1.510,00 EGP
From the brand
Databases, data science & more
Sharing the knowledge of experts
O’Reilly’s mission is to change the world by sharing the knowledge of innovators. For over 40 years, we’ve inspired companies and individuals to do new things (and do them better) by providing the skills and understanding that are necessary for success.
Our customers are hungry to build the innovations that propel the world forward. And we help them do just that.
Publisher : O’Reilly Media; 1st edition (August 25, 2009)
Language : English
Paperback : 382 pages
ISBN-10 : 0596157118
ISBN-13 : 978-0596157111
Item Weight : 1.72 pounds
Dimensions : 7 x 0.76 x 9.19 inches
Description
Price: $15.10
(as of Sep 22,2024 08:35:15 UTC – Details)
From the brand
Databases, data science & more
Sharing the knowledge of experts
O’Reilly’s mission is to change the world by sharing the knowledge of innovators. For over 40 years, we’ve inspired companies and individuals to do new things (and do them better) by providing the skills and understanding that are necessary for success.
Our customers are hungry to build the innovations that propel the world forward. And we help them do just that.
Publisher : O’Reilly Media; 1st edition (August 25, 2009)
Language : English
Paperback : 382 pages
ISBN-10 : 0596157118
ISBN-13 : 978-0596157111
Item Weight : 1.72 pounds
Dimensions : 7 x 0.76 x 9.19 inches
Customers say
Customers find the content interesting and informative. They appreciate the true beauty of the data and brilliant discussions. However, some customers report issues with the publishing quality and production quality.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Good content, lousy print quality
While the content of this book is interesting and informative, I am struck with what lousy print quality it is. For a $40+ book you would expect a hardback, or at least a paperback with thick stock pages and color plates that actually look good. It was hard for me to appreciate the content when it felt like each page (or the cover) was going to rip because they were such thin and poor quality stock. The color plates are washed out and pixelated. I was expecting the same high quality we got with “Beautiful Code”. O’Reilly usually does a much better job. That said, if these types of aesthetics don’t bother you (although with a title like “Beautiful Data” I would question that it wouldn’t) the book itself is an interesting read.
Occasionally brilliant discussions on data and what data can and cannot do
“Beautiful Data” is a collection of essays on data; how people have transformed it, worked within its confines, and offers a glimpse of where we might go. Many of the essays are wonderful snippets into how some people perceive data while others fall flat. Overall its a mostly enjoyable read that helps open up your mind to new potentials.First a disclaimer; I am not a data person. However I’ve been involved, fairly heavily, in the data field. In the parlance of the world, I’m a back end person. However I’m always trying to think about the front end; how will things be used and what information can we gleen from the system (or systems). With that in mind, this is a book that speaks to me – its all about the front end.Some of the best essays in the book would be:The first essay by Nathan Yau he talks very much about user created data and personal databases (knowledge bases). What’s exciting here is how he takes data already out there, data you have provided, and creates something useful and yes, beautiful, out of it.The Second essay by Follett and Holm really gets down to how if you want the data, you need to present it in a way that brings people into the process. As someone who has a slight crush on the statistics and practices in polling (and designing poll questions) this essay really was a fascinating read.The third essay by Hughes detailed how he handled images on the Mars mission. There wasn’t anything here that wasn’t done in embedded systems 15 years ago; still it was a great walk down memory lane since I used to program embedded imaging systems.Chapter 4 really hit home PNUTShell is cloud storage and data processing in real time. This really is the stuff of the future.Chapter 5 by Jeff Hammerbacher really didn’t offer too many insights but his writing style is fluid and fun plus he offered a glimpse into how Facebook grew.We then have the slow section of the book – Chapter 8 on distributed social data had promise but it read more like a company white page than an interesting article. Same with Chapter 12 […].Thankfully chapter 10 on Radiohead’s “House of Cards” video was there – and here we are presented with true beauty in data – beautiful enough to create a music video out of!I’m still on the fence with Chapter 13 – What Data Doesn’t Do. It was an interesting chapter but it felt both too long and too short at the same time. I almost felt that in the author, Coco Krumme, were to write a book on this topic, I’d want to read it. However her essay was not the right vehicle.Finally, the last chapter – “Connecting Data” was a truly inspiring piece; one that offers up paths for the future. I am sure a few start ups will form over the questions posed in by Segaran (or maybe the questions to the questions).Overall there were enough strengths to overcome the weak chapters. My main complaints are trivial; poor binding of the book, too many PhD candidate papers and not enough from out in the trenches. I’d love to see something from Stonebreaker here; its hard to talk about beautiful data and not have him in it. Or forget […]and talk about many eyes. Or map reduce. Still, “Beautiful Data” succeeds. It opened up my mind to different possibilities for data representation and usage.
great compendium
insightful, case-study descriptions from leading voices in area. gives real sense of how and what data science is about. foundation book. incredible used book price – even sweeter.
poor publishing quality
It has couple of nice articles but the quality of publishing is extremely poor
$35 for a “Beautiful _____” book printed in black and white?
So, in full disclosure I have only read one chapter thus far (the book arrived this afternoon). This review is primarily about the binding and production quality and not the content, which I found to be interesting (hence any stars at all).I find it completely atrocious that this book was printed in grayscale. Several of the authors’ graphics (the “beautiful” purpose for the book’s existence) make absolutely no sense when printed in low-resolution grayscale.Come on, O’Reilly. I know you want to keep Sunlight Foundation and Creative Commons (the royalty beneficiaries) in business, but I would have paid an extra $5-10 for this book if I knew that small amount could cover this book’s share of a high-res color production run.Thus far it has been a big disappointment after reading Beautiful Visualization, Programming Collective Intelligence (by the editor), and Programming the Semantic Web (also by the editor). Luckily, I have 45 days to read this in color on Safari!
Hit & Miss
I’m glad I picked it up for the essays that I found interesting. However, it wasn’t exactly what I was expecting, which was more examples of data storage solutions. Some of the essays were more well written than others.
Nice example on how to get the best out of data analysis
This book is very entertaining if you are interested in data analysis, mining and visualization. It is not too technical. It is more a top view of some case studies in data analysis / mining.Since this is a collection of “stories” some of them are very interesting e.g. about Census data, other were in my opinion somehow less relevant.It is definitely inspirational and it is a good guide to see what other people were able to achieve through data mining. You might find that somebody already solved a problem similar to yours.
Beautiful delight!
Segeran & Hammerbacher (et. al.) offer an insight on data works where inspiration may find a way. Hopefully any reader may become an author for a further version.
eine anspruchsvolle umfassende Broschüre weit jenseits von “dummies” …damit kann man echt arbeiten wenn man Hirn hat und Erwartungen befriedigen möchte