Software modeling is getting more fashionable, but it has a long way to go before it becomes as respectable as writing code. Which is funny in a way, because code is just one particular kind of model! Too many people get hung up on the graphical nature of modeling techniques such as the Unified Modeling Language (UML), forgetting that they have underlying textual representations as well.
November 2004
October 2004
Vol. 17, No. 10, October 2004
Printer Friendly PDF versionOutsourcing Is a Corporate IT Issue In this issue:- Cutter IT Journal: Offshore Outsourcing: No Pain, No Gain?
- Offshore Outsourcing: No Pain, No Gain?: Opening Statement
- Breaking the Cycle: Rethinking Your Approach to Offshore Outsourcing
- Competing in the Offshore Era
- Working in IT in America: Some Strategies for Not Losing Your Job to Overseas Outsourcing
- Preparing for Offshoring Initiatives
- Outsourcing and Information Security: What Are the Risks?
October 2004
The ability to organize for high performance is a source of competitive advantage. Teams are seen as a critical component of a high-performance organization. In my view, however, few IT managers accurately assess the organizational risk in failing to attend to team dynamics that lead to reliable delivery. Thus, they incur tremendous "organizational debt" in the way they structure and manage the work. That's where this issue of CBR comes in.
September 2004
Focus on New Technologies
Resolving data integrity issues requires new technological approaches. Technologies like RFID build in quality by improving data accuracy, objectivity, and timeliness.In this issue:- Cutter IT Journal: In Pursuit of Information Quality
- In Pursuit of Information Quality: Opening Statement
- Beyond Data Cleansing: A Process-Oriented Approach to Improving Information Quality
- The Next Frontier: How Auto-ID Could Improve ERP Data Quality
- From Pallet to Shelf: Improving Data Quality in Retail Supply Chains using RFID
- Improving Data Quality the Six Sigma Way
- Information Quality Management in a Real-Time World
- Data Tracking in the DoD, from Army Logistics to Net-Centric Warfare
September 2004
Would Hershey Foods Corporation's story of undelivered candy that piled up in the company's warehouses in 1999 and of the more than US $100 million in lost Halloween sales that year have been any different had close executive board-level oversight of the infamous enterprise resource planning (ERP) initiative taken place?