lecture was somehow shortened to about a minute. Fortunately! With a very confused Czech
pronunciation, M. Bachman was just introduced to us in one sentence.
M. Bachman – (Big) Data Science
I was waiting to find out what it was all about, what big data is, how
it is handled and what is done with it, or maybe what the science is! It took 35 minutes
to explain graphs, which were absolute basics, and I dare say that everyone with a high school education should
know them, let alone in our field. And there were less than 10
minutes left for something new:
When modeling human relationships, triads (relationships between three people) are addressed .
Neo4j – a graph database
that can be used to perform graph queries.
I would have liked more about Neo4j, but
it was mostly just mentioned that it existed and office 365 database one query was shown. Not much. Damn little.
Then I headed
to the Design Hall with Sváča and Ondra (let's say Aitomáci), because the other lectures
didn't interest us at all. And it was a disaster. Czenglish is terrible. I don't even know who was giving the
lecture, but he kept diving somewhere and then he probably ran out of oxygen because
he didn't know what word to say next. "Let's sink, let's sink..." will ring in my ears for a long time
. And what did I learn? Nothing! Nothing that I didn't know.
Lunch! Well, that was a mess. Not salty,
not greasy, there was nowhere to sit. Incomparable to other refreshments, which
used to be plentiful.
W. Becvar – Some things you can't
wireframe
Nothing new, nothing useful.
D. Clarke - Documenting Interfaces
The first lecture, during which I first
visited Development Hall . And? The moderator was disastrous, another
Czenglish like Brno. Fortunately, they replaced him the next day. But to the lecture itself.
The notes from this lecture are empty
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