January 03, 2016

Enterprise Architecture - Guiding Principles

The usefulness of principles is in their general orientation and perspective; they do not prescribe specific actions. A given principle applies in some contexts but not all contexts. Different principles may conflict with each other, such as the principle of accessibility and the principle of security. Therefore, applying principles in the development of EA requires deliberation and often tradeoffs. The selection of principles to apply to a given EA is based on a combination of the general environment of the enterprise and the specifics of the goals and purpose of the EA. The application of appropriate principles facilitates grounding, balance, and positioning of an EA. Deviating from the principles may result in unnecessary and avoidable long-term costs and risks.


How to Flush DNS

There are wide arrays of DNS issues that can arise at the network administrator or power user level. For the end-user; however, the majority of DNS problems arise from either bad configuration entries or the local computer’s DNS storage requiring flushing. Independent of the type of operating system, many home computer users will input the DNS Server for their respective Internet Service Provider (ISP) incorrectly resulting in a failed Internet connection. Each ISP will have a slightly different configuration process; however, the IP address of the DNS server for your home network to use will be provided on registration for service. Many times the ISP will use the address for their actual DNS server, where others it will be the same as the Gateway IP for the service


The Disciplined Agile Framework

IT departments are complex adaptive organizations. What we mean by that is that the actions of one team will affect the actions of another team, and so on and so on. For example, the way that your agile delivery team works will have an effect on, and be affected by, any other team that you interact with. If you’re working with your operations teams, perhaps as part of your overall DevOps strategy, then each of those teams will need to adapt the way they work to collaborate effectively with one another. Each team will hopefully learn from the other and improve the way that they work. These improvements with ripple out to other teams. The challenge is that every area within IT has one or more bodies of knowledge, and in some cases published “books of knowledge”, that provide guidance for people working in those areas.


Designing the Business of IT

One of the core benefits that organisations can expect is a more cost-efficient IT environment. Senior IT leaders from MunichRe, Shell and Achmea, as well as research from Gartner, predicts that IT4IT will help organisations manage an increasingly complex IT estate in a more cost-effective fashion. It will also free up time and budget for innovation and new products. They feel the Reference Architecture provides a strong framework for managing multi-sourcing approaches, which are becoming more prominent in organisations around the world. Another key benefit of IT4IT is that it is not being introduced as an alternative to methodologies or frameworks such as TOGAF and ITIL.


Google's 'Lego' Smartphone, Smarter TVs: What We're Excited About In 2016

The Internet of Things should continue to provide the foundation for the technology industry's ambitions next year, framed by machine learning, analytics, networking, and ever-smaller devices. Connected sensors will proliferate. Intelligent software agents will learn new tricks that automate discrete tasks in a way that's similar to Gmail's Smart Reply service. Robots will emerge from private businesses to begin grocery deliveries on public sidewalks. If regulatory approval can be secured, drones will begin lawful package deliveries, following in the footsteps of flying contraband couriers.


TLS Client Authentication

Why TLS client authentication? Because that’s the most standard way to authenticate a user who owns a certificate. Of course, smartcard certificates are not the only application – organizations may issue internal certificates to users that they store on their machines. The point is to have an authentication mechanism that is more secure than a simple username/password pair. It is a usability problem, especially with smartcards, but that’s beyond the scope of this post. So, with TLS clientAuth, in addition to the server identity being verified by the client, the client identity is also verified by the server. This means the client has a certificate that is issued by an authority, which the server explicitly trusts.


Market Police Deploy New Algorithm Weapons Against Spoofers

“We have to capture every trade now,” O’Brien said. “In today’s markets it’s all about analyzing patterns and contexts.” Yet given how rapidly fraudsters can change their methods to hoodwink human beings, outwitting surveillance software could be even easier. Algorithms are sophisticated but they’re incapable of determining whether a flurry of buy and sell orders are legitimate or unlawful. “The surveillance tools are merely the first line of defense,” said Haim Bodek, founder of Decimus Capital Markets, a New York-based algorithmic investing firm. “These tools can help bring suspicious activity to the attention of regulators, trading venues and brokers, but they’re a poor substitute for a compliance program that monitors activity across affiliated accounts and groups of traders.”


