Data is a tool for enhancing intuition.

Size doesn't matter, fast data is better than big data

As your competitors learn more, you'll need to learn, too.

I think e-mail should be sorted by importance, not by time.

The job of the data scientist is to ask the right questions.

Teaching someone to program is like giving them a superpower.

Science is the practice of failing repeatedly but learning as you go.

I wish I'd known more about how to build a startup when I was younger.

It's rare that you can solve a technology problem with more technology.

Everyone likes taking their own photos and seeing themselves reflected back.

To gain the competitive edge, companies must master the ability to innovate.

I grew up as a computer scientist, and I've always been fascinated by algorithms.

Data science is the combination of analytics and the development of new algorithms.

It turns out it's important to build a product and not just a bunch of data models.

I believe there are a lot of inefficiencies in the way technical innovation happens.

Value experiences by how much you're learning, and if you're aren't learning, move on.

It's a huge competitive advantage to see in real time what's happening with your data.

Nobody really cares about short links, but people do care about saving and sharing content.

My attention is the most valuable resource I have. I can protect it with an information diet.

I hope that, in the future, data is used to empower people and not just for marketing purposes.

Creating things that people want to tie into their identity is the best way to make them spread.

Data science requires having that cultural space to experiment and work on things that might fail.

The core advantage of data is that it tells you something about the world that you didn't know before.

In tech entrepreneurship, even a lot of hack events tend to be overly commercial in that they're designed to produce companies.

I'm very lucky to work at bitly, with a data set that allows us to explore human social behavior at the scale of human social behavior.

Cool innovation might happen in startups, but they often lack the resources or the deep expertise in the problems they want to address.

If you find something obscure fascinating, learn as much about it as you can, because there's a good chance it won't be obscure for long.

I believe technology should give us superpowers. Everyone should have the opportunity to learn to think, analyze, and create with technology.

My Grinnell education didn't prepare me directly for the work that I'm doing, but it did give me the tools that I needed to focus my curiosity.

In some ways, chocolate chip cookie recipes are my favorite algorithms. You put a bunch of bad-for-you stuff in a bowl and get a delicious result.

The sender and subject line are actually the most important parts of an e-mail because people tend to put more important information in the subject.

I'm a huge fan of the liberal arts approach of teaching you to think, analyze, and communicate, then sending you out into the world to cause trouble.

It's easy to find people who can make pretty pictures, and it's easy to find people who can do math. But it's difficult to find people who can do both.

Don't be afraid to push your company in the direction you think is right - you'll either be fired or promoted, and either outcome will end up just fine.

Technology is giving companies superpowers to compete more intelligently and capture the data behind changing trends, expanding markets, and new opportunities.

My job is to analyze our data set to understand it and build products on it. I look at raw data, do the math to clean it up, and build systems to make it easy to understand.

A lot of people seem to think that data science is just a process of adding up a bunch of data and looking at the results, but that's actually not at all what the process is.

I'm really curious about people - what their desires and interests are - and bit.ly's data tell me that. It gives me an unprecedented window into human communication and behavior.

I joined bit.ly as chief scientist in October of 2009. The company is a URL-shortener and content-sharing platform; we provide tools for people to share and track links on the Internet.

Companies that rely on licensing a proprietary dataset should expect to be outpaced by competitors using modern data collection techniques and more frequent updates and greater accuracy.

A good scientist can understand the current state of a field, pick interesting questions where a success will actually lead to useful new knowledge, and push that field further through their work.

You really need to have a lot of empathy for the work you're doing and the people who you're ultimately trying to help, whether that's a business colleague, a boss, or, ultimately, the user of the software you're building.

I decided that since I was trying to teach 'style' of thinking in science and engineering, and 'style' is an art, I should therefore copy the methods of teaching used for the other arts - once the fundamentals have been learned.

I don't actually, as a general policy, block any sort of cookies. I keep them all turned on, and that's because I'm willing to make the tradeoff that I let companies gather this information about me in return for a better experience.

Even smaller companies are putting resources behind their analytics teams in the same way they put resources behind engineering and product teams. There are some great tools out there that allow even tiny businesses to use data effectively.

Deep learning allows you to create predictive models at a level of quality and sophistication that was previously out of reach. And so deep learning also enhances the product function of data science because it can generate new product opportunities.

Often, people think that individual data is the most valuable thing they can collect. But it's not useful to know what I am doing or where I am, unless you're particularly interested in me, which is weird. But it is very useful to know what a population of people are doing.

I think of 'data science' as a flag that was planted at the intersection of several different disciplines that have not always existed in the same place. Statistics, computer science, domain expertise, and what I usually call 'hacking,' though I don't mean the 'evil' kind of hacking.

When you start at Bitly, you go through this emotional cycle, where first you go, 'Oh my God, this data is amazing.' But then you start looking at it, and you conclude that humanity is completely doomed. Because what people read is cats and Bieber and celebrity gossip and that stuff.

After graduate school, I joined Johnson & Wales University in Rhode Island as an assistant professor, but I continued to program in addition to teaching and working on research. I built a program that crawled job boards to determine which skills employers value, which helped Johnson & Wales explore ways to improve its curriculum.

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