Open data is nothing without the people who use it.
Philadelphia has been on the cutting edge of releasing data — about parking tickets, about School District budgets, about building permits. But, as Azavea founder Robert Cheetham put it, that data can’t do any good if it merely sits in an open data catalog.
Releasing data is great but we need more people, startups, researchers to use it – @rcheetham #datajawn pic.twitter.com/F7i4LyEaTs
— Technical.ly (@Technical_ly) July 15, 2015
“I’d love to see a commitment to using open data inside government, not just releasing it,” Cheetham said at RJMetrics’ Data Jawn event Thursday. (We’ve heard this sentiment from at least one other city staffer, who spoke of a mismatch between supply and demand, due in part to a lack of education internally about how city data can help those in government to do their job better.)
It’s not just a government issue, Cheetham added. He said he’d like to see more startups, nonprofits and researchers capitalize on the fact that there’s so much of this data available.
Cheetham was part of the panel that capped off the afternoon-long event at Old City’s Chemical Heritage Foundation. RJMetrics, a Philly-based business analytics startup, said they organized the event in hopes of rallying the local data community. The event packed the Foundation’s event hall and the energetic Robert Moore, RJMetrics’ CEO, played emcee.
Other highlights included:
- City data scientist Lauren Ancona and CenTrak engineer Chris Tufts’ emoji talk.
Today @devlintufts & I talked about emoji in tweets w/geodata. Data + code: http://t.co/GTLdPcaM75 Deck: http://t.co/4jXOWOQhlz #datajawn
— auntie cistamine (@laurenancona) July 16, 2015
- RJMetrics’ Ben Garvey owning his position as data nerd to the extreme.
"I don't just read data visualization blogs, I read parodies of data viz blogs." k, @bengarvey, you da ultimate data nerd #datajawn
— Technical.ly (@Technical_ly) July 15, 2015
The speaker lineup was fairly gender diverse, as some pointed out.
5 of 13 speakers at #datajawn are women – in government, big healthcare, tech startups.
— Ben Novack (@titlecharacter) July 15, 2015
But the audience wasn’t, as others pointed out. (MaassMedia’s Thanh-Trang Hoang-Le confirmed to us that she’s talking about Data Jawn.)
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