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DataTalks.Club

2020-11-21 – 2025-11-28 Podcasts Visit website ↗

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From Full-Time Mom to Head of Data and Cloud - Xia He-Bleinagel

2025-11-28 Listen
podcast_episode
Xia He-Bleinagel (NOW GmbH)

In this talk, Xia He-Bleinagel, Head of Data & Cloud at NOW GmbH, shares her remarkable journey from studying automotive engineering across Europe to leading modern data, cloud, and engineering teams in Germany. We dive into her transition from hands-on engineering to leadership, how she balanced family with career growth, and what it really takes to succeed in today’s cloud, data, and AI job market.

TIMECODES: 00:00 Studying Automotive Engineering Across Europe 08:15 How Andrew Ng Sparked a Machine Learning Journey 11:45 Import–Export Work as an Unexpected Career Boos t17:05 Balancing Family Life with Data Engineering Studies 20:50 From Data Engineer to Head of Data & Cloud 27:46 Building Data Teams & Tackling Tech Debt 30:56 Learning Leadership Through Coaching & Observation 34:17 Management vs. IC: Finding Your Best Fit 38:52 Boosting Developer Productivity with AI Tools 42:47 Succeeding in Germany’s Competitive Data Job Market 46:03 Fast-Track Your Cloud & Data Career 50:03 Mentorship & Supporting Working Moms in Tech 53:03 Cultural & Economic Factors Shaping Women’s Careers 57:13 Top Networking Groups for Women in Data 1:00:13 Turning Domain Expertise into a Data Career Advantage

Connect with Xia- Linkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/in/xia-he-bleinagel-51773585/ - Github - https://github.com/Data-Think-2021 - Website - https://datathinker.de/

Connect with DataTalks.Club: - Join the community - https://datatalks.club/slack.html - Subscribe to our Google calendar to have all our events in your calendar - https://calendar.google.com/calendar/r?cid=ZjhxaWRqbnEwamhzY3A4ODA5azFlZ2hzNjBAZ3JvdXAuY2FsZW5kYXIuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbQ - Check other upcoming events - https://lu.ma/dtc-events - GitHub: https://github.com/DataTalksClub - LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/datatalks-club/ - Twitter - https://twitter.com/DataTalksClub - Website - https://datatalks.club/

Berlin Buzzwords 2025 Conference Interviews

2025-09-12 Listen
podcast_episode
Kacper Łukawski (Qdrant) , Filip Makraduli (Superlinked) , Atita Arora , Brian Goldin (Voyager Search) , André Charton (Kleinanzeigen) , Manish Gill (ClickHouse)

At Berlin Buzzwords, industry voices highlighted how search is evolving with AI and LLMs.

  • Kacper Łukawski (Qdrant) stressed hybrid search (semantic + keyword) as core for RAG systems and promoted efficient embedding models for smaller-scale use.
  • Manish Gill (ClickHouse) discussed auto-scaling OLAP databases on Kubernetes, combining infrastructure and database knowledge.
  • André Charton (Kleinanzeigen) reflected on scaling search for millions of classifieds, moving from Solr/Elasticsearch toward vector search, while returning to a hands-on technical role.
  • Filip Makraduli (Superlinked) introduced a vector-first framework that fuses multiple encoders into one representation for nuanced e-commerce and recommendation search.
  • Brian Goldin (Voyager Search) emphasized spatial context in retrieval, combining geospatial data with AI enrichment to add the “where” to search.
  • Atita Arora (Voyager Search) highlighted geospatial AI models, the renewed importance of retrieval in RAG, and the cautious but promising rise of AI agents.

Together, their perspectives show a common thread: search is regaining center stage in AI—scaling, hybridization, multimodality, and domain-specific enrichment are shaping the next generation of retrieval systems.

