Tuesday, March 12, 2002

Roundup: Consulting crisis fallout [IDG InfoWorld]
4:07:34 PM    comment   

Years ago I worked for one of the big systems consulting firms. In a conversation on a flight from New York to Chicago, one of the partners told me, "Jim, we can't have everybody thinking for themselves, 90% of the people here are just pulling on the oars. If everybody decides to steer we won't get anywhere." There's a huge amount of industrial logic in this. You want to control risk. You want predictable results. You want control and replicability.

What makes the transition to a knowledge economy so scary is that it disrupts this equation. What if one of those guys pulling on the oars figures out how to make a sail? [McGee's Musings]

At the dawn of the Web era, I worked for a division of a large publishing conglomerate. One day I found myself on the top floor of its Manhattan headquarters proposing, to the other divisions, that we aggregate the searching of our disparate websites.

This, I was told, was hopeless: a multi-man-year, multi-tens-of-thousands-of-dollars effort.

That didn't seem right to me. So, being a sail-inventing kind of guy, I went home, noticed that the divisional sites were all indexed by AltaVista, and wrote a script to aggregate search across them.

I delivered this solution the next morning, proving that it was in fact a one-man-evening, zero-dollar effort. (I also gave myself an early glimpse of what Web services would one day become.)

Naturally, nothing came of it. To this day, there is not a full aggregation of search across all the company's web properties.

It's easy to ignore the invention of the sail, for a while. As per the Business 2.0 article Jim elsewhere cites, this may even be rational. The buildout of "subtechnologies, arrangements, and architectures" in the wake of an sudden and epochal shift is, necessarily, not so sudden.

 

[Jon's Radio]
3:37:38 PM    comment   

GPRS, colour, MMS to fuel Q3-Q4 phone bounce back. Slow trade in the interim, says Gartner [The Register]
2:59:12 PM    comment   

Is the VC depression lifting?. VentureOne CEO David Witherow offers a cautious yes, pointing to gathering evidence that the worst venture capital drought in recent history is over. [CNET News.com]
2:51:05 PM    comment   

Can Nokia's flashy phones spark sales?. The handset maker launches a bevy of new phones at the CeBit computer show. Features include color screens, multimedia messaging and support for RealNetworks' media players. [CNET News.com]
2:50:22 PM    comment   

The Current Trend of the Week: Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Hot Spot Infrastructure: Many folks have written in after the Sputnik unveiling to mention two other firms: SOHO Wireless and Joltage. All three firms are promoting what I would label vernacular autochthonous infrastructure just to be wordy.

[80211b News]
2:03:46 PM    comment