2025: the five key attributes for your business surviving the next ten years in tech

The two make-or-break traits that rose to the top for these leaders were being able to spot new opportunities predictively and being able to innovate in an agile way. The survey also asked these leaders how prepared they believe their organisations are in each of these two dimensions. The gaps were quite remarkable. While 62% of those surveyed identified predictively spotting opportunities as being very important for their businesses, only 12% thought that their businesses had this capability. And only nine percent believed their organisations were capable of innovating extremely well in an agile way.


Podcast: Portfolio Management & The Agile Extension

In agile, we need to be prepared to constantly adapt our plans. That approach works extremely well at the project or initiative level, but at an organizational level, budgets and plans tend to be longer term and less adaptable. The current rate of change often means that those plans are negated and organizations find it difficult to adapt quickly to changing market conditions. We need to take the concept of backlog management and apply it at a higher level to programs and portfolios so that we are able to adaptively respond to changes in the world around us. The traditional definition of project success has been on time, on scope, and on budget. Those constraints still exist, but they are not the driving factors today.


Cybersecurity in 2016: will it come down to luck or leadership?

Unfortunately in most respects, 2016 won’t change much: users will still unknowingly click on malicious links; IT departments will still be bad at staying up to date with patching; the bad guys will continue to attack; and the tide of misery from breaches will persist. What matters most is whether your organisation will be a victim or not. Of course you could do nothing, and be lucky. But the only way to control your fate is to lead your organisation to the high ground based on a well-considered, security-first strategy. It is important to remember that, despite their claims, most security vendors cannot help you. Within the market we see too many 'me too' vendors, who’s main focus in on the staple of detection.



Quote for the day:

"It is literally true that you can succeed best and quickest by helping others to succeed." -- Napoleon Hill

January 02, 2016

5 Aspects of Cloud Computing to Watch Out For in 2016

The best part is that there is no need to buy expensive software licenses. Any software application upgrades, and the security feature aspects are the sole obligations of the cloud service provider. When it comes to efficiency, flexibility, reliability, and scalability the cloud undoubtedly triumphs over the rest.  Staying competitive in today’s world demands high levels of investment in technology in its various avatars. But enter cloud computing and all your worries go away thanks to ‘rent, don’t buy’ policy so strikingly espoused by it. It is easy to stay on top of market opportunities and retain your competitive edge with cloud computing. The future of cloud computing will only get brighter.


Technology Will Create New Models for Privacy Regulation

The average cost per user of a data breach is now $240 … think of businesses looking at that cost and saying “What if I can find a way to not hold that data, but the value of that data?” When we do that, our concept of privacy will be different. Our concept so far is that we should give people control over copies of data. In the future, we will not worry about copies of data, but using data. The paradigm of required use will develop once we have really simple ways to hold data. If I were king, I would say it’s too early. Let’s muddle through the next few years. The costs are costly, but the current model of privacy will not make sense going forward. If I ping a service, and it tells me someone is over 18, I don’t need to hold that fact.


Artificial Intelligence Finally Entered Our Everyday World

Ng’s prototype relies on a technology called deep learning. Inside the massive computer data centers that underpin Baidu’s online services, the company runs massive neural networks—networks of hardware and software that approximate the web of neurons in the human brain. By analyzing enormous collections of digital images, these networks can learn to identify objects, written words, even human faces. Feed enough cat photos into a neural net, and it can learn to identify a cat. Feed it enough photos of a cloud, and it can learn to identify a cloud.