Kacper Łukawski Senior Developer Advocate at Qdrant, he educates users on vector and hybrid search. He highlighted Qdrant’s support for dense and sparse vectors, the role of search with LLMs, and his interest in cost-effective models like static embeddings for smaller companies and edge apps. Connect: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kacperlukawski/

Manish Gill
Engineering Manager at ClickHouse, he spoke about running ClickHouse on Kubernetes, tackling auto-scaling and stateful sets. His team focuses on making ClickHouse scale automatically in the cloud. He credited its speed to careful engineering and reflected on the shift from IC to manager.
Connect: https://www.linkedin.com/in/manishgill/

André Charton
Head of Search at Kleinanzeigen, he discussed shaping the company’s search tech—moving from Solr to Elasticsearch and now vector search with Vespa. Kleinanzeigen handles 60M items, 1M new listings daily, and 50k requests/sec. André explained his career shift back to hands-on engineering.
Connect: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrecharton/

Filip Makraduli
Founding ML DevRel engineer at Superlinked, an open-source framework for AI search and recommendations. Its vector-first approach fuses multiple encoders (text, images, structured fields) into composite vectors for single-shot retrieval. His Berlin Buzzwords demo showed e-commerce search with natural-language queries and filters.
Connect: https://www.linkedin.com/in/filipmakraduli/

Brian Goldin
Founder and CEO of Voyager Search, which began with geospatial search and expanded into documents and metadata enrichment. Voyager indexes spatial data and enriches pipelines with NLP, OCR, and AI models to detect entities like oil spills or windmills. He stressed adding spatial context (“the where”) as critical for search and highlighted Voyager’s 12 years of enterprise experience.
Connect: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brian-goldin-04170a1/

Atita Arora
Director of AI at Voyager Search, with nearly 20 years in retrieval systems, now focused on geospatial AI for Earth observation data. At Berlin Buzzwords she hosted sessions, attended talks on Lucene, GPUs, and Solr, and emphasized retrieval quality in RAG systems. She is cautiously optimistic about AI agents and values the event as both learning hub and professional reunion.
Connect: https://www.linkedin.com/in/atitaarora/

From Supply Chain Management to Digital Warehousing and FinOps - Eddy Zulkifly

2025-04-04 Listen
podcast_episode
Eddy Zulkifly (Kinaxis)

In this podcast episode, we talked with Eddy Zulkifly about From Supply Chain Management to Digital Warehousing and FinOps

About the Speaker: Eddy Zulkifly is a Staff Data Engineer at Kinaxis, building robust data platforms across Google Cloud, Azure, and AWS. With a decade of experience in data, he actively shares his expertise as a Mentor on ADPList and Teaching Assistant at Uplimit. Previously, he was a Senior Data Engineer at Home Depot, specializing in e-commerce and supply chain analytics. Currently pursuing a Master’s in Analytics at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Eddy is also passionate about open-source data projects and enjoys watching/exploring the analytics behind the Fantasy Premier League.

In this episode, we dive into the world of data engineering and FinOps with Eddy Zulkifly, Staff Data Engineer at Kinaxis. Eddy shares his unconventional career journey—from optimizing physical warehouses with Excel to building digital data platforms in the cloud.

🕒 TIMECODES 0:00 Eddy’s career journey: From supply chain to data engineering 8:18 Tools & learning: Excel, Docker, and transitioning to data engineering 21:57 Physical vs. digital warehousing: Analogies and key differences 31:40 Introduction to FinOps: Cloud cost optimization and vendor negotiations 40:18 Resources for FinOps: Certifications and the FinOps Foundation 45:12 Standardizing cloud cost reporting across AWS/GCP/Azure 50:04 Eddy’s master’s degree and closing thoughts

🔗 CONNECT WITH EDDY Twitter - https://x.com/eddarief Linkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/in/eddyzulkifly/ Github: https://github.com/eyzyly/eyzyly ADPList: https://adplist.org/mentors/eddy-zulkifly

