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Modern Big Data Architectures. Dominik Ryzko
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isbn 9781119597933
Автор произведения Dominik Ryzko
Жанр Программы
Издательство John Wiley & Sons Limited
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MODERN BIG DATA ARCHITECTURES
A MULTI-AGENT SYSTEMS PERSPECTIVE
Dominik Ryżko
© 2020 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.
Published simultaneously in Canada.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is Available:
ISBN 978-1-119-59784-1 (hardback)
ISBN 978-1-119-59794-0 (ePDF)
ISBN 978-1-119-59793-3 (ePub)
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PREFACE
Over several years of my career in IT, I have observed how various ideas and technologies have come and gone, taking different paths, from being new and innovative to maturity and adoption, only to be replaced by even newer concepts as they arrive. Some gained popularity very quickly and became the buzzwords of their time, something that everybody tries and claims to be doing. Such is the case of big data, the popularity of which skyrocketed and was embraced by research, industry, and governments alike. In 2012 the Obama Administration announced the Big Data Research and Development Initiative [2012] acknowledging it as a key enabler to accelerate the pace of discovery in science and engineering, strengthen our national security, and transform teaching and learning. Only recently has big data been overshadowed by the widespread adoption of artificial intelligence (AI), which by the way, builds on the foundations of big data. However, big data will remain strong for the foreseeable future.
Other promising technologies from the past have not stood the test of time. The rise of statistical approaches to AI, and deep learning in particular in the past decade, gave the final blow to the symbolic methods, which I found elegant and fascinated me at the time of my undergraduate studies in the 1990s. Have the logical systems passed forever? Possibly not; after all, there are still open questions as on how humans analyze facts, reason, and make decisions, which we are not yet able to model purely by statistical methods. Only the future will show us in which direction science will progress.
Another interesting story is related to Multi-Agent Systems (MAS), the field I picked for my PhD and later research. While the concept of an agent, or closely related actor, go way back to the 1970s, it never gained wide popularity outside the relatively narrow research community and some niche business applications. Despite bringing in innovative views on information system paradigms and