Of course, this is not a new metaphor. BPM folks have been using the concept of “white space” for a while. BPM professionals usually use the term “white space” to refer to the gap between process steps. That gap is important to the Enterprise Architect as well, but the EA does not stop with the gap between business processes. An EA is also interested in the gap between business entities (information), the gap between business functions (business), and the gap between integrated systems (integration).
At this year’s CES two unthinkable things happened:
- The abandonment of Windows exclusivity by practically all of Microsoft’s OEM customers.
- The abandonment of Intel exclusivity by Microsoft for the next generation of Windows.
Many of Microsoft’s customers chose to use an OS product from Microsoft’s arch enemy. Some chose to roll their own. Microsoft, in turn, chose to port its OS to an architecture from Intel’s arch enemy.
These actions confirm the end of the PC era
I found this through Daring Fireball...
Will a developer always make a better product than a nondeveloper?Not always, but they will always move faster.Moving faster means you can try more things, and the person who experiments more learns more, so in the long run I'm betting on developer-driven culture. It means you make more mistakes, but as we've learned, mistakes mean nothing in our industry -- even if they come with huge PR blackeyes, settlements and fines.Said another way, more doing equals more mistakes, more understanding and more innovation. Fail faster!
From Jason Calacanis' newsletter...
In 1938 Buckminster Fuller coined the term ephemeralization to describe the increasing tendency of physical machinery to be replaced by what we would now call software. The reason tablets are going to take over the world is not (just) that Steve Jobs and Co are industrial design wizards, but because they have this force behind them. The iPhone and the iPad have effectively drilled a hole that will allow ephemeralization to flow into a lot of new areas. No one who has studied the history of technology would want to underestimate the power of that force.
Trolling, defined as the act of posting inflammatory, derogatory or provocative messages in public forums, is a problem as old as the Internet itself, although its roots go much farther back. Even in the fourth century B.C., Plato touched upon the subject of anonymity and morality in his parable of the ring of Gyges.
That mythical ring gave its owner the power of invisibility, and Plato observed that even a habitually just man who possessed such a ring would become a thief, knowing that he couldn’t be caught. Morality, Plato argues, comes from full disclosure; without accountability for our actions we would all behave unjustly.
"This will unfortunately be a prolonged process and we continue to hope that the matter can be resolved appropriately without more years of litigation. The mark of a leading company is the way it handles its mistakes…Our focus now is looking forward," he said.
[Sent from my iPhone 3GS]
Moving to plug the defection of staff to competitors,Google Inc. is giving a 10% raise to all of its 23,000 employees, according to people familiar with the matter.
The raise, which will be given to executives and staff across the globe, is effective in January.
The pay hike comes as Google ramps up its battle with competitors, especially neighboring Facebook Inc., in a fight to secure talented staff. Roughly 10% of Facebook's employees are Google veterans and other Silicon Valley companies have aggressively poached employees from the Internet giant.
[Sent from my iPhone 3GS]
For some software, rapid development of feature-rich applications is what matters. The idea is that users will put up with errors in programs because they have so many useful features that are un-obtainable elsewhere. As Edward Yourdon put it, "I'm going to deliver a system to you in six months that will have 5,000 bugs in it—and you're going to be very happy!"