Playing the Customer Role Is Easier for the 21st-Century IT Professional

Suresh Malladi

Last September's Cutter IT Journal contains many insightful contributions about 21st-century IT professionals to help you gear up for the new world in which products like smartphones and tablets are playing a growing role (see "21st-Century IT Personnel: Tooling Up or Tooling Down?" Vol. 24, No. 9). The articles touch on the essentials for the 21st-century IT professional, including usability, user interfaces, smart devices, and so on.


Predictions on Collaboration in 2012

David Coleman

Every year I am asked, "What's next for collaboration?" I came up with 10 predictions for 2011, with about an 80% accuracy, according to my own calculations. I began to work on this year's predictions in mid-December, hoping to finish them by the New Year.


Collaborative Intelligence

David Coleman

We have all heard of IQ (intelligence quotient) and even EI (emotional intelligence), but very few people seem to deal with collaborative intelligence (CI).


The Economy, the Cloud, and the iPad: Notes from a CIO Breakfast

krau@cutter.com

I had the good fortune recently to attend a bimonthly breakfast meeting of CIOs. In addition to me, seven of the 23 regular members of the group were in attendance.


Agility, Adaptability, and Alignment

Israel Gat

It often starts as a seemingly plain training request. Having decided to go the agile route, a client would like Cutter to train a certain number of employees in one agile method or another.


Right Requirements, Right Now: Strategies for Project Success Webinar

Scott Stribrny

In this hour-long on-demand webinar, Cutter Senior Consultant Scott Stribrny distills the strategies and metrics used in many successful requirements projects that could serve as the foundation for your next requirements effort. You’ll get an overview of a useful requirements definition process and discover how to build a specification that unambiguously and completely describes the product your client wants.


Applying Architecture to Business Intelligence

Mike Rosen

As architects, we are constantly challenged to provide value to the business. Much of the value we provide comes from avoiding costs and problems before they occur and is difficult to demonstrate or quantify. But architecture can also deliver value by providing a better, broader, more flexible, and extensible solution to business requirements. I always look for opportunities or projects where an architectural approach will provide a better solution and try to seize these chances when I can.


Weeding and Seeding Internal Crowdsourcing Initiatives

Sam McLellan, Andrew Muddimer

A 1983 New Yorker cartoon shows a man taking his son on a walk. "It's good to know about trees," he says to the boy, then adds almost as an afterthought, "Just remember, nobody ever made big money knowing about trees."1 Self-motivation is a well-established explanation for why people get involved.


The Value of Social

David Coleman

With Facebook closing in on one billion people (one in every six people on the planet is on Facebook), it is clear that consumer social networks are having great influence on how the enterprise is now using these technologies.


The Value of Social

David Coleman

With Facebook closing in on one billion people (one in every six people on the planet is on Facebook), it is clear that consumer social networks are having great influence on how the enterprise is now using these technologies.


Agile EA: Governance Introduction

Jim Watson

The effort to make enterprise architecture (EA) more agile is a broad topic. On one hand, there is the successful agile development movement that has influenced and improved system development and project-delivery processes.


Agile EA: Governance Introduction

Jim Watson
Abstract

This Executive Report explores processes in enterprise architecture governance to achieve improved agility using technology advancements in Maven and virtualization.


Who Watches for the Watchers When the Watchers Don't Watch?

Robert Charette

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

"Who will guard the guardians?"

Roman poet Juvenal supposedly asked that question nearly 2,000 years ago, and it is one that often comes to mind when speaking of the current financial crisis as it drags itself into yet another year.


Who Watches for the Watchers When the Watchers Don't Watch?

Robert Charette

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

"Who will guard the guardians?"

Roman poet Juvenal supposedly asked that question nearly 2,000 years ago, and it is one that often comes to mind when speaking of the current financial crisis as it drags itself into yet another year.