The CEO of Google's £400 million AI startup is going to discuss ethics

Defending why Google hasn't revealed the members of its AI ethics committee yet, Hassabis said "it's very early days" and "there's lots of scrutiny on this". He said he'd like to get everyone "up to speed" on artificial intelligence first. "We wanted to have a calm, collected debate first," he said. "At some point we will reveal who these people [on the ethics committee] are and what issues are being discussed." Hassabis also assured the audience that he will not allow DeepMind technology to be used in military applications. Hassabis also revealed that he spoke with Hawking on the topic of AI a few months ago. "I think [Hawking] was quite reassured about how we specifically were approaching AI," said Hassabis.


Ten digital trust challenges

It’s not just the challenge of keeping up to speed with technological developments. It’s whether and how the current design of our private and public institutions needs to adapt to cope with these changes and to restore the trust of society – digital trust. In June, to mark the 800th anniversary of the Magna Carta, we looked at how institutions (organised and purposeful interactions of people based on contract, law or culture) must create and maintain trust through legitimacy, effectiveness and transparency, and how global megatrends like technology are driving the need for a design transformation and a bold new charter for our digital world. Here we take a look at 10 digital trust issues that in our view institutions must grow new capabilities to address.


Security threats, hackers and shadow IT still plague health IT

As a starting point, Hopfer suggests that CIOs take an inventory of the cloud services running within their organizations to assess their security posture. The exercise of evaluating what types of applications employees are running can shed light on the tools they need to support the business objectives of the enterprise. ... As hackers grow more sophisticated and attacks mount, security is a primary concern for CIOs in all industries, but it carries a special importance in healthcare owing to the sensitivity of the data involved. Moreover, much of the information contained in health records is unalterable, and, taken in composite, makes for a remarkably full profile that criminals can put to use for all manner of fraudulent ends.


How to defend your business against the worst hackers have to offer in the New Year

When it comes to crystal ball gazing in the tech world, the rule of thumb is not to do it as you only end up looking like an idiot in 12 months’ time. This time, though, the sad truth of the matter is that predicting the shape of the IT security threatscape for next year really isn't that hard: 'more of the bloody same' pretty much sums it up. But while exploit kits, DDoS attacks, and ransomware will all continue marching into the enterprise and doing damage, these threats will also evolve to become more dangerous. Here's five IT security predictions to mull over as you recover from your New Year's Eve party.


Big Data Industry Predictions for 2016

In 2016, automated personalization will be a critical business benefit that big data analytics will begin to deliver in the coming year. Companies will continue to seek competitive advantage by adopting new big data technologies and allowing machines to simulate subjective ‘squishy’ data – including human communication cues such as nonverbal behavior, facial expressions, tone of voice. Big data analytics makes this possible by assimilating vast amounts of information, including the types of data that were too slow and expensive to collect and analyze in the past, such as communications and case records for knowledge workers. As the machines get better at interpreting a variety of data types and collating it with vast quantities of structured data, they can begin to improve and accelerate both employee-owned business processes and customer-facing experiences.


Using Redis As a Time Series Database: Why and How

One of the first questions brought up when talking about Redis and its use as a time-series database is “what is the use or purpose of a time-series database?” The use-cases around time series databases are more related to the data involved - specifically that your data is structured as a series of events or samples of one or more values or metrics over time. A few examples include (but are not limited to): Sell price and volume of a traded stock; Total value and delivery location of an order placed at an online retailer; Actions of a user in a video game; and Data gathered from sensors embedded inside IoT devices. We could keep going, but basically if something happened or you made a measurement, you can record that with a timestamp.



Quote for the day:


"Unless you try to do something beyond what you have already mastered, you will never grow." --Ralph Waldo Emerson


January 01, 2016

Happy New Year, techies ! 


