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        <title>barack-obama - ReadWrite</title>
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                <title><![CDATA[Obama To Hold "Fireside Hangout" On State of the Union Address]]></title>
                <description><![CDATA[
                                        <img src="http://readwrite.com/files/styles/800_450sc/public/fields/Fireside%20Hangout.jpg" />
                                        <p class="p1">Franklin Delano Roosevelt's radio series of 30 "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fireside_chats" target="_blank">fireside chats</a>" was a key way to connect the presidency to homes across the nation in 1933 and 1934. More than 75 years later, President Obama is using Google+ to "Hangout" with his constituents.&nbsp;</p>
<p class="p1">In his ongoing series paying respect to the <a style="line-height: 1.538em;" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fireside_chats">New Deal broker</a>, Obama's&nbsp;<a style="line-height: 1.538em;" href="https://plus.google.com/events/ck7p5i47e2pfqlq4bkk6lo8sml8">"Fireside Hangout</a>" starts Thursday at 4:50pm ET (1:50pm PT). The President will answer questions from Americans nationwide concerning&nbsp;<a style="line-height: 1.538em;" href="http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2013/02/12/full-text-president-obamas-2013-state-of-the-union/">his fourth State of the Union</a> address, which took place Monday night.</p>
<p class="p1">Obviously no stranger to the Internet, Obama has a history of digital prowess and social media savvy.&nbsp;He knows <a style="line-height: 1.538em;" href="http://washington.cbslocal.com/2012/11/17/obama-and-maroney-pose-for-meme-inspired-photo/">how to captizlize on a viral meme</a>, <a style="line-height: 1.538em;" href="http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57502863-38/obama-answers-live-questions-on-reddit-crashes-servers/">can overload Reddit with an AMA</a>, and has long trounced his political opponents in Twitter outreach (even <a style="line-height: 1.538em;" href="https://twitter.com/ThePresObama" target="_blank">his best fake Twitter account</a> has an unreasonably high number of&nbsp;followers).</p>
<p class="p1">To be sure, the President's culturally attuned staff is helping him every step of the way. After all, <a style="line-height: 1.538em;" href="http://swampland.time.com/2012/11/07/inside-the-secret-world-of-quants-and-data-crunchers-who-helped-obama-win/">it was unprecedented &nbsp;social tools and data crunching that helped him secure his second term</a>.</p>
<p class="p1">So if you have something you want to say about the President's State of the Union address, or just want to watch the dialogue in real time, <a href="https://plus.google.com/events/ck7p5i47e2pfqlq4bkk6lo8sml8" target="_blank">be sure to jump in the Hangout this afternoon</a>. You can also see it at <strong><a href="http://youtube.com/whitehouse" target="_blank">http://youtube.com/whitehouse</a>&nbsp;</strong>and <strong><a href="http://wh.gov" target="_blank">http://wh.gov</a>.&nbsp;</strong></p>
<p class="p1">As of publication time, the number of confirmed attenddess of the virtual Q&amp;A is nearing 24,000 Google users, and that number is likely to keep climbing as the kickoff time nears.</p>
                    ]]></description>
                <link>http://readwrite.com/2013/02/14/obama-to-hold-fireside-hangout-on-state-of-the-union-address</link>
                <guid>http://readwrite.com/2013/02/14/obama-to-hold-fireside-hangout-on-state-of-the-union-address</guid>
                <category>Barack Obama</category>
                <pubDate>Thu, 14 Feb 2013 11:41:00 -0800</pubDate>
                <author>Nick Statt</author>
            </item>
                    <item>
                <title><![CDATA[How To Watch President Obama's 2013 State Of The Union Address Online]]></title>
                <description><![CDATA[
                                        <img src="http://readwrite.com/files/styles/800_450sc/public/fields/obama-state-of-the-union.jpg" />
                                        <p>Unless <a href="http://www.latimes.com/business/technology/la-fi-tn-apple-ceo-tim-cook-to-sit-with-michelle-obama-during-state-of-the-union-20130211,0,2913894.story" target="_blank">you're Tim Cook</a>, you probably don't have a front row seat lined up for President Obama's State of the Union (SOTU) address on Tuesday night. That's okay though, because the ever-more-interactive speech is best experienced online, where it will be accompanied by more context and conversation than in any other medium.&nbsp;</p>
