Pete Warden
Areas of Expertise:
- Visualization
- Hadoop
- Big Data
Pete Warden is the founder of the OpenHeatMap project, writer of the Data Source Handbook for O'Reilly, a regular contributor to ReadWriteWeb, and a consultant to the New York Times. With 14 years experience building large-scale data processing solutions, including five as a senior engineer at Apple, Pete has been on the frontlines of Big Data, using, writing about, and contributing code to tools like Redis, MongoDB and Hadoop. He believes these services radically change what's possible, and speaks to audiences around the country about how they can do amazing things with their own data.
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Recent Posts | All O'Reilly Posts
- How to create a visualization, February 13 2012
- 3 ideas you should steal from HubSpot, June 14 2011
- Lessons of the Victorian data revolution, May 23 2011
- Why you can't really anonymize your data, May 17 2011
- Why the term "data science" is flawed but useful, May 09 2011
- The iPhone tracking story, one week later, April 27 2011
- Additional iPhone tracking research, April 24 2011
- iPhone tracking: The day after, April 22 2011
- Will data be too cheap to meter?, February 08 2011
- 4 free data tools for journalists (and snoops), January 06 2011
Recent Posts | All O'Reilly Posts
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