Algorithms: Turning Data Into Products


Algorithms rely on data. If you can get results from clear data, you can spot patterns, such as why a query is returning the wrong results, according to Surabhi Gupta, engineering manager at Airbnb. For companies such as Google and Airbnb, algorithms are their "product." In the simplest terms, a Google search algorithm has to produce an effective search result. That search result is the company's product. Airbnb's algorithms have to connect travelers with those offering accomodations. Practical expediency governs how algorithms are used and referenced. In the business world, algorithms are built for speed. "You are working with people with the expectation of immediate answers," said Google's Marshall. "Your algorithm has another constraint on it." In the end, a developer is taking a sub-optimal solution that runs fast, and comparing it to the optimal solution to see how close the two compare, he added.


The Impact of IoT on Data Science and Analytics

Of all the trends that will shape data science and analytics over the next few years, the Internet of Things (IoT) promises to have the most profound impact of all. In keeping with the publishing tradition of saying goodbye to one year, and hello to a new one, with top prediction lists, I have complied my thoughts on what is in store for the IoT in 2016 (and beyond). ... Disintermediation will be the word of 2016, as the tipping point has been reached and companies start reaping benefits of the investments in automated decisioning systems which will evolve in AI (yet another way in which robots will emerge). By removing human touch points from especially administrative processes, massive layoffs will make headlines. And public debate will rise on the ethical aspects of robotization in our society.


Will new regulations affect fintech startups in Hong Kong?

Fintech, or financial technology. The ubiquitous yet mysterious word usually references startups that are using technology to provide alternative or “disruptive” financial solutions. Fintech has been a buzzword as of late, rising as one of the most compelling sectors in Hong Kong’s startup scene. Attend any startup event or conferences touting creativity and you’ll hear something along the lines of how Hong Kong is well positioned to rise as a fintech hub akin to Singapore and Australia.  This would be exciting as fintech can ease payment processes and money transfers, generally moving a traditional industry forward. Hong Kong has already seen an increase in fintech-centric accelerators:



The Biggest Security Threats We’ll Face in 2016

Data sabotage can be much more difficult to detect than the kind of physical destruction caused by Stuxnet. That’s because data alterations can be so slight yet have enormous consequences and implications. Anyone remember the Lotus 1-2-3 bug back in the 90s that would produce accounting miscalculations in spreadsheets under certain conditions? That was an unintentional error. But attackers could get into financial and stock-trading systems to alter data and force stock prices to rise or fall, depending on their aim. ... There’s no evidence yet that the Juniper backdoor was installed by the NSA; it’s more likely that an NSA spying partner—possibly the UK or Israel—or a US adversary installed it.


Continuously Improving Your Lean-Agile Coaching

Rachel Davies describes a compatible approach in her book Agile Coaching. She was an original member of one of the first, most prolific, longest running extreme-programming (XP) teams at ConneXtra, and she is now an agile coach at Unruly. Joseph Pelrine, a computer and social-complexity scientist and leading XP expert, has a similar perspective. He uses complexity science to explain the theory behind agile and Scrum and uses social complexity to guide and coach self-organising teams. This view aligns with the coach role that Kent Beck, creator of XP, gives in the book Extreme Programming Explained. .... While each of these authors expands on some of aspect of lean-agile coaching, they all describe a role with all the aspects I mentioned before: hard and the soft skills, teaching/training to support growth and development, and guidance and support during delivery.


Cybersecurity and the Twenty-First Century Board of Directors

Just as boards require directors with expertise in finance, today they must also have directors with experience in cybersecurity. It takes qualified board members to provide oversight by knowing what questions to raise and how to assess management's responses. Symantec recognized this a few years ago when they recruited U.S. Air Force General Suzanne Vautrinot to the board. During her 31 year tenure with the USAF, "she led large-scale, diverse, global organizations that operate, extend, maintain, and defend global networks." Not only does General Vautrinot have the advanced degrees and board experience, she also "oversaw a multi-billion dollar global cyber enterprise with 14,000 military, civilians, and contractors.


