In my compare and contrast essay I really focused on the contrast part. Mostly because the two I chose do the same job, but take very different approaches as to what they think really matter. I talk about how AMD is good for multi-taskers who are on a budget and how Intel is for users who just want a faster computer overall and are willing to spend a little more to get it.
I think that I did a very good job contrasting the two and briefly describing the benefits of both. Unfortunately, I think it falls a little short in the comparison department. There’s a link to the essay down below.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B92fono4_p1IYWZWNHp3YWR3Y00/view?usp=sharing
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Friday, October 10, 2014
TED Talk: "Big Data is Better Data" -Kenneth Cukier
In Kenneth Cukier’s TED talk “Big
Data is Better Data” Cukier
took a very interesting approach to big data. He didn't talk about how is evil
and taking away our privacy. He is thinking bigger; he realized that things could
be generalized in good ways to improve society. He argues that Big Data is the
thing that will bring the human race together. He says that not only will it
bring us together; it will keep us safer in things like driving. He talked
about machine learning and how computers will get smarter with data, just like
we do. He also mentioned the reverse side of big data, which was necessary for this argument in order to maintain fairness.
I
think that Cukier said some things about Big Data that made me think about it
in a different way. I had always heard about the negative connotations of Big
Data. He made me think about how great this technology can be for mankind.
Things in theory will be safer, statistics will be more accurate, and mankind
will be just better. He also made me worry about the things that big data could
end up doing to our rights as humans. It could end up ruining our freedom and
making us trapped by our own technology. He used Edward Snowden as an example
for this. Snowden is seeking political asylum from the big data he collected.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)