If you grew up, and you never had a computer, and you've never used the Internet, and someone asked you if you wanted to buy a data plan, your response would be 'What's a data plan, and why would I want to use this?'
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The value of having a computer, to me, is that it'll remember everything you do. It's a databank.
Data is cost. It takes money to create data, store it, clean it, and throw resources at it to learn anything from it.
Outside the U.S., most data plans have a data limit.
I love data. I think it's very important to get it right, and I think it's good to question it.
Every company today is a data company whether they realize it or not.
Consumers deserve to know exactly what they're getting for their money when they sign-up for a 4G data plan.
We're entering a new world in which data may be more important than software.
Big data has been used by human beings for a long time - just in bricks-and-mortar applications. Insurance and standardized tests are both examples of big data from before the Internet.
Data is the kind of ubiquitous resource that we can shape to provide new innovations and new insights, and it's all around us, and it can be mined very easily.
Data is the fabric of the modern world: just like we walk down pavements, so we trace routes through data, and build knowledge and products out of it.