Teaching
A few updates since last year... I am now teaching as an Assoc. Professor of Data Science in Lyon, France, at EM-Lyon Business School. The plan was 2 years and "we'll see." I finished year 1 of teaching business analytics, python and python data and text analysis. It was hard but rewarding when I had good students!
Talks / Slides
Since last year, lots of talks and slide decks! Creative first, then data sciency and visy.
Eyeo 2016: A talk on generative text, tools for creatives, and generally wonderful collaborations between humans and machines. Slides and code are here.
Eyeo 2016 – Lynn Cherny from Eyeo Festival // INSTINT on Vimeo.
I also gave a similar but earlier form of this talk at Alt-AI, a small conference organized in NYC at SFPC a month earlier. Slides here.
Dato/Turi Data Science conference, June 2016. A tutorial talk on doing NLP-like things in Elasticsearch, with python and javascript code. The code examples are here.
JSM 2016: I was on a panel organized by Hilary Parker, where I gave a talk called "Cocktail Party Horror Stories: Data Vis for Clients." For various reasons, I don't want to make the slide deck public, sorry.
Lyon Datavis Meetup: "Design for Interactive Data Vis" - an updated version of a talk I gave in Miami at a local data vis conference, delivered in Lyon at the Datavis Meetup in November 2016.
Miami 2015 Seminar in Comm Dept.: A talk I gave while I was a Knight Fellow in Miami, "Text Analysis Without Programming." Should really be updated a bit since teaching business students, too.
I also gave an NLP tutorial for Eyeo 2016 (python notebooks).
Writing / Posts
I finally opened a Medium account, and posted a well-received article on "Data Visualization 'Versus' UI and Data Science." This post explores the career options and relationships in neighboring fields.
I've started a tinyletter in a spirit similar to my Eyeo talk, "Things I Think Are Awesome." (archive) Keywords: AI, creative tech, data vis, generative text, games, occult... I'm also cross-posting them to Medium to reach a perhaps wider audience because there's virtually no feedback from a tinyletter!