Wale Akinfaderin Presenting “The Creative Art of Engineering Bespoke Features”

UPDATED: Video Added from the Conference!

Introducing Wale Akinfaderin > @WaleAkinfaderin < presenting “The Creative Art of Engineering Bespoke Features”.

wale-akinfaderinWale Akinfaderin is a Data Scientist at Lowe’s Company, Inc with expertise in machine learning, deep learning, statistical experimentation and general information theory. He has broad experience in implementing and extending ML techniques to solve practical and business problems.

In the past, he has built a data veracity model using machine learning and natural language processing techniques for international development with IBM Research and he was a 2018 Insight Data Science Fellow. He is an advocate of open source and democratizing learning and his writings on data science and machine learning have been featured on Hacker News, Data Science Central, Dataconomy, R Bloggers and IBM DSX.

He is a machine learning proposal reviewer for Cambridge University Press, the founder of Data Science Tallahassee meetup group, and a data science expert mentor for Insight2Impact which is funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. He also advises startups in the data science and cognitive computing space.

Feature engineering is rudimentary to applying machine learning models to raw and messy data. From multiple imputations for missing data to filtering in feature selection for issues like information redundancy, crafting bespoke features can be used to understand the underlying patterns in a dataset, facilitate the machine learning processing pipeline and improve model evaluation metrics.

In this talk, we will explore feature extraction and representation techniques for numeric, categorical and spatio-temporal features. We’ll also highlight other advance feature engineering methods like non-linear encoding for linear algorithms, topological filters, data leakage and best practices.

Come check out Wale Akinfaderin’s talk at ML4ALL happening April 28th-30th in amazing Portland, Oregon! Get your tickets to attend here. For the schedule, our excellent sponsors docs for the conference, check out the ML4ALL Conference Site!

Dr. Sarah Kaiser Presenting “What is Quantum Machine Learning, and Is It A Thing?”

UPDATED: Video Added from the Conference!

Introducing Dr. Sarah Kaiser > @Crazy4pi314 < presenting “What is Quantum Machine Learning, and Is It A Thing?”.

sarah-kaiser.jpgDr. Sarah Kaiser is a Research Engineer at Pensar Develop working on developing cutting edge consumer technology. She has a PhD in Physics specializing in quantum information where she melted things with lasers and prototyped quantum encryption satellites. In her spare time she writes books about engineering and machine learning for babies, and tries not to laser cut all the things.

In the rush to add the word quantum to everything from batteries to banking, Quantum machine learning has entered the fray. A perfect combination of buzzwords that will get all of the funding….right? In this talk I want to look at: quantum computers are and how you program one. With this context, we can look at what machine learning tasks are being explored for possible speedups with quantum computing.

Come check out Dr Sarah Kaiser’s talk at ML4ALL happening April 28th-30th in amazing Portland, Oregon! Get your tickets to attend here. For the schedule, our excellent sponsors docs for the conference, check out the ML4ALL Conference Site!

But wait, that’s not all, Sarah has also written a few books with Chris Ferrie that I wanted to give her a shout out for! Robotics for Babies, Neural Networks for Babies, and ABCs of Engineering.

 

 

Catherine Nelson Presenting “Practical Privacy in Machine Learning Systems”

UPDATED: Video Added from the Conference!

Introducing Catherine Nelson > @DrCatNelson < presenting “Practical Privacy in Machine Learning Systems”.

catherine-nelsonCatherine Nelson is a Senior Data Scientist for Concur Labs at SAP Concur, where she explores innovative ways to use machine learning to improve the experience of a business traveller. She is particularly interested in privacy-preserving ML and applying deep learning to enterprise data. In her previous career as a geophysicist she studied ancient volcanoes and explored for oil in Greenland. Catherine has a PhD in geophysics from Durham University and a Masters of Earth Sciences from Oxford University.

Data privacy is a huge topic right now for any business using personal data. People are questioning whether they should allow companies to collect data about them, and they are asking about what happens to that data after they hand it over. Machine learning systems often depend on data collected from their users to make accurate predictions. But can we build cool products powered by machine learning while still providing privacy for our users?

