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From YouTube: South Big Data Regional Innovation Hub Overview
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A
So
renata
is
going
to
give
a
10
to
15
minutes
to
brief
presentation
on
the
hub,
and
you
can
ask
her
any
questions
at
the
end
of
that
and
right
after
that,
we'll
jump
into
our
government
lab
talks
as
as
we
planned,
and
this
might
push
our
lunch
a
little
bit.
We
may
be
done
by
it
all
30.
Instead
of
12,
the
lunch
will
be
waiting
for
us
outside
and
then
we
can
take
an
hour
for
the
lunch
and
slightly
shift
the
ship.
The
agenda.
B
Thank
you,
so
the
we
already
got
the
brief
description
from
string
of
us,
but
one
of
the
main
things
for
the
hub
is
this
idea
of
breaking
silos,
bridging
solutions
and
accelerating
partnerships.
So
this
I
particularly,
would
do
a
short
personal
notes
or
my
background,
my
PhDs
and
biophysics
and
bioinformatics,
and
we
got
into
big
data,
as
was
mentioned
by
the
material
genome
initiative,
is
because
of
all
of
the
next-generation
sequencing,
the
new
tools
that
come
out
and
how
that
translated
to
all
of
my
research
time.
B
This
is
a
paper
we're
doing
for
worldwide
populations
and
looking
at
databases,
data
structures,
interoperability,
the
uncertainty
quantification
is
you've
been
talking
about
today,
and
so
it
led
me
to
know
that
this
was
not
going
to
be
solved
lab
by
lab.
It's
not
something
that
you
need
policies.
You
need
structure,
you
need
format
in
order
to
get
a
community
around
it.
B
And
then
this
aspect
of
coordination
and
that's
where
the
hub
is
it's
in
coordination
and
part
of
it-
is
to
coordinate
the
Big
Data
innovation
ecosystem
and
promote
partnerships
in
across
different
disciplines
that
can
really
address
the
Grand
Challenge,
so
actually
realize
the
promise
of
big
data.
So
it's
said
that
you
know
Big
Data
can
help
with
all
of
these
different
industries.
All
of
these
are
manufacturing,
but
you
need
multiple
players
and
the
pipelines
to
make
that
actually
happen.
You
need
academic,
but
you
also
need
commercialization.
You
need
federal
funding.
B
You
need
cities
in
some
cases,
government
labs.
So
this
is
where
the
the
hubs
fall
in,
so
the
question
I
get
sometimes,
is
why
regional
there's
a
differences
among
different
regions
for
different
application
areas,
specifically
to
the
south?
We
have
you
have
varying
Grand
Challenges.
This
is
a
very
federal
term
that
affect
the
cells.
This
is
climate.
This
is
a
health
care
example
and
so
for
the
south
hub.
This
is
only
showing
our
partners,
but
we
have
over
500
members
just
for
the
south
now,
which
is
industry,
academia
and
government.
B
B
So
we
had
an
all-hands
meeting
last
year,
200
people
coming
together
to
do
these
ideas
of
spokes
with
strain
of
us
talked
about.
We
got
70
spokes
for
the
hub
for
the
south,
and
each
spoke
is
supposed
to
be
a
industry,
academia
and
government
partnership
that
can
be
funded
up
to
the
level
of
a
million
dollars
for
actually
solving.
Some
of
these
grand
challenges
around
big
data
in
different
verticals,
so
the
hub
is
structured
as
geographic
regions.
B
So
these
are
our
themes.
These
are
the
seven
areas.
There
is
materials
manufacturing,
coastal
hazards,
health
care,
habitat,
which
is
smart
cities
and
grid
industrial,
big
data
and
energy
and
economic
privacy
and
policy
issues.
So
that's
where
the
bridging
solutions
comes
with
the
hub,
so
with
the
background
in
genomic,
so
the
background
in
materials
and
are
there
solutions
that
can
then
cross
these
different
verticals
that
would
be
beneficial
to
the
different
communities.
So
that's
one
of
the
driving
factors
as
well
so
spokes
can
be.
B
These
grand
challenges
is
also
two
areas
that
it
can
also
address.
Besides
the
Grand
Challenges,
which
is
automation
so
automating,
some
parts
of
the
data
life
cycle,
we
actually
talked
about
this.
For
materials
and
a
lot
of
places
and
data
sharing,
and
ask
that
you
know
ask
that
sharing.
So
that's
another
area
for
the
hub.
B
These
are
just
examples
of
different
types
of
things
that
can
be
spoke
projects
which
I'll
well
gloss
over
for
right
now,
and
our
structure
for
there's
three
areas
that
we're
highlighting
as
being
core
hub
functions,
and
these
are
the
things
that
actually
entice
me
of
a
side.
Strain
of
us
is
a
good
in
negotiating,
but
also
to
leave
my
research
for
us.
B
I
can
to
be
able
to
do
these
things
to
get
education,
community
partnerships
and
data
infrastructure,
so
those
are
going
to
be
very
high,
focuses
for
the
hub
and
then
the
different
vertical
areas
were
actually
putting
out
for
the
community.
So
we're
going
to
feed
a
lot
of
endeavor
tease
like
this
we're
going
to
get
partnerships
together,
but
we
really
want
it
to
be
community-driven.
It's
not
going
to
be
the
hub
deciding
it's
the
community
deciding
what
is
necessary
and
needed
for
you.
So
these
are
a
few
of
the
things
that
have
happened.
B
B
These
are
a
few
of
the
community
engagements.
We
did
a
congressional
briefing
for
our
for
the
science
committees.
We
went
to
the
different
federal
agencies
that
fun
big
data
talked
about
the
hubs
this
meeting
in
August.
We
have
several
other
meetings
that
will
be
similar
to
this
in
different
areas,
so
it
will
be
in
energy,
which
is
the
sep
tember
6
energy
and
smart
grid
health,
health
disparities,
health,
analytics
precision,
medicine
will
be
September,
nineteenth
and
twentieth.
Also
here
also
looking
at
data
in
the
in
the
nonprofit
and
public
space.
B
So
how
can
data
do
things
for
data
science,
for
social,
good
or
data
kind
or
different
organizations?
Teradata
is
a
very
big
provider
of
solutions
for
for
data
infrastructure
and
they're
very
interested
in
this
space
of
using
data
for
this
kind
of
social,
social
aspect
too,
and
also
doing
a
workshop
on
mobile
health
and
health
disparities.
B
So
this
is
just
some
interest
from
the
federal
space
DHS
NASA
had
talks
with
a
USGS
in
SF,
of
course,
is
put
in
a
substantial
investment.
They
are
their
primary
funder
for
the
hub,
but
also
industry.
So
Microsoft
has
given
the
hug
the
four
hubs:
collectively:
three
million
in
cloud
computing
credits,
which
will
be
Alec
O'toole
weeds
working
with
the
research
community
to
look
at
what
types
of
projects
those
can
be
used
for
also
numerous
academic
and
industry
partners
that
are
interested
in
putting
forth
services
so
putting
forth.
B
The
idea
of
these
are
things
that
are
available,
that
we
can
make
more
publicly
known
through
the
hub
that
can
get
wider
adoption
and
use,
because
there's
a
lot
of
solutions
that
don't
get
used
because
people
don't
know
where
to
find
them.
They
don't
know
that
they
exist,
there's
no
trainings
on
them
in
other
ways,
so
we're
trying
to
also
look
at
that
to
kind
of
set
aright
some
of
the
solution.
So
we
saw
this
slide
already.
I
thought
that
other
people
would
be
here
when
I
gave
it
the
second
time.