<p>When it comes to tuning in online, this won't be anything like the <a href="http://readwrite.com/2012/07/27/how-to-watch-the-2012-summer-olympics-online-legally-or-otherwise" target="_blank">Summer Olympics</a>. There will be plenty of free livestreaming options across a variety of devices, as well as any number of social chats, on-camera analyses and interactive features from media outlets, journalists and the White House itself.&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Livestreaming The State Of The Union Address</h2>
<p>The White House will not only be live-streaming President Obama's speech Tuesday night, but it will be displaying relevant charts and data in sync with whatever the President happens to be talking about. The <a style="line-height: 1.538em;" href="http://www.whitehouse.gov/state-of-the-union-2013" target="_blank">White House's "enhanced livestream"</a> begins at 9pm Eastern Time (6pm Pacific Time) and will be followed by a live panel discussion with policy experts. All of this will be available on the White House's website, as well as its official iOS and Android apps.&nbsp;</p>
<p>If the White House stream freezes up right as your <a href="http://www.drinkinggame.us/" target="_blank">SOTU drinking game</a> is just getting rowdy, you can always <a href="http://www.c-span.org/SOTU/" target="_blank">jump over to C-SPAN.com</a>, which will be streaming the speech as well. On C-SPAN, you can also compare Obama's fourth State of the Union with archived addresses from the past. The C-SPAN folks have written transcripts dating back to Franklin Delano Roosevelet and archived videos as far back as Ronald Reagan's fourth State of the Union address in 1984. For even more historical analysis, check out <a href="http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/interactive/2013/02/201321213243145814.html" target="_blank">Al Jazeera's interactive tool</a> comparing Obama's past State of the Union speeches.&nbsp;</p>
<p>And if all of those options aren't enough, <a href="http://www.cnn.com/%20%20" target="_blank">CNN</a>, <a href="http://online.wsj.com/home-page" target="_blank">Wall Street Journal</a>, <a href="http://youtube.com" target="_blank">YouTube</a>&nbsp;and <a href="http://live.huffingtonpost.com" target="_blank">HuffPost Live</a> will also be live streaming the speech.&nbsp;</p>
<h2>The State Of The Union Is… Interactive</h2>
<p>These days, it's pretty much a given that any big news or entertainment event is the "most interactive" instance of that event that's ever happened. That's what progress is all about.</p>
<p>The State of the Union is no exception, and not just because people are increasingly connected and more prone to live-tweet TV events in general. The famously tech-savvy Obama administration has been proactive about baking interactive elements into the speech and encouraging online participation.&nbsp;</p>
<p>On Twitter, the White House has officially endorsed the<a href="https://twitter.com/search?q=%23sotu" target="_blank"> #SOTU hashtag</a> and is encouraging users to use <a href="https://twitter.com/search?q=WHChat&amp;src=typd" target="_blank">#WHChat</a> to submit questions to on-air policy experts after Obama's speech. The administration will also be actively maintaining conversations with citizens <a style="line-height: 1.538em;" href="https://www.facebook.com/WhiteHouse" target="_blank">on Facebook</a> and <a style="line-height: 1.538em;" href="https://plus.google.com/+whitehouse/posts%20" target="_blank">Google+</a>.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Republicans will be live-critiquing Obama's speech <a href="http://www.gop.gov/sotu/" target="_blank">on the official GOP website</a> and encouraging rank-and-file conservatives to do the same over various social channels.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Media outlets are running their own interactive features during the speech as well. <a href="http://live.huffingtonpost.com/r" target="_blank">Huffpost Live</a>, for example,&nbsp;will be doing its usual thing, live-streaming the speech and post-speech reactions while inviting viewers to join on-air discussions and live chats.&nbsp;</p>
                    ]]></description>
                <link>http://readwrite.com/2013/02/12/how-to-watch-president-obama-2013-state-of-the-union-address-online-tonight</link>
                <guid>http://readwrite.com/2013/02/12/how-to-watch-president-obama-2013-state-of-the-union-address-online-tonight</guid>
                <category>Politics</category>
                <pubDate>Tue, 12 Feb 2013 13:30:00 -0800</pubDate>
                <author>John Paul Titlow</author>
            </item>
                    <item>