Unsuccessful Agile and Lean Adoptions

Amr Elssamadisy

Agile and lean adoptions don't always work. This Advisor shares a few examples of lean and agile adoptions that failed to make things better. These types of agile adoptions are more common than we would like to think. If you are experiencing any of these failure states, you are not alone. But remember that you do not have to accept results like these; they can be fixed. Let's examine four of these failure states more closely.


Secure Software: Part II -- Hackers and Cyber Attackers

E.M. Bennatan

If you're looking for a great idea for a high-tech startup, read on.


Cloud Strategy: Some Good Tactics to Implement

Frank Teti

It appears lately that all business consulting has something to do with cloud computing. For instance, an organization I am currently working with has a mandate in place requiring all forward-engineering projects to be developed using a virtualized cloud environment. This effort is, in this organization's "corporate mind's eye," a way to prepare it to move production applications into the cloud, which is something it has not previously done.


Cloud Strategy: Some Good Tactics to Implement

Frank Teti

It appears lately that all business consulting has something to do with cloud computing. For instance, an organization I am currently working with has a mandate in place requiring all forward-engineering projects to be developed using a virtualized cloud environment. This effort is, in this organization's "corporate mind's eye," a way to prepare it to move production applications into the cloud, which is something it has not previously done.


Cloud Strategy: Some Good Tactics to Implement

Frank Teti

It appears lately that all business consulting has something to do with cloud computing. For instance, an organization I am currently working with has a mandate in place requiring all forward-engineering projects to be developed using a virtualized cloud environment. This effort is, in this organization's "corporate mind's eye," a way to prepare it to move production applications into the cloud, which is something it has not previously done.


Growing Data Phenomenon and Shrinking Response Times

Sudhanshu Hate

Today's unprecedented growth rate of data (structured and unstructured) necessitates faster and cost-effective processing for near-real-time decision making. Over the years, many have viewed high-performance computing (HPC) as a monster too complex and too unaffordable for processing large data. However, that viewpoint is changing rapidly due to open source innovations such as Apache Hadoop, the advent of the cloud, and simple and affordable platforms like Microsoft.


Cloud Computing: Don't Miss the Forest for the Trees

Suresh Malladi

Much has been discussed about the potential and perils of cloud computing. While there is promise in provisioning elasticity on demand, cautionary tales point to security, interoperability, portability, and privacy, among others. A recent edition of Cutter IT Journal was forward-looking with excellent suggestions on architectural and operational strategies for effective cloud sourcing (see "Cloud Computing: A CIO's Perspective," Vol. 24, No. 7).


"Big Data" Is More than Just a Lot of Data

Curt Hall

"Big Data" was one of the hottest IT buzzwords of 2011, and you can expect the hype only to increase this year. BI vendors, the IT press, and analytics gurus go on and on about the need for organizations to meet their Big Data requirements. All the excitement around Big Data is not just hype, however. Today we are seeing organizations develop some very impressive applications that were impractical, if not impossible, just a few years ago.


"Big Data" Is More than Just a Lot of Data

Curt Hall

"Big Data" was one of the hottest IT buzzwords of 2011, and you can expect the hype only to increase this year. BI vendors, the IT press, and analytics gurus go on and on about the need for organizations to meet their Big Data requirements. All the excitement around Big Data is not just hype, however.


HPC Steroid for Big Data

Sudhanshu Hate

Today's unprecedented growth rate of data (structured and unstructured) necessitates faster and cost-effective processing for near-real-time decision making. Over the years, many have viewed high-performance computing (HPC) as a monster too complex and too unaffordable for processing large data. However, that viewpoint is changing rapidly due to open source innovations such as Apache Hadoop, the advent of the cloud, and simple and affordable platforms like Microsoft.


HPC Steroid for Big Data

Sudhanshu Hate

Today's unprecedented growth rate of data (structured and unstructured) necessitates faster and cost-effective processing for near-real-time decision making. Over the years, many have viewed high-performance computing (HPC) as a monster too complex and too unaffordable for processing large data.