Simpler management motivates Ethernet SAN investments

"It encouraged the SAN and Ethernet networking teams to work more closely together and closely with the systems team," Masseth said. Before, the FC guys thought the Ethernet team didn't understand lossless, or the importance of uptime. Now, Masseth said, whenever UA has an outage, incident or complex build to tackle, fingers aren't pointing at the other team. "They roll up their sleeves and find and fix the problems." Ethernet-based storage protocols offer attractive cost profiles through reuse of existing network infrastructure and management expertise, said IDC's Casemore. Lower cost when scaling out storage infrastructure was important to 35% of survey respondents when considering Ethernet SAN options. Masseth found that FCoE did reduce costs for UA, but this might not be the case for other builds, he warned.


Async await with Web Forms over multiple postbacks

Support for asynchronous procedures (using async / await) is great in C# and VB languages, and works very well in desktop (WinForms, WPF, console and others) applications. But there are web applications, like based on ASP.NET Web Forms, where support for asynchronous procedures are much less exposed. Microsoft itself states, that support for asynchrony (using async / await or other methods) is only limited to offload working threads, increase throughput and all asynchronous procedures must complete work before rendering phase (generating HTML). But there are also much more useful scenarios, where asynchronous procedure is started in some postback, and completed in one of subsequent postbacks, so executing spans over multiple postacks. This allow for UI driven asynchronous processing, which is useful for most web apps.


Thriving On Data #4 - Data Apart Together

The modern reality of technical evolution is that the conservative approach is the one that embraces delivery and operation changes more aggressively and focuses less on individual technologies. This view on information underpins the Business Data Lake which Capgemini co-innovated with Pivotal in 2013 and has since been adopted by both Informatica and EMC. Data Apart Together is not simply about how you combine data; it’s about recognizing that information often is apart for a reason. It is partner data they don’t want to share in the raw, it’s personal information that has to be kept in a specific geography, or its separate due to an acquisition and the sheer volume of information makes it unreasonable to coalesce into a single environment. Data Apart Together is therefore about how you enable different business units to derive insight across all the available information and not simply that which is directly available.


With potential Ford tie-up, Google looks to take back self-driving car lead from Tesla

For Google, the move would get their technology into more vehicles without them having to invest large amounts of capital into manufacturing. And, it's clear that Google wants to move the project forward since they'll be structuring their self-driving vehicle division as its own company under the new parent corporation, Alphabet next year—potentially including a carpooling competitor to Lyft or Uber. When asked what he thought of the potential partnership, Gartner analyst Ken Dulaney said that it makes "lots of sense." "Google needs the experience of production distribution and marketing, and Ford needs the breakthrough talents of Silicon Valley," Dulaney said.



Quote for the day:


"The result of long-term relationships is better and better quality, and lower and lower costs." -- W. Edwards Deming


December 31, 2015

7 Technology Resolutions For a Better 2016

It's 2016 and there's a feeling of hope and renewal in the air. That can mean only one thing: It's time for some New Year's resolutions. What did you vow to change this year? Are you going to learn a new skill? Pay off your credit card debt? Lose 40 pounds? Whatever your plans are, don't forget to throw in a few resolutions that involve the technology in your life. The best part of tech resolutions is they're fairly easy to keep and can improve your life almost right away. We've got seven suggestions below on how to make technology central to your plans for an awesome 2016.


Immutable Layers, Not (Just) Infrastructure

Immutable infrastructure is an effective application delivery workflow, but the deployment process is slow and resources are often underutilized. Building images and creating new hosts on every application update leads to a deploy process that can take 10 minutes or more. If there’s only one service per host, it usually does not use all the available CPU, memory, and disc resources on the host. If only 20% of resources are used, then the remaining 80% is wasted expense. Schedulers like Nomad, Mesos, and Kubernetes allow organizations to split applications and infrastructure into separate immutable layers, which speeds up deployment times and increases resource density, while still maintaining the benefits of immutable infrastructure. 


Software Licensing Audits: Is Your Company Prepared?

