novel idea). Not sure about the cadence yet, so stay tuned. This might mean that non-guest podcasts simply have a topic associated with the title.
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What if the world's metadata were interconnected in a decentralized way? This is part of the vision of Ole Olesen-Bagneux's Meta Grid. We have a chat about what it is, and its implications for the data industry.
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We've got so many awesome tools and technology, but I often don't think we know how to properly use them. In this episode, I discuss what I think is one of the biggest problems in the data industry - the skills gap.
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Albert and I discuss the do's and don't of finding a job in the data field. Do you do a portfolio project? What's the market like these days? This and more are discussed. Enjoy.
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Tanya Bragin and I have a wide-ranging chat about the tension of open source and commercial products, Clickhouse, aligning marketing and product, and how she manages her time.
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People often ask me for career advice. In a tough job market where people are sending out thousands of resumes and hearing nothing back, I notice a lot of people have weak networks and are unknown to the companies they're applying to. This results in lots of frustration and disappointment for job seekers.
Is there a better way? Yes. People need to know who you are. Obscurity is your enemy.
Also, the name of the Friday show changed because I can't seem to keep things to five minutes ;)
My works:
📕Fundamentals of Data Engineering: https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/fundamentals-of-data/9781098108298/
🎥 Deeplearning.ai Data Engineering Certificate: https://www.coursera.org/professional-certificates/data-engineering
🔥Practical Data Modeling: https://practicaldatamodeling.substack.com/
🤓 My SubStack: https://joereis.substack.com/
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Chris Riccomini and I chat about building his latest project SlateDB, building data intensive infrastructure, writing, investing, and much more.
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In this episode, I have a chat with Antti Rask, Juha Korpella, Niko Korvenlaita, Russell Willis, and Kosti Hokkanen. We chat about data, startups, and business in Finland and Europe.
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Let's do things the right way, not just the fast way.
My works:
📕Fundamentals of Data Engineering: https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/fundamentals-of-data/9781098108298/
🎥 Deeplearning.ai Data Engineering Certificate: https://www.coursera.org/professional-certificates/data-engineering
🔥Practical Data Modeling: https://practicaldatamodeling.substack.com/
🤓 My SubStack: https://joereis.substack.com/
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