Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

James Donner
on 22 September 2015

Big Data Contest at Strata + Hadoop World


Strata + Hadoop World New York City is going to be a big week for big data. Canonical are proud to be exabyte sponsors for the upcoming event.

If you’re coming to Strata + Hadoop World, don’t forget to visit our booth and discover the wonders of Juju. Juju is our service modelling tool that will let you build entire cloud environments in just a couple of clicks. In fact, you can see how easy it is to use by testing the demo in your web browser.

Juju opens endless potential for configurations. To demonstrate this, we’ll be hosting a Big Data Contest during Strata + Hadoop World. Come to our designated pod at our booth and create a solution for Big Data Architectures using the Juju GUI. Once you’ve submitted it as a bundle and outlined the documentation, you’ll be entered into the competition. We’ll be judging the solutions based on complexity, problem solving, and real use application. If your solution is chosen, we have some exciting rewards for the winners.

If you’re in top 3, you’ll get to pick between a Bose Soundlink Speaker, a Parrot Rolling Spider, or an Intel Compute Stick Ubuntu Edition. And the 3 next will each get a Xiaomi Mi Band.

We hope to see you at Strata + Hadoop World, and we can’t wait to see what creative solutions you can imagine. When it comes to big data, think big!

Related posts


Philip Williams
18 February 2026

Predict, compare, and reduce costs with our S3 cost calculator

Ceph Article

Previously I have written about how useful public cloud storage can be when starting a new project without knowing how much data you will need to store.  However, as datasets grow  over time, the costs of public cloud storage can become overwhelming.  This is where an on premise, or co-located, self-hosted storage system becomes advantage ...


Yanisa Haley Scherber
17 February 2026

A year of documentation-driven development

Ubuntu Article

For many software teams, documentation is written after features are built and design decisions have already been made. When that happens, questions about how a feature is understood or used often don’t surface until much later.  A little over one year ago, our team began to recognize this pattern in our own work. Features generally ...


Henry Coggill
17 February 2026

Announcing FIPS 140-3 for Ubuntu Core22

Hardening Article

FIPS compliance for IoT use cases in Federal space. In this article, we’ll explore what Ubuntu Core is, and how to use it with FIPS. ...