Technologically frozen in 1995. Still thinks "the cloud" is for rain and refuses to click anything newer than Solitaire.
An interactive report that executives will ignore until they ask for the same data… in an Excel sheet.
Corporate for "I forgot what this is about but I need to make noise before someone notices".
Like moving houses, but with more downtime and crying.
Because JSON wasn’t painful enough.
Saving progress so your system can crash at a later, more inconvenient time.
“Throw some data models at the wall and see what sticks.”
The one number we stare at while ignoring the iceberg.
The one dashboard we all agreed on… until someone else made a new one with different numbers.
The never-ending battle between hackers and IT teams running on coffee.
“Here’s what you should do, but no one actually follows.”
Scrambling data so only the right people (hopefully) can read it.
When your model is too smart for its own good and memorizes the training data instead of learning useful patterns.
A structured way to describe data relationships (or overcomplicate things).
A marketing term for "we kinda fixed the Data Lake problem."
A central place for data that everyone fights over.
A flowchart-like model that makes decisions—think "choose your own adventure" but with math.
Schedules pre-meetings for the pre-meeting's pre-brief because they couldn't read an email to save their life.
Keeping secrets… until someone forgets to lock the database.
Checking your data before it embarrasses you.
A checklist of rules to follow… until regulations change again.
“Will this dashboard break when more than 5 people refresh it at once?”
Spotting the oddballs in your data, because sometimes anomalies are fraud, and sometimes they’re just mistakes.
How much pain your system can handle before collapsing.
Hoping two systems eventually agree on reality.
The easiest SQL query that someone still wants to call a "data-driven insight."
Like conducting a symphony, but with way more screaming.
Because bad data leads to bad decisions and lots of excuses.
Copying data from one mistake to another.
Corporate deity whose random breakfast thoughts outrank your entire research department.
The unlucky souls tasked with keeping data under control.
The behind-the-scenes details of how data was collected.
Google’s way of making your SQL queries cost a small fortune.
The family tree of your data, assuming you can track it.
The frustrations of explaining, again, why two reports don’t match.
“We need better numbers, but we don’t want to change anything.”
Fancy PowerPoint slides no one follows.
Because not every department deserves full database access.
The endless cycle of finding new ways to blame bad data for bad decisions.
Preparing for disasters that will still somehow surprise you.
Moving data from one mess to another.
The badge that says “We take security seriously” (but still have breaches).
The serial focus assassin. Everyone knows at least one.
Turns their poor planning into your emergency with Slack messages that induce cardiac events.
Tweaking your dataset to improve model performance—because sometimes you need to cheat a little.
The dashboards and reports that will be outdated within a week.
Cutting back on data storage costs until everything runs painfully slow.
Invisible data hero who's seen SQL horrors that would make junior devs cry.
Shoving a half-baked feature into the project at the last minute.
Demands data-driven decisions then overrides everything because their morning shower had "different vibes."
The science of making sense of data—assuming it’s not lying to you.
The "we'll fix it in production" person. They're just one misplaced comma away from getting fired.
SQL’s rebellious younger sibling.
When your company trends on Twitter for all the wrong reasons.
Nesting IF statements like Russian dolls and defending their desktop spreadsheet hoard like a caffeinated dragon.
Slapping AI on the same old nonsense.
Metadata management to keep track of your ever-growing data jungle.
Ignoring that data quality issue until it causes real problems.
Sharing resources and pretending everything is fine.
Data that refuses to fit into neat tables—think text, images, and the chaos of the internet.
Because raw data is just too ugly.
A table that tells you how often your model gets things right (or, more realistically, how often it screws up).
Because manually checking your code is for the weak.
The fine art of deciding who gets in and who gets a "403 Forbidden."
The dashboard everyone ignores until an executive asks for it.
The programming language everyone pretends to know.
Builds the data highways, then spends half the week fixing potholes caused by everyone else driving like maniacs.
Just because two things happen together doesn’t mean one caused the other. Like, eating more cheese doesn’t actually make you better at math.
Treats every email address like nuclear launch codes and speed-dials Legal when someone shares a first name.
A statistical way to check if two things are related or if your data is just messing with you.
Letting a neural network go crazy with layers upon layers of computation—basically AI's version of overthinking.
Because mistakes were made.
The reason your software updates faster than you can blink.
Keeping multiple copies of your data in sync.
“We made a pretty chart—please pretend it changed your decision-making.”
A structured way to work with large datasets.
Turning data into a fixed-size mess—useful for passwords, not so great if you ever need to reverse it.
Load first, transform later—modern data integration in action.
Deploying apps without touching infrastructure (until something breaks).
Human API who communicates in endpoints and considers UIs a moral weakness.
Rules about data that everyone agrees on but nobody follows.
The Data Lake’s evil twin.
Where structured data goes to drown.
Guards their "secret metric" like it's launch codes when it's really just page views in a trench coat.
Digging through massive datasets, hoping to strike gold.
A 57-slide PowerPoint where 3 slides actually contain useful charts.
The fight over who actually controls the data mess.
A data point that’s way off from the rest—could be an error, or could be the next big discovery.
Because reading rows one at a time is for chumps.
The reason your database admin hates you.
Making sure data stays trustworthy—or at least looks like it.
The dream every company sells but never actually delivers.
Slicing and dicing data until it fits your argument.
A minor data visualization tweak that gets presented as groundbreaking.
The underappreciated hero who turns messy data into charts and makes everyone else look good.
The algorithm that helps machine learning models learn—think of it as slowly rolling downhill to the right answer.
Making sure your data descriptions don’t live in someone’s forgotten spreadsheet.
A gradient boosting algorithm that wins Kaggle competitions—because sometimes brute force just works.
When your AI learns from biased data and makes unfair decisions—because garbage in = garbage out.
Guessing with data—because flipping a coin isn't "data-driven."
Organizing data at a scale where things will go wrong.
Extract, transform, load—the classic data pipeline approach.
“This report is valid until next quarter, when everything changes.”
Urban data dictionary powered by