🔗 CONNECT WITH DataTalksClub Join the community - https://datatalks.club/slack.html Subscribe to our Google calendar to have all our events in your calendar - https://calendar.google.com/calendar/r?cid=ZjhxaWRqbnEwamhzY3A4ODA5azFlZ2hzNjBAZ3JvdXAuY2FsZW5kYXIuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbQ

Check other upcoming events - https://lu.ma/dtc-events LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/datatalks-club/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/DataTalksClub Website - https://datatalks.club/

MLOps in Corporations and Startups - Nemanja Radojkovic

2025-03-14 Listen
podcast_episode

In this podcast episode, we talked with Nemanja Radojkovic about MLOps in Corporations and Startups.

About the Speaker: Nemanja Radojkovic is Senior Machine Learning Engineer at Euroclear.

In this event,we’re diving into the world of MLOps, comparing life in startups versus big corporations. Joining us again is Nemanja, a seasoned machine learning engineer with experience spanning Fortune 500 companies and agile startups. We explore the challenges of scaling MLOps on a shoestring budget, the trade-offs between corporate stability and startup agility, and practical advice for engineers deciding between these two career paths. Whether you’re navigating legacy frameworks or experimenting with cutting-edge tools.

1:00 MLOps in corporations versus startups 6:03 The agility and pace of startups 7:54 MLOps on a shoestring budget 12:54 Cloud solutions for startups 15:06 Challenges of cloud complexity versus on-premise 19:19 Selecting tools and avoiding vendor lock-in 22:22 Choosing between a startup and a corporation 27:30 Flexibility and risks in startups 29:37 Bureaucracy and processes in corporations 33:17 The role of frameworks in corporations 34:32 Advantages of large teams in corporations 40:01 Challenges of technical debt in startups 43:12 Career advice for junior data scientists 44:10 Tools and frameworks for MLOps projects 49:00 Balancing new and old technologies in skill development 55:43 Data engineering challenges and reliability in LLMs 57:09 On-premise vs. cloud solutions in data-sensitive industries 59:29 Alternatives like Dask for distributed systems

🔗 CONNECT WITH NEMANJA LinkedIn -   / radojkovic   Github - https://github.com/baskervilski

🔗 CONNECT WITH DataTalksClub Join the community - https://datatalks.club/slack.html Subscribe to our Google calendar to have all our events in your calendar - https://calendar.google.com/calendar/... Check other upcoming events - https://lu.ma/dtc-events  LinkedIn -   / datatalks-club    Twitter -   / datatalksclub    Website - https://datatalks.club/ 

Redefining AI Infrastructure: Open-Source, Chips, and the Future Beyond Kubernetes – Andrey Cheptsov

2025-01-31 Listen
podcast_episode
Andrey Cheptsov (dstack)

In this podcast episode, we talked with Andrey Cheptsov about ​The future of AI infrastructure.

About the Speaker: Andrey Cheptsov is the founder and CEO of dstack, an open-source alternative to Kubernetes and Slurm, built to simplify the orchestration of AI infrastructure. Before dstack, Andrey worked at JetBrains for over a decade helping different teams make the best developer tools. During the event, the guest, Andrey Cheptsov, founder and CEO of dstack, discussed the complexities of AI infrastructure. We explore topics like the challenges of using Kubernetes for AI workloads, the need to rethink container orchestration, and the future of hybrid and cloud-only infrastructures. Andrey also shares insights into the role of on-premise and bare-metal solutions, edge computing, and federated learning. 00:00 Andrey's Career Journey: From JetBrains to DStack 5:00 The Motivation Behind DStack 7:00 Challenges in Machine Learning Infrastructure 10:00 Transitioning from Cloud to On-Prem Solutions 14:30 Reflections on OpenAI's Evolution 17:30 Open Source vs Proprietary Models: A Balanced Perspective 21:01 Monolithic vs. Decentralized AI businesses 22:05 The role of privacy and control in AI for industries like banking and healthcare 30:00 Challenges in training large AI models: GPUs and distributed systems 37:03 DeepSpeed's efficient training approach vs. brute force methods 39:00 Challenges for small and medium businesses: hosting and fine-tuning models 47:01 Managing Kubernetes challenges for AI teams 52:00 Hybrid vs. cloud-only infrastructure 56:03 On-premise vs. bare-metal solutions 58:05 Exploring edge computing and its challenges

