The Fall of Big Data
The term "Big Data" peaked as a buzzword around 2012-2015 and has since faded into background terminology. It followed the classic Gartner hype cycle: explosive marketing, overpromises, disillusionment, and normalization. It's not "dead" in substance. Data volumes keep exploding, processing tools improved, and organizations still handle massive datasets daily. Market projections show the big data tech sector growing robustly into the 2030s. Claims of total irrelevance ignore that petabyte-scale work is routine now. But the phrase lost pop-culture and consultant cachet. That's the real shift. Why the term declined: Hype exhaustion and failed prophecies. Early 2010s rhetoric promised a data cataclysm requiring exotic tools (Hadoop everywhere) for revolutionary insights. The apocalypse didn't arrive at predicted scale for most orgs; hardware/cloud scaled predictably, and "whatever doesn't fit on one machine" kept shrinking as single machines g...