Violating license agreements can be expensive. Six defendants recently pled guilty in a software piracy case worth more than $100 million. While it wasn't an enterprise company left holding the bag, the outcome illustrates the consequences. In enterprise settings, most noncompliance is unintentional, which usually means the company did a poor job of managing its software licenses. If a company does not go to court, at minimum it will likely have to "true up," which means pay any licensing fees owed for software overuse. That can easily mean six or seven figures in large organizations. Licensees may also be subject to fines and penalties outlined in the license agreement. If the matter goes to litigation, the causes of action usually include breach of contract and copyright infringement, whether or not the noncompliance was willful or negligent.


How will blockchain technology transform financial services?

Bitcoin’s open source blockchain, described as a “permissionless” system, means it is decentralised and open to anyone. UBS and Microsoft are both working with blockchain start-up Ethereum, which runs a similar open source technology, and allows for the smart contracts that can execute trades automatically. But many in banking, wary of losing their grip over operations or of upsetting regulators, see the future in closed, or permissioned-only, networks. Almost two dozen of the world’s largest banks, including JPMorgan, UBS and Barclays, have thrown their weight behind R3 CEV, a start-up venture, to set up a private blockchain open only to invited participants who between them maintain and run the network. It forms part of an effort to build an industry-wide platform to standardise use of the technology.


Waterfall-to-Agile transition: Five tips from Bose

Bose adopted Agile development in 2003, after having become frustrated with the Waterfall methodology. CIO Rob Ramrath said Bose had trouble with Waterfall's "unknown unknowns," or ambiguity inherent in the process. He said the company "made a decision to burn the ships," and move to Agile development, which, he said, provides a structured way to avoid ambiguity in the development process and to pull business customers into the development process. Here are five recommendations that came out of the panel for a Waterfall-to-Agile transition:


Metatheory and enterprise-architecture

By contrast, a metatheory provides a consistent description of the context-space itself – the parameters and trade-offs underlying that context-space, much as above. As a theory-of-theory, a metatheory provides a frame in which to identify where each type of theory would work well – and where it wouldn’t. Hence on complexity, for example, Roger Sessions argues that we should aim to eliminate all complexity; John Seddon argues instead that we should aim to embrace complexity, and that trying to eliminate it only makes things worse. Which of them is right? If we were looking for a single consistent theory, one of them surely must be wrong? But actually they’re both right - in the right types of context. Equally, both of them are wrong – for the wrong type of context. To use a well-worn architects’ expression, “It depends“…


Microsoft outlines its cloud and server integration roadmap for 2016

Microsoft is planning to make generally available its tenth release of BizTalk Server in the fourth quarter of 2016. Before that, in Q2 of next year, Microsoft will release a Community Technology Preview of BizTalk Server 2016, followed by a beta of that product in Q3.BizTalk Server 2016 will align with Windows Server 2016 (due out in Q3 next year), SQL 2016, Office 2016 and the latest version of Visual Studio. The latest BizTalk release will support SQL 2016's AlwaysOn Availability Groups both on-premises, as well as hosted on Azure. Microsoft plans to tighten the integration between BizTalk Server and various application programming interface connectors, such as the ones to Salesforce.com and Office 365, to enhance hybrid on-prem/cloud scenarios.


Hybrid Cloud – Taming the Digital Dragon

Often the somewhat rigid structures and processes of IT departments, such as fixed employment or procurement via RFP, aren’t the most innovation-encouraging activities. This means CIOs can easily source their functional requirements, such as delivery and support of a SAP system, but they struggle to engage personnel who can devise innovative new ways in which it might be used to extend a successful digital strategy. That’s a much more rare skill set and is often concentrated in small startup businesses, where domain experts seek to exploit their considerable assets of knowledge areas. They in turn urgently need reference clients and problem statements to build their business around, and so very dynamic fusion can be achieved with regards to shared goals of digital innovation.


