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How many of us wrestle with the question "who should report to whom?" several times a year? Have your efforts to "reorganize" the business-technology relationship been proactive or reactive?
December 1, 2002 | Authored By: Steve Andriole
Note from the Managing Editor: The Agile Manifesto places value on individual
September 19, 2012 | Authored By: Moshe Cohen
Although not many organizations are fully Agile at this time, those that are display the following qualities:
February 12, 2015 | Authored By: Lawrence Fitzpatrick
We have developed a simple yet powerful framework to help business leaders navigate the digital landscape based on four business-focused questions that are at the core of effective governance of digital. We call these questions the four “ares.” In our previous Advisor, we discussed the first two of the “ares”: Are we doing the right things? and Are we doing them the right way? This Advisor explores the two that remain.
August 22, 2018 | Authored By: Joe Peppard, John Thorp
In Part 1 of this Executive Update (Vol. 2, No.
March 31, 2001 | Authored By: Michael Epner
Strategic Planning in the Contemporary World: Nonlinearity, complexity, and incredible technological change by Colin Crook
February 29, 1996 | Authored By: Colin Crook
Strategic Planning in the Contemporary World: Nonlinearity, complexity, and incredible technological change by Colin Crook
February 29, 1996 | Authored By: Colin Crook
© 2000 by Karl E. Wiegers. All rights reserved.
April 30, 2000 | Authored By: Karl Wiegers
The "consumerization of IT" is a name we've given to a new phenomenon. A couple of new edge devices have come on the scene -- smartphones and tablets -- and they are quickly moving from being consumer gadgets to widespread elements in enterprise IT.
May 16, 2012 | Authored By: Dan Gordon
CONTROLLED CHAOS: LIVING ON THE EDGE by Ken Schwaber
March 31, 1996 | Authored By: Ken Schwaber
WHEN TELEPATHY WON'T DO:
April 30, 2000 | Authored By: Karl Wiegers
In a previous Executive Up
July 14, 2007 | Authored By: Kenneth Rau
In this article, I'll focus on XML languages. One key to understanding the value of XML is recognizing that XML is a metalanguage -- it allows the creation of tailored languages that describe data that can be passed from one user or application to another.
February 1, 2002 | Authored By: Paul Harmon
Opening Statement David Garmus
May 31, 2003 | Authored By: Capers Jones
Cutter IT Journal VOL. 27, NO. 2
February 27, 2014 | Authored By: Jason Tice