🔗 CONNECT WITH ANDREY CHEPTSOV Twitter -  / andrey_cheptsov   Linkedin -  / andrey-cheptsov   GitHub - https://github.com/dstackai/dstack/ Website - https://dstack.ai/

🔗 CONNECT WITH DataTalksClub Join DataTalks.Club:⁠⁠⁠https://datatalks.club/slack.html⁠⁠⁠ Our events:⁠⁠⁠https://datatalks.club/events.html⁠⁠⁠ Datalike Substack -⁠⁠⁠https://datalike.substack.com/⁠⁠⁠ LinkedIn:⁠⁠⁠  / datatalks-club  ⁠

DataOps, Observability, and The Cure for Data Team Blues - Christopher Bergh

2024-08-15 Listen
podcast_episode
Johanna Berer (DataTalks.Club) , Christopher Bergh (DataKitchen)

0:00

hi everyone Welcome to our event this event is brought to you by data dos club which is a community of people who love

0:06

data and we have weekly events and today one is one of such events and I guess we

0:12

are also a community of people who like to wake up early if you're from the states right Christopher or maybe not so

0:19

much because this is the time we usually have uh uh our events uh for our guests

0:27

and presenters from the states we usually do it in the evening of Berlin time but yes unfortunately it kind of

0:34

slipped my mind but anyways we have a lot of events you can check them in the

0:41

description like there's a link um I don't think there are a lot of them right now on that link but we will be

0:48

adding more and more I think we have like five or six uh interviews scheduled so um keep an eye on that do not forget

0:56

to subscribe to our YouTube channel this way you will get notified about all our future streams that will be as awesome

1:02

as the one today and of course very important do not forget to join our community where you can hang out with

1:09

other data enthusiasts during today's interview you can ask any question there's a pin Link in live chat so click

1:18

on that link ask your question and we will be covering these questions during the interview now I will stop sharing my

1:27

screen and uh there is there's a a message in uh and Christopher is from

1:34

you so we actually have this on YouTube but so they have not seen what you wrote

1:39

but there is a message from to anyone who's watching this right now from Christopher saying hello everyone can I

1:46

call you Chris or you okay I should go I should uh I should look on YouTube then okay yeah but anyways I'll you don't

1:53

need like you we'll need to focus on answering questions and I'll keep an eye

1:58

I'll be keeping an eye on all the question questions so um

2:04

yeah if you're ready we can start I'm ready yeah and you prefer Christopher

2:10

not Chris right Chris is fine Chris is fine it's a bit shorter um

2:18

okay so this week we'll talk about data Ops again maybe it's a tradition that we talk about data Ops every like once per

2:25

year but we actually skipped one year so because we did not have we haven't had

2:31

Chris for some time so today we have a very special guest Christopher Christopher is the co-founder CEO and

2:37

head chef or hat cook at data kitchen with 25 years of experience maybe this

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is outdated uh cuz probably now you have more and maybe you stopped counting I

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don't know but like with tons of years of experience in analytics and software engineering Christopher is known as the

2:55

co-author of the data Ops cookbook and data Ops Manifesto and it's not the

3:00

first time we have Christopher here on the podcast we interviewed him two years ago also about data Ops and this one

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will be about data hops so we'll catch up and see what actually changed in in

3:13

these two years and yeah so welcome to the interview well thank you for having

3:19

me I'm I'm happy to be here and talking all things related to data Ops and why

3:24

why why bother with data Ops and happy to talk about the company or or what's changed

