Episode 26: Im not a data scientist, but I work for an AI/ML startup building on Serverless Containers

Published: Sept. 5, 2018, 6 a.m.

b'Do you deal with a lot of data? Do you need to analyze and interpret data? Veritone\\u2019s platform is designed to ingest audio, video, and other data through batch processes to process the media and attach output, such as transcripts or facial recognition data.\\nToday, we\\u2019re talking to Christopher Stobie, a DevOps professional with more than seven years of experience building and managing applications. Currently, he is the director of site reliability engineering at Veritone in Costa Mesa, Calif. Veritone positions itself as a provider of artificial intelligence (AI) tools designed to help other companies analyze and organize unstructured data. Previously, Christopher was a technical account manager (TAM) at Amazon Web Services (AWS); lead DevOps engineer at Clear Capital; lead DevOps engineer at ESI; Cloud consultant at Credera; and Patriot/THAAD Missile Fire Control in the U.S. Army. Besides staying busy with DevOps and missiles, he enjoys playing racquetball in short shorts and drinking good (not great) wine.\\nSome of the highlights of the show include:\\n\\nVarious problems can be solved with AI; companies are spending time and money on AI\\nTasks can be automated that are too intelligent to write around simple software\\nMachine learning (ML) models are applicable for many purposes; real people with real problems and who are not academics can use ML\\nFargate is instant-on Docker containers as a service; handles infrastructure scaling, but involves management expense\\nInstant-on works with numerous containers, but there will probably be a time when it no longer delivers reasonable fleet performance on demand\\nDecision to use Kafka was based on workload, stream-based ingestion\\nVeritone\\u2019s writes code that tries to avoid provider lock-in; wants to make an integration as decoupled as possible\\nPeople spend too much time and energy being agnostic to their technology and giving up benefits\\nIf you dream about seeing your name up in lights, Christopher describes the process of writing a post for AWS \\nPain Points: Newness of Fargate and unfamiliarity with it; limit issues; unable to handle large containers\\n\\nLinks:\\n\\nVeritone\\nChristopher Stobie on LinkedIn\\nBuilding Real Time AI with AWS Fargate\\nSageMaker\\nFargate\\nDocker\\nKafka\\nDigital Ocean'