An Evaluation Guide to Application Lifecycle Management Software Solutions

Application Lifecycle Management tools can help improve software quality, cut costs, shorten time to market, and enhance collaboration by clearly outlining workflows, and helping you stay on top of your artifacts and processes throughout the lifecycle. What's more, advanced integrated ALM solutions also offer simple ways to export reports, greatly facilitating compliance audits in the above-mentioned safety-critical industries. Right, so there's a solution (or at least significant help) available for some of the most pressing difficulties you're facing. Should you just run to the store, grab an ALM platform off the shelf, and sit back to watch the extra money flowing in? Well, here's the thing: Application Lifecycle Management software come in all shapes and sizes, and finding the one that perfectly suits your processes can be problematic.


The Tech That Will Change Your Life in 2016

Voice-operated electronics are poised for a quantum leap in accuracy and intelligence in 2016. Talking offers a more natural way to interact with devices that need complex input but aren’t exactly keyboard-friendly, such as TVs, sound systems and household electronics. Voice arrived in a big way in 2015 when Microsoft’s Cortana virtual assistant came to Windows 10, while Siri and Google Now turned up in cars and TVs. This year, expect voice control on more computers and an even wider range of gadgets, including the CogniToys Dino, a toy that uses IBM’s Watson to help answer questions, and Jibo, a talking family robot.



Quote for the day:



"Be a leader to be remembered, make people feel good about themselves and increase their belief in their own abilities" -- Gordon Tredgold

December 30, 2015

Healthcare IT: Hot Trends For 2016, Part 1

Several technology trends are converging to give patients advantages, such as improved sources of knowledge and fast, improved medical service. "In 2016, the debate will heighten as to whether patients -- or health consumers -- will be asked to do more or less to manage their health," said Dr. Stephen S. Tang, president of the University Science Center in Philadelphia. "The more information the health consumer has, the more analytics and control he or she may want." We'll each have more opportunity to monitor our health and wellbeing through apps and products that take diagnostics and treatments out of the physician's office and into the home, Tang said. Tang sees this as a positive: Providers and research institutions will take on the burden of inventing better solutions, rather than giving already-busy people a new set of responsibilities, he says.


Data Center Technology Startups to Watch in 2016

You won’t find hot SDN, cluster management, flash, or application container startups on this list. We specifically chose to narrow it down to companies we feel are addressing some of the biggest pain points in data center design and management. This isn’t meant to be an exhaustive list, but the startups listed here are trying to solve big problems in interesting, innovative ways. Feel free to suggest other companies that should be on this list by submitting comments below or on our social media channels: Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn,Google+.


Effective Strategies for Data Leakage Detection

The central strategy and key resource involved in data leakage detection is pretty much the same, regardless of the amount of data or files involved: effective management of metadata. Many organizations don’t realize the real value of metadata, especially when it incorporates both conceptual metadata (the kind that comes from people’s heads and is therefore subjective) and logical metadata (the kind gathered with technology tools, which is very black-and-white and objective). If you haven’t acquired both types and resolved any discrepancies, you will not be able to interpret everything needed to manage a given data asset more effectively — because you are looking at only a “half truth.”


Five Cybersecurity Trends to Watch in 2016

To no one’s surprise, cybersecurity continued to be a key area of concern and struggle among organizations of all sizes in 2015. However, buried amongst the constant news cycle of new attacks and sophisticated breaches is the fact that more business leaders are understanding the importance of cybersecurity and its potential impact on the organization. Whether it’s a small operation within a niche industry or a major global corporation, everyone is at risk. As we prepare to ring in 2016, we have taken time to reflect on lessons learned in the past year and how these trends and major news stories in cybersecurity will affect the year ahead. Here are five things we’ll be watching for in 2016


NFV: Not Ready for Prime Time but Working on It

While real work began in 2015 on NFV MANO, our in-house analyst Scott Raynovich made the argument that the MANO model that was set up by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) has served its useful purpose. He says real-world NFV management is quickly morphing beyond the constraints of the ETSI diagram. ... Sure enough, at SDN & OpenFlow Congress in Germany in October, Axel Clauberg said the cloud VPN service Deutsche Telekom (DT) launched in March “was difficult.” The VPN service is based on OpenStack. Also at the OpenFlow conference, OpenStack came under fire for lagging behind the needs of NFV deployments. If OpenStack can’t do the job, other alternatives could emerge, ranging from proprietary technology to another open source group, such as OPNFV, filling the void.