3:30

excited yeah so let's dive in so the questions for today's interview are prepared by Johanna berer as always

3:37

thanks Johanna for your help so before we start with our main topic for today

3:42

data Ops uh let's start with your ground can you tell us about your career Journey so far and also for those who

3:50

have not heard have not listened to the previous podcast maybe you can um talk

3:55

about yourself and also for those who did listen to the previous you can also maybe give a summary of what has changed

4:03

in the last two years so we'll do yeah so um my name is Chris so I guess I'm

4:09

a sort of an engineer so I spent about the first 15 years of my career in

4:15

software sort of working and building some AI systems some non- AI systems uh

4:21

at uh Us's NASA and MIT linol lab and then some startups and then um

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Microsoft and then about 2005 I got I got the data bug uh I think you know my

4:35

kids were small and I thought oh this data thing was easy and I'd be able to go home uh for dinner at 5 and life

4:41

would be fine um because I was a big you started your own company right and uh it didn't work out that way

4:50

and um and what was interesting is is for me it the problem wasn't doing the

4:57

data like I we had smart people who did data science and data engineering the act of creating things it was like the

5:04

systems around the data that were hard um things it was really hard to not have

5:11

errors in production and I would sort of driving to work and I had a Blackberry at the time and I would not look at my

5:18

Blackberry all all morning I had this long drive to work and I'd sit in the parking lot and take a deep breath and

5:24

look at my Blackberry and go uh oh is there going to be any problems today and I'd be and if there wasn't I'd walk and

5:30

very happy um and if there was I'd have to like rce myself um and you know and

5:36

then the second problem is the team I worked for we just couldn't go fast enough the customers were super

5:42

demanding they didn't care they all they always thought things should be faster and we are always behind and so um how

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do you you know how do you live in that world where things are breaking left and right you're terrified of making errors

5:57

um and then second you just can't go fast enough um and it's preh Hadoop era

6:02

right it's like before all this big data Tech yeah before this was we were using

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uh SQL Server um and we actually you know we had smart people so we we we

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built an engine in SQL Server that made SQL Server a column or

6:20

database so we built a column or database inside of SQL Server um so uh

6:26

in order to make certain things fast and and uh yeah it was it was really uh it's not

6:33

bad I mean the principles are the same right before Hadoop it's it's still a database there's still indexes there's

6:38

still queries um things like that we we uh at the time uh you would use olap

6:43

engines we didn't use those but you those reports you know are for models it's it's not that different um you know

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we had a rack of servers instead of the cloud um so yeah and I think so what what I

6:57

took from that was uh it's just hard to run a team of people to do do data and analytics and it's not

7:05

really I I took it from a manager perspective I started to read Deming and

7:11

think about the work that we do as a factory you know and in a factory that produces insight and not automobiles um

7:18

and so how do you run that factory so it produces things that are good of good

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quality and then second since I had come from software I've been very influenced

7:29

by by the devops movement how you automate deployment how you run in an agile way how you

7:35

produce um how you how you change things quickly and how you innovate and so

7:41

those two things of like running you know running a really good solid production line that has very low errors

7:47

um and then second changing that production line at at very very often they're kind of opposite right um and so

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how do you how do you as a manager how do you technically approach that and

8:00

then um 10 years ago when we started data kitchen um we've always been a profitable company and so we started off

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uh with some customers we started building some software and realized that we couldn't work any other way and that

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the way we work wasn't understood by a lot of people so we had to write a book and a Manifesto to kind of share our our

8:21

methods and then so yeah we've been in so we've been in business now about a little over 10

8:28

years oh that's cool and uh like what

8:33

uh so let's talk about dat offs and you mentioned devops and how you were inspired by that and by the way like do

8:41

you remember roughly when devops as I think started to appear like when did people start calling these principles

