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Big Data: Does Size Matter?

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Big data knows where you've been and who your friends are. It knows what you like and what makes you angry. It can predict what you'll buy, where you'll be the victim of crime and when you'll have a heart attack. Big data knows you better than you know yourself, or so it claims.

But how well do you know big data?

You've probably seen the phrase in newspaper headlines, at work in a marketing meeting, or on a fitness-tracking gadget. But can you understand it without being a Silicon Valley nerd who writes computer programs for fun?

Yes. Yes, you can.

Timandra Harkness writes comedy, not computer code. The only programmes she makes are on the radio. If you can read a newspaper you can read this book.

Starting with the basics – what IS data? And what makes it big? – Timandra takes you on a whirlwind tour of how people are using big data today: from science to smart cities, business to politics, self-quantification to the Internet of Things.

Finally, she asks the big questions about where it's taking us; is it too big for its boots, or does it think too small? Are you a data point or a human being? Will this book be full of rhetorical questions?

No. It also contains puns, asides, unlikely stories and engaging people, inspiring feats and thought-provoking dilemmas. Leaving you armed and ready to decide what you think about one of the decade's big ideas: big data.

Author: Harkness Timandra
Publisher: BLOOMSBURY
Pages: 320
ISBN: 9781472920072
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2017

Timandra Harkness is a science writer, broadcaster and comedian, who has been writing and performing on scientific, mathematical and statistical topics since the latter days of the 20th Century.

Timandra is a regular on BBC Radio 4, writing and presenting BBC Radio 4's FutureProofing series and documentaries such as Data, Data Everywhere, and Personality Politics. She's also resident reporter on social psychology series The Human Zoo.

Since winning the Independent newspaper's column-writing competition with a short piece on goat-borrowing, she has written for many publications including the Telegraph, Guardian, Sunday Times, Evening Standard, BBC Focus magazine, WIRED, Men's Health and Significance (the journal of the Royal Statistical Society).

After many years of performing improvised & stand up comedy, hosting cabaret, & touring with a tented circus, she formed the first comedy science double-act in the UK with neuroscientist Dr. Helen Pilcher.
Since then she has written and performed scientific and mathematical comedy from Adelaide (Australia) to Pittsburgh PA, and on BBC Radio 4.
In 2010 she co-wrote and performed Your Days Are Numbered: The Maths of Death, with stand-up mathematician Matt Parker. They performed the show to average audiences of 100.3 and 4 star reviews at the Edinburgh Fringe, then toured it in the UK and Australia. That led to many media appearances & a few heckles using the words 'stochastic' and 'Y axis'.
Science comedy since then includes cabaret, gameshows, and solo live show Brainsex.

As well as speaking on big data, she participates in panel discussions on a wide range of topics around our relationship with science and technology. Timandra regularly chairs events for clients including the Cheltenham Science Festival, the British Council, the Royal Geographical Society, the RSA, the Institute of Ideas, the Wellcome Collection and a Robotics conference in Moscow, among many others.

Timandra currently has 86% of a B.Sc. in Mathematics & Statistics with the Open University. That means she could calculate the chances that it'll be 100% by July 2017, if she didn't have to get on with some proper work.

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