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posted by LaminatorX on Sunday October 19 2014, @02:43AM   Printer-friendly
from the Mathamagician-of-Digitopolis dept.

Jim Edwards writes at Business Insider that Google is so large and has such a massive need for talent that if you have the right skills, Google is really enthusiastic to hear from you - especially if you know how to use MatLab, a fourth-generation programming language that allows matrix manipulations, plotting of functions and data, implementation of algorithms, creation of user interfaces, and interfacing with programs written in other languages, including C, C++, Java, Fortran and Python. The key is that data is produced visually or graphically, rather than in a spreadsheet.

According to Jonathan Rosenberg, Google's former senior vice president for product management, being a master of statistics is probably your best way into Google right now and if you want to work at Google, make sure you can use MatLab. Big data — how to create it, manipulate it, and put it to good use — is one of those areas in which Google is really enthusiastic about. The sexy job in the next ten years will be statisticians. When every business has free and ubiquitous data, the ability to understand it and extract value from it becomes the complimentary scarce factor. It leads to intelligence, and the intelligent business is the successful business, regardless of its size. Rosenberg says that "My quote about statistics that I didn't use [last night] but often do is, 'Data is the sword of the 21st century, those who wield it [are] the samurai.'"

 
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  • (Score: 2) by PizzaRollPlinkett on Sunday October 19 2014, @01:38PM

    by PizzaRollPlinkett (4512) on Sunday October 19 2014, @01:38PM (#107543)

    Query: Help me out, if anyone is at Google reading this... Does Google really want trained MatLab users, or do they just want anyone who knows big-data statistics? Is Google really investing in copies of MatLab, or do they use Python, R, and Octave? If so, it would go against their entire corporate history of exploiting open source.

    Rumination: Funny that just yesterday, Hadoop was the big thing. Now it's MatLab? Before that it was mobile development, and now that's run its course. There's a new big thing every couple of years. How can anyone have a career when things go hot and cold so fast? And you'd think Google of all people would know to draft on potential, and train the best in whatever the flavor of the month is.

    (Interrogation: What robot begins his sentences with a word describing their intent? You should know that, meatbag, if you read this web zone.)

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