8:49

and like tools around them as de yeah so agile Manifesto well first of all the I

8:57

mean I had a boss in 1990 at Nasa who had this idea build a

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little test a little learn a lot right that was his Mantra and then which made

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made a lot of sense um and so and then the sort of agile software Manifesto

9:14

came out which is very similar in 2001 and then um the sort of first real

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devops was a guy at Twitter started to do automat automated deployment you know

9:27

push a button and that was like 200 Nish and so the first I think devops

9:33

Meetup was around then so it's it's it's been 15 years I guess 6 like I was

9:39

trying to so I started my career in 2010 so I my first job was a Java

9:44

developer and like I remember for some things like we would just uh SFTP to the

9:52

machine and then put the jar archive there and then like keep our fingers crossed that it doesn't break uh uh like

10:00

it was not really the I wouldn't call it this way right you were deploying you

10:06

had a Dey process I put it yeah

10:11

right was that so that was documented too it was like put the jar on production cross your

10:17

fingers I think there was uh like a page on uh some internal Viki uh yeah that

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describes like with passwords and don't like what you should do yeah that was and and I think what's interesting is

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why that changed right and and we laugh at it now but that was why didn't you

10:38

invest in automating deployment or a whole bunch of automated regression

10:44

tests right that would run because I think in software now that would be rare

10:49

that people wouldn't use C CD they wouldn't have some automated tests you know functional

10:56

regression tests that would be the

Navigating Career Changes in Machine Learning - Chris Szafranek

2023-02-03 Listen
podcast_episode

We talked about

Chris’s background Switching careers multiple times Freedom at companies Chris’s role as an internal consultant Chris’s sabbatical ChatGPT How being a generalist helped Chris in his career The cons of being a generalist and the importance of T-shaped expertise The importance of learning things you’re interested in Tips to enjoy learning new things Recruiting generalists The job market for generalists vs for specialists Narrowing down your interests Chris’s book recommendations

Links:

Lex Fridman: science, philosophy, media, AI (especially earlier episodes): https://www.youtube.com/lexfridman Andrej Karpathy, former Senior Director of AI at Tesla, who's now focused on teaching and sharing his knowledge: https://www.youtube.com/@AndrejKarpathy Beautifully done videos on engineering of things in the real world: https://www.youtube.com/@RealEngineering Chris' website: https://szafranek.net/ Zalando Tech Radar: https://opensource.zalando.com/tech-radar/ Modal Labs, new way of deploying code to the cloud, also useful for testing ML code on GPUs: https://modal.com Excellent Twitter account to follow to learn more about prompt engineering for ChatGPT: https://twitter.com/goodside Image prompts for Midjourney: https://twitter.com/GuyP Machine Learning Workflows in Production - Krzysztof Szafanek: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CO4Gqd95j6k From Data Science to DataOps: https://datatalks.club/podcast/s11e03-from-data-science-to-dataops.html

Free data engineering course: https://github.com/DataTalksClub/data-engineering-zoomcamp

Join DataTalks.Club: https://datatalks.club/slack.html

Our events: https://datatalks.club/events.html

Teaching and Mentoring in Data Analytics - Irina Brudaru

2022-12-02 Listen
podcast_episode
Irina Brudaru (AI Guild)

We talked about:

Irina’s background Irina as a mentor Designing curriculum and program management at AI Guild Other things Irina taught at AI Guild Why Irina likes teaching Students’ reluctance to learn cloud Irina as a manager Cohort analysis in a nutshell How Irina started teaching formally Irina’s diversity project in the works How DataTalks.Club can attract more female students to the Zoomcamps How to get technical feedback at work Antipatterns and overrated/overhyped topics in data analytics Advice for young women who want to get into data science/engineering Finding Irina online Fundamentals for data analysts Suggestions for DataTalks.club collaborations Conclusions

Links:

LinkedIn Account: https://www.linkedin.com/in/irinabrudaru/

ML Zoomcamp: https://github.com/alexeygrigorev/mlbookcamp-code/tree/master/course-zoomcamp