To start with, privacy is not a binary choice. There are many options available to developers for adding privacy to ML. In this talk, I’ll discuss some practical options, from simple methods to differential privacy, and show some examples of how we can incorporate these into real products. I’ll show how we’ve built a Data Washing Machine that allows us to provide nuanced levels of privacy via a simple API. I’ll also explore the tradeoff between user privacy and model accuracy, and show how we can still make accurate predictions with our models even when privacy is increased.

Come check out Catherine Nelson’s talk at ML4ALL happening April 28th-30th in amazing Portland, Oregon! Get your tickets to attend here. For the schedule, our excellent sponsors docs for the conference, check out the ML4ALL Conference Site!

Metal Monday Taking a World Tour

First band from India. Endurant.

Orphaned Land featuring Hansi Kürsch.

Alien Weaponry from New Zealand. Whisper.

Each of these songs, I suggest giving a read to some of those comments, checking out the bands further. They’re not the usual mess on Youtube. These bands are triumphing against so many odds and standing up for people in so many ways, inspiring the best in us. It’s metal to the core.

Survey of Go Libraries for Database Work

Over the past few months I’ve picked up a number of libraries in the Go ecosystem to help me get work done around database engineering. These libraries are ones that I have used to do a range of work primarily around Apache Cassandra, DataStax Enterprise, PostgreSQL, and to a lesser degree MS SQL Server, MySQL, and others. The following is a survey of libraries that I’ve found to be pretty solid for getting the job done.

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I’ve broken the follow tooling libraries out into the following categories:

  • Observability, Monitoring, & Insight – I created this section, and added libraries to it based specifically on the specific and peculiarly pedantic nature of observability in light of monitoring that work to provide insight into one’s applications they’re responsible for. For additional information about observability check out the Wikipedia article on the topic observability, it’s a great starting point. For monitoring however it gets more specific with a breakdown of monitoring types: application performance monitoring, network monitoring, system monitoring, and business transaction monitoring. The libraries in this section apply to some or all of the criteria in this definitions.
  • Data Schema Migration – Managing one’s data schema for a database, even really, truly, honestly if you have a schema-less system you still need to manage the underlying schema at some level.
  • Flow, Pipelines, Extraction, Transformation, and Loading – This section is mutative in the sense that it includes a lot of various types of libraries that have a very wide range of work to do and they offers a plethora of ways to do this work. Creating pipelines, to flow sequences, to extraction and transformation, to standard bulk loading. These libraries provide ways to get the data where you need it when you need it there in effective and reliable ways.
  • Database Backup Libraries – There are a zillion different things to maintaining effective and useful database backups; onsite storage, offsite storage, rotation periods, transmission & security control, scheduling, full or differential, and other topics of concern. One of the most important and often overlooked aspect of database backups is actually restoring the database from backup! These libraries can be used to get those backups, automate, and implement restoration of data in a more seamless way.
  • Database Drivers – At the core of any programmable automation of databases, one needs to have some way to connect to and work with the databases they’re automating, that’s where database drivers come into play. For Go, there’s a ton of support on every relatively known database in existence. MS SQL, Apache Cassandra, PostgreSQL, and dozens more!

DevOps Days Vancouver - Architecture Guidance - Venomous Database Reliability Engineering

Veneur – Largely used by and originating from Stripe. This library works as a distributed, fault tolerant pipeline for data emitted from run time on systems and services throughout your environment. It has server implementations of the DogStatsD protocol or SSF (Sensor Sensibility Format) for aggregating metrics and sending these metrics for storage or via sinks to various other systems. The system can also works up histograms, sets, and counters as global aggregator.

TLDR;

Veneur is a convenient sink for various observability primitives with lots of outputs!

Honeycomb.io – Honeycomb I did some work for back in February of 2018 and gotta say I loved the team. Charity @mipsytipsy, Christine @cyen, Ben @maplebed and crew are tops! Friendly, wildly smart, and humble thrown in for good measure. With that said, I’m also a fan of the product. It’s a solid high cardinality, query and event intake system for observability. There are libraries for Go as well as others, and it’s pretty easy to use the library to setup ingest for appropriately instrumented applications.

