Sramana Mitra: These are IT applications you are talking about, right? Ron Bodkin: It is an application for technology vendors, supporting and servicing products that might be sold into IT [departments].
Nick LeCuyer is the vice president of strategy and distribution at Western Union Digital. He holds an MBA from the University of Michigan and a BSE in civil engineering from Princeton University and had more than 13 years of experience in corporate strategy as well as consulting. In this interview, Nick talks about the role
Sramana: How do you determine a non-linear career path? What is that conversation like? Kevin O’Conn0r: Organizations go through different stages. If you are in an early stage, then an individual’s career development is in his or her hands. When you get to a bigger company, career paths become far more linear. It is very
SM: That is the question I was asking you. Are you working with the application layer companies, which are the AgilOnes, the Oversights and another 10 or 20 companies that are leaders in their categories? There is certainly as services business around that.
Sramana: Part of the advantage in vertical search is the ability to zero in on a market segment using a precise taxonomy. Kevin O’Connor: Absolutely. That is why we built a platform that lets us handle virtually any taxonomy. If you look at shopping comparison engines, you will see they are a price comparison engine,
TechCrunch has posted a cool video of a Google glass tour of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Take a look! For this week’s blog posts, click on the paragraph link.
Sramana Mitra: There are plenty of big data application layer companies that specialize in specific verticals. Yieldex, for example, is delivering very specific value in getting more out of the online inventory. DataXu is working on the advertising optimization space. There is Evolven in the IT operations area. There are a bunch of them working
Sramana Mitra: Imagine you are a young entrepreneur today starting a company. Where do you see some open problems that you think are worth working on? Josh Rogers: There is a debate happening on what Hadoop is. I would suggest people to look at it as an operating system. Think about the set of services