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» Go to news mainBig momentum for big data
With big data projects in the works
 across several faculties, at the institutional level in a unique 
post-secondary collaboration and at the student level through the 
Faculty of Computer Science, it鈥檚 safe to say Dal鈥檚 making its mark in 
the big data community.
Last November, Dalhousie joined six other post-secondary institutions in
 Nova Scotia institutions to partner with IBM Canada toward a common 
goal: create career opportunities for new graduates and launch research 
in the fast-emerging fields of data analytics and optimization.
"A collaboration involving seven post-secondary institutes in Nova 
Scotia is a unique way to address an upcoming skills shortage in an 
important sector,鈥 says Michael Shepherd, dean of the Faculty of 
Computer Science.
The project is called the Collaboration for Analytics Research, 
Education and Technology (CARET). Dr. Shepherd also sits on CARET鈥檚 
executive steering committee.
Expanding academic and research opportunities 聽
CARET鈥檚 member institutions are examining ways to develop curriculum and
 research together. The first step, though, is to set up a shared 
computing infrastructure, or 鈥渃loud,鈥 so everyone can work 
collaboratively and share data sets easily between campuses all across 
the province.
Today, IBM Canada announced it鈥檚 providing CARET with a multi-million 
dollar cloud computing system that will be operational in early 2014. 
The hardware will be hosted in Dal鈥檚 data centre at the Killam Library.
鈥淭he ability to share a common system among all schools allows us to get
 started on collaborating as educators and researchers to meet our 
shared goals,鈥 says Dr. Shepherd. 鈥淭here are always benefits to working 
together and this shared infrastructure will really allow CARET to 
leverage each institution鈥檚 unique programming, resulting in highly 
skilled students ready to enter the workforce."
In addition to Dal鈥檚 participation in CARET, the Faculty of Computer Science launched the Institute for Big Data Analytics last summer. And next fall, students working towards a Bachelor of Computer Science degree can opt to take a data science specialization, receiving a certificate to complement their degree.
Interested in learning more about this topic? You can attend a live Google+ Hangout panel discussion this Friday (November 29) at 1 p.m. ADT. There, you鈥檒l hear from Andrew Rau-Chaplin of Dal鈥檚 Faculty of Computer Science and others on how IBM, governments and more than a dozen Canadian universities are applying cloud and analytics technologies. Questions can be asked on Twitter using the hashtag #Convo4Change.
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