Back to Data Manipulation at Scale: Systems and Algorithms
University of Washington

Data Manipulation at Scale: Systems and Algorithms

Data analysis has replaced data acquisition as the bottleneck to evidence-based decision making --- we are drowning in it. Extracting knowledge from large, heterogeneous, and noisy datasets requires not only powerful computing resources, but the programming abstractions to use them effectively. The abstractions that emerged in the last decade blend ideas from parallel databases, distributed systems, and programming languages to create a new class of scalable data analytics platforms that form the foundation for data science at realistic scales. In this course, you will learn the landscape of relevant systems, the principles on which they rely, their tradeoffs, and how to evaluate their utility against your requirements. You will learn how practical systems were derived from the frontier of research in computer science and what systems are coming on the horizon. Cloud computing, SQL and NoSQL databases, MapReduce and the ecosystem it spawned, Spark and its contemporaries, and specialized systems for graphs and arrays will be covered. You will also learn the history and context of data science, the skills, challenges, and methodologies the term implies, and how to structure a data science project. At the end of this course, you will be able to: Learning Goals: 1. Describe common patterns, challenges, and approaches associated with data science projects, and what makes them different from projects in related fields. 2. Identify and use the programming models associated with scalable data manipulation, including relational algebra, mapreduce, and other data flow models. 3. Use database technology adapted for large-scale analytics, including the concepts driving parallel databases, parallel query processing, and in-database analytics 4. Evaluate key-value stores and NoSQL systems, describe their tradeoffs with comparable systems, the details of important examples in the space, and future trends. 5. “Think” in MapReduce to effectively write algorithms for systems including Hadoop and Spark. You will understand their limitations, design details, their relationship to databases, and their associated ecosystem of algorithms, extensions, and languages. write programs in Spark 6. Describe the landscape of specialized Big Data systems for graphs, arrays, and streams

Status: Graph Theory
Status: Apache Hadoop
Course20 hours

Featured reviews

DG

4.0Reviewed Jan 1, 2016

Last week of the course is too much information and without any assignments it kind of doesn't make much sense and it doesn't stick.

AA

4.0Reviewed Dec 2, 2015

Very good course, but lectures could be more tuned onto the home assignments. A lot of independent work for me at least. Teacher is very good.

WE

4.0Reviewed Oct 3, 2016

Definitely need some background in R or Python and the lectures are a bit old. Seem to be from around 2013 when this first came out but most of the info is still relevant.

RH

5.0Reviewed Jun 30, 2019

A great way to start, and become familiar with the nature, requirements & analytics of today's data.

AD

4.0Reviewed Jul 19, 2020

Well structured and nice overview of data manipulation. But the assignments should really be updated in order to use python 3.x instead of 2.7, which is not maintained anymore...

TG

4.0Reviewed May 12, 2016

covers a lot of ground quickly, but you still get a good understanding of the underlying theory or technologies

MM

5.0Reviewed Jan 17, 2016

The course is very coherent and comprehensive. It covers only important aspects of the fields. Also, the exercises are very well prepared.

SK

4.0Reviewed Jan 11, 2016

Its pretty decent. I liked the assignments. However there were some typos in the lecture slides and also the grader output is not very friendly.

AK

5.0Reviewed Feb 4, 2018

A very good introduction to skills needed for applying data science ideas on large scale data problems.

MS

4.0Reviewed Jan 4, 2016

Very broad and instructive course with a good level of theory, many practical examples. Good teaching.Some nice assignments but a lake of assignement for the 4th week I recommand this course

LG

5.0Reviewed Jun 19, 2017

Comprehensive and clear explanation of theory and interlinks of the up-to-date tools, languages, tendencies. Kudos and thanks to Bill Howe.Highly recommended.

YH

4.0Reviewed Nov 24, 2018

It's pretty tough in assignments especially when there are mistakes in the given description, but I do learn the basic concepts of relational algorithm and MapReduce from them.

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