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FWD: DM/KDD TrainingFrom: James Krueger (612) 883-5663 Date: Fri, 20 Feb 1998 09:17:37 -0500 (EST)
Ms. Firsching: Please see the attached E-mail re. my initial request to be placed on the mailing list. As a follow-up to this, I have received about 6-8 responses to my E-mail offering a variety of advice. I have remained in contact with one of the responders and hope to travel to Northern Arizona U. to receive some hand-on training on various DM/KDD softwares. For me personally, then, this forum has so far been very beneficial. I think the fact that I have received a variety of (sometimes conflicting) advice points out the "newness" of this field and the fact that there is not one best method to accomplish DM/KDD objectives. I remain fascinated with what I'm learning and hope to continue to increase my knowledge and experience with the ultimate goal of marrying my background with DM/KDD to produce a challenging and exciting career. --Jim Krueger-- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 12:08:40 -0600 (CST)
From: "James Krueger (612) 883-5663"
Subject: DM/KDD Training
To: DATAMINE-L
Hello-
My name is Jim Krueger and I'm new to the mailing list and relatively new to
data mining/knowledge discovery.
My question is: what do others on the mailing list recommend that I do to learn
more (much more) about this field? I have gleaned a fair amount of information
from the internet, but am interested in learning more specifics about the
various DM/KD techniques as well as gaining hands-on experience with some of the
more popular softwares.
As it stands, my current organization (a large HMO) will probably not enter the
realm of DM/KD for about another two years. I'd like to push that timetable
ahead somewhat (okay, a lot).
My background is in actuarial, data analysis, statistical analysis, data
warehousing project management (user), reporting, and consulting (sorry if this
is beginning to sound like a resume). My technical background includes at least
a smattering of SAS, SPSS, JCL, SQL, Access Basic, NOMAD, Focus, PCFocus,
Access, Paradox, Fortran, and Pascal in a variety of PC, C/S, and mainframe
platforms and environments. I know enough "to be dangerous", enough to meet my
analytical needs, and usually pick up new applications very quickly, but in
order to become knowledgeable in DM/KD, do I need to focus on the technical side
or is the project management/consulting side a viable alternative?
I'd like to take my knowledge about DM/KD to the next level, do it soon, and at
an affordable cost. Are seminars/conferences the only option or are training
courses available? I have a passion for problem-solving and making customers
happy and DM/KD sounds like the right way to do it. Plus, it seems to me like
it would be just plain fun.
Any suggestions that would help me to achieve these goals would be greatly
appreciated. Thank you!
--Jim Krueger--
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