Big Data, Disruption, and the 800-Pound Gorilla in the Corner
  Michael Stonebraker   Michael Stonebraker
Adjunct Professor
M.I.T.
 


 

Tuesday, March 19, 2019
08:45 AM - 09:25 AM

Level:  Business / Non-Technical


This talk will focus on the current market for “Big Data” products, specifically those that deal with one or more of “the 3 V’s." Michael will suggest that the volume problem for business intelligence applications is pretty well solved by the data warehouse vendors; however upcoming “data science” tasks are poorly supported at present. On the other hand, there is rapid technological progress, so “stay tuned." In the velocity arena, recent “new SQL” and stream processing products are doing a good job, but there are a few storm clouds on the horizon. The variety space has a collection of mature products, along with considerable innovation from startups. 

Michael will discuss opportunities in this space, especially those enabled by possible disruption from new technology. Also discussed will be the pain levels Michael observes in current enterprises, culminating in his presentation of “The 800 Pound Gorilla in the Corner."


Michael Stonebraker is an adjunct professor at MIT CSAIL and a database pioneer who specializes in database management systems and data integration. He was awarded the 2014 A.M. Turing Award (known as the “Nobel Prize of computing”) by the Association for Computing Machinery for his “fundamental contributions to the concepts and practices underlying modern database systems as well as their practical application through nine start-up companies that he has founded."