Originally posted by BlueSharp
View Post
- Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
- Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!
State of the Market
Collapse
X
Collapse
-
The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist -
Originally posted by hairymouse View PostNot surprised, there's tons of cloud architect roles on the job boards as well. Lots of data engineer roles as well.Comment
-
Originally posted by HairyRoadie View PostGood job I'm a Data Engineer then, though still not leaving Permieville. Always been tempted, but not in this market. Anyway it's all SQL.
My uncle was a Highway hygienist.Comment
-
Originally posted by Paralytic View PostI love job titles. I remember when people who wrote SQL were called SQL developers. Now people who write spreadsheets are Data Scientist.
My uncle was a Highway hygienist.
As you need statistics, ML and other related fields.Comment
-
Originally posted by AndrewK View PostYou probably could do Data Science with spreadsheets (basic analysis). But from real data scientist, I would expect at least MSc, preferable PhD and he will use R + Python.
As you need statistics, ML and other related fields.
"Data is the new oil! We have so much data but we're not using it! "
"We must become data scientists and find new value"
"We'll become a disruptive data driven business, miles ahead of our competitors"
"We can monetize our customer data and we'll be rich!"
A data science team, a £multi-million supercomputer, and 12 months later....
The result (spurious correlations)Comment
-
Originally posted by AndrewK View PostYou probably could do Data Science with spreadsheets (basic analysis). But from real data scientist, I would expect at least MSc, preferable PhD and he will use R + Python.
As you need statistics, ML and other related fields.Comment
-
Originally posted by CheeseSlice View PostExcited CIO/CDO:
"Data is the new oil! We have so much data but we're not using it! "
"We must become data scientists and find new value"
"We'll become a disruptive data driven business, miles ahead of our competitors"
"We can monetize our customer data and we'll be rich!"
A data science team, a £multi-million supercomputer, and 12 months later....
The result (spurious correlations)
And data science is not about correlation, which is important but only as the first step in any analysis.
Just take a look at how many real data scientist Amazon and Google have.Comment
-
Originally posted by Paralytic View PostProving that job titles mean very little.Comment
-
Originally posted by AndrewK View PostYou probably could do Data Science with spreadsheets (basic analysis). But from real data scientist, I would expect at least MSc, preferable PhD and he will use R + Python.
As you need statistics, ML and other related fields.
They want a 22 year old that can wear shorts to work and has a skateboard
Sent from my iPhone using Contractor UK ForumComment
-
Not sure I agree with the arguement that these job titles are interchangeable, and I'm right in it because I can apply for SQL dev jobs but can't really go for data engineer roles. I think that a SQL developer is a guy who writes SQL , and possibly ETL like SSIS for either transactional databases or data warehouses. This could be stored procedures with complicated logic and creating schemas like data warehouses.
I think that a data engineer is all about big data and the cloud, and writing ETL pipelines using Python or Java where the logic lives in AWS or Azure. No stored procedures, no on premises SQL Servers. Using CI/CD to iteratively release the pipelines. However, their thing mostly ends once the data is in the database.
Data Scientists look at the data and analyze it, maybe using python to analyze it for use in machine learning or AI. They wouldn't be responsible for ingesting the data and might tell the data engineer where he should put it.
At least that's the way it was for my latest client. I was a SQL developer and before I knew it, they wanted me to be a data engineer and use Java to write a manual version of Stitch.Comment
- Home
- News & Features
- First Timers
- IR35 / S660 / BN66
- Employee Benefit Trusts
- Agency Workers Regulations
- MSC Legislation
- Limited Companies
- Dividends
- Umbrella Company
- VAT / Flat Rate VAT
- Job News & Guides
- Money News & Guides
- Guide to Contracts
- Successful Contracting
- Contracting Overseas
- Contractor Calculators
- MVL
- Contractor Expenses
Advertisers
Contractor Services
CUK News
- Autumn Budget 2024: Reeves raids contractor take-home pay Oct 31 14:11
- How Autumn Budget 2024 affects homes, property and mortgages Oct 31 09:23
- Autumn Budget 2024: Reeves raids contractor take-home pay Oct 31 09:20
- Autumn Budget 2024: Umbrella companies hit, Employer NICs hiked, and BADR heading for 18% Oct 30 16:54
- Autumn Budget 2024: chancellor’s full speech Oct 30 16:34
- RecExpo got told this about Labour’s Employment Rights Bill… Oct 30 09:10
- A limited company just got one over HMRC on VAT; here’s how Oct 29 09:24
- Business Account with ANNA Money Oct 28 15:51
- Top 5 Autumn Budget areas for IT contractors to tick off Oct 28 09:30
- Top 5 umbrella company expenses things to still do in 2024 under 2016's T&S rules Oct 24 08:21
Comment