Towards an Agile Software Architecture

An important aspect of agile software architecture is when it has to start. Opposed to the waterfall model where we have well-defined phases, in the agile world there is no certain point that people agree to be the starting one. One typical approach is to introduce sprint #0 – a special sprint where the development environment is configured and some fundamental decisions are made. A common pitfall with this approach though, is people tend to prolong it as they always find things that are “almost ready”. “One more week and we can start the regular sprints” is often heard. In many cases you find yourself already working on the system, without even having the user stories, because “it will be really cool to have that helper feature implemented in advance”. In such situations you should beforehand agree on an end date for sprint #0 – this could be the duration of a regular sprint or something close to it.


6 Strategic Projects Any Business Can Implement in 2016

As 2016 begins, now is the time for businesses (regardless of industry, size, product or service offering, or location) to take stock of all resources and initiatives, and plan strategy-centric projects to implement in the New Year. There are many projects any business can implement that, if executed successfully, can create fresh opportunities or drastically reduce the chance of costly missed opportunities. Projects are often pursued for the purpose of generating revenues, creating growth opportunities, seeking innovation or even increasing brand awareness, but it can be easy to get caught up in just day-to-day operations without recognizing the actual cost of missing some more basic projects.


Reader Forum: IoT and the automotive industry

As these commercial fleet vehicles solutions increasingly began to share information bi-directionally via the Internet, they have become a part of the Internet of Things. Today, the “connected car” is rapidly transforming the consumer automotive experience as manufacturers compete to provide a wide array of factory- and dealer-installed IoT options. These consumer-oriented IoT applications range from practical to entertaining. Audi, BMW and Mercedes demonstrated automated vehicles that assist with parking and lane changing at last year’s Consumer Electronics Show. AT&T partnered with Uber to enable passengers to watch college football games from tablets in the backseat. Signing up with General Motors, Audi and Ford, AT&T is aiming to hook up cars with Internet access to stream videos and games onto passengers’ mobile devices.


Why Information Governance Initiatives Matter

“The volume and rate of growth of data do not bring the greatest challenges to information integrity across healthcare. The tougher challenges to information integrity, availability and security require information governance.” Further discussions emphasized the various aspects and value of trusted information, including safe use of IT and interoperability. While many organizations are still in the beginning phase of implementing an IG program, a recent survey by Cohasset Associates revealed that 44 percent of respondents have established IG oversight bodies, 44 percent have seen modest to significant progress, 38 percent have included IG in their organization’s strategic goals, and 36 percent have designated senior executive sponsors.


Enterprise startups: Open source may be your only hope

The reason is that open source communities can be bigger than any particular startup or company. And, if you're going to have a real chance at solving a crazy complicated enterprise IT problem, you must bring an army. This is why mega-banks, retailers, etc. buy from mega IT vendors. It's not that they believe an IBM knows more than random Startup X. Instead, they opt to buy from a large enterprise software vendor because they're big enough to understand the problem, and to have the resources (and longevity) to tackle it. This isn't to suggest there's not room to disrupt enterprise IT. There is. Just ask Amazon Web Services. But, even cloud and open source aren't enough. AWS is hitting its stride in part because it increasingly looks and acts like the legacy vendors it's displacing. CIOs trust its scale.



Quote for the day:


"Some men see things as they are and ask why. Others dream things that never were and ask why not." -- George Bernard Shaw