Sensible, simple, accessible, écrit à l'anglo-saxonne, càd sans le verbiage dont les sciences sociales aiment bien se nimber de ce côté-ci de l'Atlantique. C'est un très très bon essai pour comprendre ce qui signifie cette tarte à la crème qu'est le Big Data... Et au delà, une belle réflexion sur les vraies différences homme / femme, sur le "moi" et sur le "nous" !
Reduction is inescapable. Algorithms are crude. Computers are machines. Data science is trying to make digital sense of an analog world. It’s a by-product of the basic physical nature of the microchip: a chip is just a sequence of tiny gates. Not in the way that the Internet is a “series of tubes” but in actuality. The gates open and close to let electrons through, and when one of these gates wants to know what state to be in, it’s all or nothing—like any door, a circuit is open or it isn’t; there are no shades of maybe. From that microscopic reality an absolutism propagates up through the whole enterprise, until at the highest level you have the definitions, data types, and classes essential to programming languages like C and JavaScript.