                <title><![CDATA[Obama & Romney Are Ignoring America’s Hottest Export: Big Data]]></title>
                <description><![CDATA[
                                        <img src="http://readwrite.com/files/styles/800_450sc/public/fields/121024%20Obama%20%26%20Romney%20debate%20the%20elephant%20in%20the%20room%20%28800%20px%29.jpg" />
                                        <p>With as many as <a href="http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/59-2-million-watch-final-presidential-debate_b151653">67.2 million viewers worldwide</a>, the latest round of U.S. presidential debates were the <a href="http://uspolitics.about.com/od/elections/ig/TV-and-Politics/TV-Ratings---Debates.htm">most closely watched since 1980</a>, when Ronald Reagan delivered a crushing blow to then-President Jimmy Carter.</p>
<p>Yet with that great an audience, in all three appearances, President Barack Obama made one of only two brief mentions of information technology as an American asset.&nbsp; “If we don’t have the best education system in the world, if we don’t continue to put money into research and technology that will allow us to create great businesses here in the United States,” stated the President toward the end of the third debate Monday, “that’s how we lose the competition.”</p>
<p>Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney followed up, literally in the last few minutes, by framing U.S. digital technology in terms of its value to China:&nbsp; “They're stealing our intellectual property, our patents, our designs, our technology, hacking into our computers, counterfeiting our goods,” Gov. Romney said.</p>
<p>Regardless of one’s feelings of how the candidates performed over the past few weeks, &nbsp;the absence of any substantive discussion of the key success story of American industry — information technology - makes the divide between politics and reality crystal clear.&nbsp; The debates offered more than ample opportunity to frame this country as the champion of free information and the harbinger of the fastest growing industry since petroleum. Big data, the cloud, and information services delivered over the Web are the key to small business growth. But it was as if neither candidate had time enough to glance&nbsp;at the world outside their jet cabin windows.</p>
<h2>Virtual Product, Real Industry</h2>
<p>The rise of <em>big data</em> as big business points to the urgent need to restructure data centers. This comes in response to three factors that have completely changed in just five years:</p>
<ol>
<li>The almost inconsequential cost of data storage, precipitated in no small part by the declining cost of overseas manufacturing labor;</li>
<li>The explosion in processing power per megawatt, which led to rapid deployment of parallelism that enables analytics functions that were impossible for single-threaded processors;</li>
<li>The sudden appearance of Web-based languages that enable lightweight apps to perform the same tasks that, just a few years ago, required mainframes and even supercomputers.</li>
</ol>
<p>It may be difficult to calculate the value of big data contribution to the nation’s gross national product. But the longer we go without including data as an economic product, the more we may be blinding ourselves to an aspect of true American recovery - along with the jobs and brighter futures that come with it - happening right in front of our faces.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Jack Norris, who’s the VP of marketing for San Jose-based MapR — <a href="http://readwrite.com/2011/12/08/latest-mapr-12-distribution-pr">which I introduced you to last December</a> – leads the promotional efforts for one of the commercial vendors of Hadoop, the open source big data technology.&nbsp; As Norris helped verify, <a href="http://www.indeed.com/jobs?q=Hadoop+$100,000&amp;jt=fulltime">a recent Indeed search</a> for full-time Hadoop-specific jobs advertised as earning at least $100,000 per year, yielded 1,377 results. At the top of the list: <a href="https://intel.taleo.net/careersection/10000/jobdetail.ftl?job=500067&amp;src=JB-10400">Hadoop Deployment Manager for Intel</a>.&nbsp; Norris has been generating these searches over the past year, and has noticed an exponential job demand curve, from literally nothing to colossal.</p>