Join DataTalks.Club: https://datatalks.club/slack.html

Our events: https://datatalks.club/events.html

From Academia to Data Analytics and Engineering - Gloria Quiceno

2022-05-20 Listen
podcast_episode

We talked about: 

Gloria’s background Working with MATLAB, R, C, Python, and SQL Working at ICE Job hunting after the bootcamp Data engineering vs Data science Using Docker Keeping track of job applications, employers and questions Challenges during the job search and transition Concerns over data privacy Challenges with salary negotiation The importance of career coaching and support Skills learned at Spiced Retrospective on Gloria’s transition to data and advice Top skills that helped Gloria get the job Thoughts on cloud platforms Thoughts on bootcamps and courses Spiced graduation project Standing out in a sea of applicants The cohorts at Spiced Conclusion

Links:

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gloria-quiceno/ Github: https://github.com/gdq12

MLOps Zoomcamp: https://github.com/DataTalksClub/mlops-zoomcamp

Join DataTalks.Club: https://datatalks.club/slack.html

Our events: https://datatalks.club/events.html

Recruiting Data Engineers - Nicolas Rassam

2022-04-29 Listen
podcast_episode
Nicolas Rassam (Onfido)

We talked about: 

Nicolas’ background The tech talent market in different countries Hiring data scientists vs data engineers A spike in interest for data engineering roles The importance of recruiters having  technical knowledge The main challenges of hiring data engineers The difference in hiring junior, mid, and senior level data engineers Things recruiters look for in people who switch to a data engineering role The importance of knowing cloud tools The importance of knowing infrastructure tools Preparing for the interview The importance of a formal education The importance having a project portfolio How your current domain influence the interview Conclusion

Links: 

Nicolas' Twitter: https://twitter.com/n_rassam  Nicolas' LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicolasrassam/  Onfido is hiring: https://onfido.com/engineering-technology/  Interview with Alicja about recruiting data scientists: https://datatalks.club/podcast/s07e02-recruiting-data-professionals.html Webinar "Getting a Data Engineering Job" with Jeff Katz: https://eventbrite.com/e/310270877547

Join DataTalks.Club: https://datatalks.club/slack.html

Our events: https://datatalks.club/events.html

From Data Science to Data Engineering - Ellen König

2022-03-11 Listen
podcast_episode

We talked about:

Ellen’s background Why Ellen switched from data science to data engineering The overlap between data science and data engineering Skills to learn and improve for data engineering Ways to pick up and improve skills (advice for making the transition) What makes a data engineering course “good” Languages to know for data engineering The easiest part of transitioning into data engineering The hardest part of transitioning into data engineering Common data engineering team distributions People who are both data scientists and data engineers Pet projects and other ways to pick up development skills Dealing with cloud processing costs (alerts, billing reports, trial periods) Advice for getting into entry level positions Which cloud platform should data engineers learn?

Links:

Twitter: https://twitter.com/ellen_koenig LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ellenkoenig/

Join DataTalks.Club: https://datatalks.club/slack.html

Our events: https://datatalks.club/events.html

Build Your Own Data Pipeline - Andreas Kretz

2021-07-02 Listen
podcast_episode

We talked about:

Andreas’s background Why data engineering is becoming more popular Who to hire first – a data engineer or a data scientist? How can I, as a data scientist, learn to build pipelines? Don’t use too many tools What is a data pipeline and why do we need it? What is ingestion? Can just one person build a data pipeline? Approaches to building data pipelines for data scientists Processing frameworks Common setup for data pipelines — car price prediction Productionizing the model with the help of a data pipeline Scheduling Orchestration Start simple Learning DevOps to implement data pipelines How to choose the right tool Are Hadoop, Docker, Cloud necessary for a first job/internship? Is Hadoop still relevant or necessary? Data engineering academy How to pick up Cloud skills Avoid huge datasets when learning Convincing your employer to do data science How to find Andreas

