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Tuesday, July 23, 2002 |
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Wal-Mart CIO Interview.
In this day of XML standards, one might question why someone cares about (1) and (2) until you start asking about cost. I like to say that an engineer is someone who can do for a dollar what any fool can do for two. I've also learned, the hard way, that XML is great for interoperability when you can't control both ends of the system (or don't expect to in the future). When you do control all the pieces, however, XML is a whole lot of parsing for nothing. Its hard to get people to see the wisdom in the first two philosophies. There's a natural tendency to autonomy, decentralization, and disparate systems. Many confuse these statements with geographic or system centralization, which is not the case. I'm sure, for example, that Wal-Mart has both people and systems spread out around the globe. What they don't have is fiefdoms. I've written a white paper on IT organization that speaks to how I'd like to see IT functions organized in Utah. [Windley's Enterprise Computing Weblog]11:35:50 PM |
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3. The Microcontent News Blogging Software Roundup - Part One of the Weblog Industry Report - Microcontent News, a Corante.com Microblog (19.0 points). The Microcontent News Blogging Software Roundup [( blogdex : recent )] 11:26:22 PM |
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Phil Wainewright: Web services missing a key ingredient. Phil Wainewright comments on the missing ingredient in web services -- how to get paid.
...virtually no meaningful work has been done to develop the technology to accurately measure usage, raise bills, collect payments and distribute settlements for multi-tiered component service delivery. I know certain vendors will e-mail me to dispute that assertion, but the fact remains that Google and Amazon have both introduced their APIs as limited-use free trials precisely because no-one has a clue how they will charge for them once they decide they need to.[Thanks: Doug Kaye] [Scott Loftesness] 11:25:07 PM |