Thursday, September 24, 2015

Hosting a Dinner with Chef Watson

I recently hosted a business dinner to discuss cognitive technologies.  What better way to do this than serve a creation by Chef Watson?  So I gave instructions: this will be a plated dinner, make what you want, BUT you muse serve one course created by Chef Watson, which can be accessed by anyone at https://www.ibmchefwatson.com/.  I was so proud of myself for thinking of this idea, I couldn't contain it.

On the day of the dinner, I was mentioning my proud surprise to a colleague, and was asked "What if the recipe doesn't taste good?"

Ever have one of those moments where you thought you'd thought of everything, but in reality you forgot what might be a fatal flaw?  I became a bit nervous at that moment, to describe it in the least.

When I arrived early to set up materials for dinner, this is what greeted me:

After seeing this I felt a lot better.  After eating this below, I even felt better than that.


Chef Watson eats data, not food, so my concern was valid.  But I'm reminded that there are correlations in data I still haven't found and are waiting to be explored.  We live in exciting times for people that love data.

Now I'm wondering when the Watson App for working off Chef Watson creations will be available on Bluemix?



Friday, September 11, 2015

Tools That Help Me Love Data

I'm a data geek.  A data nerd.  I think about data and I think about how to analyze data.  So much so, that my kids are starting to pick up my habit, or at least answer me in a logical, structured way.

Driving to school yesterday with my 10 year old daughter London,  we started discussing her upcoming research project.  Her school has a project that is done in groups every year from first grade on, and now she is at the level where she gets to do one by herself, on a topic that means a lot to her.

There are 3 things she likes, and one of them is math.  Numbers.  She loves them.  Stats, she understands them.  Calculations, she does them for fun.  You get the idea.

The question she wants to research: "Are girls better at math than boys?"

I stepped lightly into this (potential) minefield  of a discussion, mind you, and began the Socratic method.

Dad:"What do you think?"
London:"I don't know."
D:"How could you find out?"
L:"I could ask a bunch of girls and a bunch of boys."
D:"Would that be objective, or subjective?"
L:"Probably subjective"
D:"How could you get objective data?"

This went on until we determined there are probably some data sets somewhere she can get to analyze the performance of students in math.  Google becomes your best friend in these situations, right?  The world is full of data waiting to be analyzed. Data that's been collected that is just that, collected data.  What we need is to turn that data into information we can use to communicate our finding.

This when got me thinking of another problem: How am I going to teach data analysis to a (smart) 10 year old?  Something I've spent my career learning to effectively do?  Where do I start? Spreadsheets?  A stats program like SPSS?

London is lucky in a few ways.  1.  She is good at asking questions. 2.  She knows how to use a web browser.  3.  She can upload a file.

Because of this, her research analysis just became a lot easier (for both of us).  I helped London create her own IBM ID, the only other prerequisite other than the 3 above that is needed to get started immediately with Watson Analytics.  The videos explain step by step how to upload data and begin analysis right away.  The best part?  She can use her inquisitive mind to ask Watson questions and Watson will give her answers. It's so easy, so easy that a 10 year old can get value out of using cognitive technologies to learn.