<p>Norris agrees with IBM’s Anjul Bhambri, <a href="http://readwrite.com/2012/02/17/ibm-vp-anjul-bhambri-on-the-er">whom I interviewed last February</a>, about the growing necessity among businesses for a new kind of role called the <em>data scientist</em>. “It’s not the statistician/PhD, necessarily, that will be the data scientist of the future,” remarked Norris in an interview, citing Google’s now-classic principle that simple algorithms in bulk can outperform complex arithmetic. “What we’re seeing is, when you throw data at simple algorithms, you don’t have to have complex models to approximate what the truth is. You take all the data, and you find where the patterns are, the issues -&nbsp;<em>that’s</em> the wave of the future.”</p>
<h2>Rethinking The Database Application</h2>
<p>Hadoop has come unto its own as an analytics resource, for observing patterns in huge collections of data across multiple volumes, and <em>reducing</em> those patterns to explainable variables and formulas. One tool in Hadoop’s toolkit, called MapReduce, is the origin of MapR’s brand name.</p>
<p>Because big data methodologies, including Hadoop, are transforming the data center, research that years or even months ago could not have seemed feasible, are now not only conceivable but remakably inexpensive. One example Norris cites comes from Ancestry.com, which now offers customers <a href="http://dna.ancestry.com/atFAQ.aspx#1">an at-home DNA sampling kit</a>. Through the compilation of an unfathomably massive genetics database, Ancestry.com is uncovering thousands of genetic links between distantly related individuals - links that history alone could never have illuminated.</p>
<p>Consider if the same resources were applied to highly important, federally funded projects that mostly or entirely rely upon database analysis, such as <em><a href="http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hsrinfo/cer.html">comparative effectiveness research</a></em>.&nbsp; This is the long-term historical evaluation of medical diagnosis and treatment strategies. Specific aspects of this research qualify for federal grants, including $1.1 billion in funding to the National Patient Advocate Foundation just for the database. Big data technologies could conceivably reduce the costs required to run this database by three orders of magnitude.</p>
<p>Which would be more than enough to save Big Bird.</p>
<h2>Unifying The Unifiers</h2>
<p><span class="embedded-Media-image img-caption-c">
				<img src="http://readwrite.com/files/fields/121023%20MapR%20M7%20diagram.jpg" style="" />
			</span>
</p>
<p>The types of innovations necessary to facilitate such cost reductions are being unveiled literally by the day. Just Tuesday, MapR announced the M7 edition of its database architecture, which reduces the number of engine components yet again. The company’s goal is a unified database structure where “big data” and “data” are essentially the same - where HBase and dBase, if you will, are mere format distinctions.</p>
<p>“The premise, driven by the original Web 2.0, that Hadoop can be its own ecosystem with <a href="http://hadoop.apache.org/docs/r0.20.0/hdfs_shell.html">its HDFS [<em>file system</em>] API</a> to which you rewrite everything, doesn’t really recognize what’s happening in a lot of organizations,” explained MapR’s Norris. “The ability to take Hadoop and open it up through open standards like NFS, ODBC, or <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windowsazure/gg715283.aspx">REST for management</a>, or Kerberos for security, so it can easily integrate with existing processes and solutions, is a huge step.” He cites the case of one MapR customer, aircraft maker Boeing, which reduced the cost of a database integration project to <em>near-zero</em>. Instead, it used M7 to avoid rewriting a million lines of legacy code in Java (which would have been required for M5), and integrate existing data with M7’s big data store.</p>
<p>“Big data is an approach where you’re doing compute and data together,” he continued, “and you’re not concerned about the data that you’re handling. You don’t have to pre-process it, segment it, decide what type it is and then route it to different clusters or silos. It’s just there. The developer doesn’t have to understand what his limitations are; he can just process the data.”</p>
<p>So if anyone out there is looking for suggestions to fill in those missing details on how the budget cuts Obama and Romney keep arguing about can be implemented... we’ve got our hands up over here.</p>
                    ]]></description>
                <link>http://readwrite.com/2012/10/26/americas-fastest-growing-export-big-data</link>
                <guid>http://readwrite.com/2012/10/26/americas-fastest-growing-export-big-data</guid>
                <category>Big data</category>
                <pubDate>Fri, 26 Oct 2012 04:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
                <author>Scott M. Fulton</author>
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