Links:

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andreas-kretz Data engieering cookbook: https://cookbook.learndataengineering.com/ Course: https://learndataengineering.com/

Join DataTalks.Club: https://datatalks.club/slack.html

Our events: https://datatalks.club/events.html

Data Observability - Barr Moses

2021-04-23 Listen
podcast_episode
Barr Moses (Monte Carlo)

We covered:

Barr’s background Market gaps in data reliability Observability in engineering Data downtime Data quality problems and the five pillars of data observability Example: job failing because of a schema change Three pillars of observability (good pipelines and bad data) Observability vs monitoring Finding the root cause Who is accountable for data quality? (the RACI framework) Service level agreements Inferring the SLAs from the historical data Implementing data observability Data downtime maturity curve Monte carlo: data observability solution Open source tools Test-driven development for data Is data observability cloud agnostic? Centralizing data observability Detecting downstream and upstream data usage Getting bad data vs getting unusual data

Links:

Learn more about Monte Carlo: https://www.montecarlodata.com/ The Data Engineer's Guide to Root Cause Analysis: https://www.montecarlodata.com/the-data-engineers-guide-to-root-cause-analysis/ Why You Need to Set SLAs for Your Data Pipelines: https://www.montecarlodata.com/how-to-make-your-data-pipelines-more-reliable-with-slas/ Data Observability: The Next Frontier of Data Engineering: https://www.montecarlodata.com/data-observability-the-next-frontier-of-data-engineering/ To get in touch with Barr, ping her in the DataTalks.Club group or use [email protected]

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The ABC’s of Data Science - Danny Ma

2021-02-26 Listen
podcast_episode

Did you know that there are 3 types different types of data scientists? A for analyst, B for builder, and C for consultant - we discuss the key differences between each one and some learning strategies you can use to become A, B, or C.

We talked about:

Inspirations for memes  Danny's background and career journey The ABCs of data science - the story behind the idea Data scientist type A - Analyst  Skills, responsibilities, and background for type A Transitioning from data analytics to type A data scientist (that's the path Danny took) How can we become more curious? Data scientist B - Builder  Responsibilities and background for type B Transitioning from type A to type B Most important skills for type B Why you have to learn more about cloud  Data scientist type C - consultant Skills, responsibilities, and background for type C Growing into the C type Ideal data science team Important business metrics Getting a job - easier as type A or type B? Looking for a job without experience Two approaches for job search: "apply everywhere" and "apply nowhere" Are bootcamps useful? Learning path to becoming a data scientist Danny's data apprenticeship program and "Serious SQL" course  Why SQL is the most important skill R vs Python Importance of Masters and PhD

Links:

Danny's profile on LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/datawithdanny Danny's course: https://datawithdanny.com/ Trailer: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/datawithdanny_datascientist-data-activity-6767988552811847680-GzUK/ Technical debt paper: https://proceedings.neurips.cc/paper/2015/hash/86df7dcfd896fcaf2674f757a2463eba-Abstract.html

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The Rise of MLOps - Theofilos Papapanagiotou

2021-02-05 Listen
podcast_episode

We covered:

What is MLOps The difference between MLOps and ML Engineering Getting into MLOps Kubeflow and its components, ML Platforms Learning Kubeflow DataOps 

And other things

Links:

Microsoft MLOps maturity model: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/architecture/example-scenario/mlops/mlops-maturity-model Google MLOps maturity levels: https://cloud.google.com/solutions/machine-learning/mlops-continuous-delivery-and-automation-pipelines-in-machine-learning MLOps roadmap 2020-2025: https://github.com/cdfoundation/sig-mlops/blob/master/roadmap/2020/MLOpsRoadmap2020.md Kubeflow website: https://www.kubeflow.org/ TFX Paper: https://research.google/pubs/pub46484/

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