TLDR;

Honeycomb.io is a Saas tool with available libraries for Go to provide observability insight and data collection for your applications!

OpenCensus – This framework and toolsetprovides ways to get telemetry out of your services. Currently  there are libraries for a number of languages that allow you to capture, manipulate, and export metrics and distributed traces to your data store of choice. The key idea is that OpenCensus works via tracing through the course of events in an application and that data is logged for awareness, insight, and thus observability of your systems.

TLDR;

OpenCensus is a library that provides ways to gather telemetry for your services and store it in your choice of a location.

RxGo – This library is a reactive extensions built for Go. This one is as much a programming concept as it is a way to enhance and specifically focus on observability, so let’s take a look at the intro example they’ve got on the actual repo README.md itself.

ReactiveX, or Rx for short, is an API for programming with observable streams. This is a ReactiveX API for the Go language.

ReactiveX is a new, alternative way of asynchronous programming to callbacks, promises and deferred. It is about processing streams of events or items, with events being any occurrences or changes within the system.

In Go, it is simpler to think of a observable stream as a channel which can Subscribe to a set of handler or callback functions.

The pattern is that you Subscribe to an Observable using an Observer:

subscription := observable.Subscribe(observer)

An Observer is a type consists of three EventHandler fields, the NextHandlerErrHandler, and DoneHandler, respectively. These handlers can be evoked with OnNextOnError, and OnDone methods, respectively.

The Observer itself is also an EventHandler. This means all types mentioned can be subscribed to an Observable.

nextHandler := func(item interface{}) interface{} {
    if num, ok := item.(int); ok {
        nums = append(nums, num)
    }
}

// Only next item will be handled.
sub := observable.Subscribe(handlers.NextFunc(nextHandler))

TLDR;

RxGo are the reactive extensions that make it easier to go full scale and spectrum observability, with significantly greater insight into your applications over time and the events they execute.

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Go-Migrate – This library is written in Go and handles data schema migrations for a significant number of databases; PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite, RedShift, Neo4j, CockroadDB, and that’s just a few.

Example:

migrate -source file://path/to/migrations -database postgres://localhost:5432/database up 2

TLDR;

Go-Migrate is an open source library that can be used via CLI or in code to manage all your schema migration needs.

Gocqlx Migrate – This library primarily provides extensions to the Go CQL driver library, and one of those extensions specifically is a data-schema migration functionality.

Example:

package main

import (
    "context"

    "github.com/scylladb/gocqlx/migrate"
)

const dir = "./cql" 

func main() {
    session := CreateSession()
    defer session.Close()

    ctx := context.Background()
    if err := migrate.Migrate(ctx, session, dir); err != nil {
        panic(err)
    }
}

TLDR;

Gocqlx Migrate is a feature of the Gocqlx extensions library that can be used for schema migrations from within code.

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Pachyderm – (Open Source Repo) A pachyderm is

a very large mammal with thick skin, especially an elephant, rhinoceros, or hippopotamus.

So it is kind of a fitting name for this library. The library, the project itself, has found funding and bills itself as “Scalable, Reproducible Data Science“. I’ve used it minimally myself, but find it continually popping up on my “use this tool because you’ll need a ton of the features” list.

TLDR;

Pachyderm is an open source library, and paired capital funded company, that does indeed provide scalable, reproducible data science in addition to being a great library for your ETL and related data management needs.

Reflow – This library provides incremental data processing in the cloud. Providing this ability gives scientists and engineers the ability to put tools together, packaged in Docker images, using programming constructs. The library then evaluates the programs transparently parallelizing the work and memoizing results – i.e. using go routines and caching data appropriately to speed up tasks. The library was created at GRAIL to manage our NGS (next generation sequencing) bioinformatics workloads on AWS, but has also been used for many other applications, including model training and ad-hoc data analyses. Severl of Reflow’s key features include:

  • functional, lazy, type-safe Domain Specific Language (DSL) for writing workflow programs.
  • the runtime for the DSL evaluates incrementally, coordinating cluster execution, and memoization.
  • a cluster scheduler to dynamically provision and tear down resources in the cloud (currently AWS is supported).
  • with containers the same processing workloads can also be executed locally.

TLDR;

Reflow provides a way for data scientists, and by proxy database administrators, data programmers, programmers, and anybody that needs to work through ETL or related work to write programs against that data in the cloud or locally.

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Restic (Github) – Restic is a backup CLI and Go library that will backup to a number of sources, a few including; local directory, sftp, http REST, S3, Google Cloud Storage, Azure Blob Storage, and others.

Restic follows several objectives:

  • The tool aims to be easy, with minimal singular steps to execute a backup.
  • The tool aims to be fast, using appropriate mechanisms to ensure speedy backups.
  • The tool aims to provide verifiable backups that can easily be restored.
  • The tool aims to incorporate cryptographic guarantees of confidentiality to make sure the backups are secure.
  • The tool aims to be efficient with additional snapshots only taking the storage of the actual increment and de-duplicated to save space in the storage back end.

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For each of these there’s a particular single driver that I use for each. Except in the case of Apache Cassandra and DataStax Enterprise I have also picked up gocqlx to add to my gocql usage.

PostgreSQL – Features:

  • SSL
  • Handles bad connections for database/sql
  • Scan time.Time correctly (i.e. timestamp[tz], time[tz], date)
  • Scan binary blobs correctly (i.e. bytea)
  • Package for hstore support
  • COPY FROM support
  • pq.ParseURL for converting urls to connection strings for sql.Open.
  • Many libpq compatible environment variables
  • Unix socket support
  • Notifications: LISTEN/NOTIFY
  • pgpass support

Gocql & Gocqlx

Gocql Features:

  • Modern Cassandra client using the native transport
  • Automatic type conversions between Cassandra and Go
    • Support for all common types including sets, lists and maps
    • Custom types can implement a Marshaler and Unmarshaler interface
    • Strict type conversions without any loss of precision
    • Built-In support for UUIDs (version 1 and 4)
  • Support for logged, unlogged and counter batches
  • Cluster management
    • Automatic reconnect on connection failures with exponential falloff
    • Round robin distribution of queries to different hosts
    • Round robin distribution of queries to different connections on a host
    • Each connection can execute up to n concurrent queries (whereby n is the limit set by the protocol version the client chooses to use)
    • Optional automatic discovery of nodes
    • Policy based connection pool with token aware and round-robin policy implementations
  • Support for password authentication
  • Iteration over paged results with configurable page size
  • Support for TLS/SSL
  • Optional frame compression (using snappy)
  • Automatic query preparation
  • Support for query tracing
  • Support for Cassandra 2.1+ binary protocol version 3
    • Support for up to 32768 streams
    • Support for tuple types
    • Support for client side timestamps by default
    • Support for UDTs via a custom marshaller or struct tags
  • Support for Cassandra 3.0+ binary protocol version 4
  • An API to access the schema metadata of a given keyspace

Gocqlx Features:

  • Binding query parameters form struct or map
  • Scanning results directly into struct or slice
  • CQL query builder (package qb)
  • Super simple CRUD operations based on table model (package table)
  • Database migrations (package migrate)

Go-MSSQLDB – Features:

  • Can be used with SQL Server 2005 or newer
  • Can be used with Microsoft Azure SQL Database
  • Can be used on all go supported platforms (e.g. Linux, Mac OS X and Windows)
  • Supports new date/time types: date, time, datetime2, datetimeoffset
  • Supports string parameters longer than 8000 characters
  • Supports encryption using SSL/TLS
  • Supports SQL Server and Windows Authentication
  • Supports Single-Sign-On on Windows
  • Supports connections to AlwaysOn Availability Group listeners, including re-direction to read-only replicas.
  • Supports query notifications

So this is just a few of the libraries I use, have worked with, and suggest checking out if you’re delving into database work and especially building systems around databases for reliability and related efforts.

If you’ve got other libraries that you’ve used, or really like, definitely leave a comment and let me know and I’ll update the post to include new libraries for Go. Subscribe to the blog too as I’ve got more posts in the cooker for database work, Go libraries and usage with databases, and a lot more. Happy thrashing code!