"Do you really own software? If you own it you can re-sell it after you're doing using it. But most software is licensed, not owned. I remember there was a discussion some years ago if you are allowed to resell licensed software. Not sure what the status is."
- andrej koelewijn
"True, nothing is perfect. By having loosely coupled teams you will loose a bit of efficiency regarding coding. But you gain that efficiency by cutting away overhead and coordination. In my view, what you win is bigger than what you loose. I think it is a very big win if every team understand their customer, and can prioritize on what the customer/user needs. You will gain a lot of innovation speed. If you find functionality that is really useful for multiple teams, spin it off into a separate component, with a separate team."
- andrej koelewijn
"I agree that most of the visual stuff that we used to do with javascript will be done using css3 and html5. But i think that most of the user interface code, the controller part of MVC, and also the model part will be coded in javascript in the browser, instead of on the server. So expect the amount of javascript to actually increase instead of decrease, just for a different purpose."
- andrej koelewijn
"Maybe a combination of toyota-A3 documentation and creating an environment that forces good decisions (shape the path as described in switch) would be a good way to deliver architecture?"
- andrej koelewijn
"Sure, if you have to support browsers without javascript, this is no option. Server-side validation is a must, as is database validation. Server-side service (REST) or orm frameworks can handle validation without the need for a user interface mvc web framework."
- andrej koelewijn
"True, single page apps are not very common in the enterprise, but the frameworks and tools you need are there and maturing quickly. What is still missing before we can start building enterprise javascript applications?"
- andrej koelewijn
"It should be, but it's not to everyone. There are plenty who think enterprise architecture means big design up front, no room for empirical project control, and no posibility for incrementally delivering testable increments."
- andrej koelewijn
"It should be, but it's not to everyone. There are plenty who think enterprise architecture means big design up front, no room for empirical project control, and no posibility for incrementally delivering testable increments."
- andrej koelewijn
"Xoom only has the best features if you think really great apps aren't part of the features that really matter. I'd rather have keynote + idraw+ omnigraph than an usb and sd slot... Who cares about the hardware if the software is missing?"
- andrej koelewijn
"Xoom only has the best features if you think really great apps aren't part of the features that really matter. I'd rather have keynote + idraw+ omnigraph than an usb and sd slot... Who cares about the hardware if the software is missing?"
- andrej koelewijn
"People are not willing to buy things at the right price. The only right price is the cheapest. Why do you think everything is produced in china? Everybody complains that all jobs are moving to china, but nobody is willing to buy more expensive products produced elsewere. Even so called luxury products like apple products are manufactured in china."
- andrej koelewijn
"People are not willing to buy things at the right price. The only right price is the cheapest. Why do you think everything is produced in china? Everybody complains that all jobs are moving to china, but nobody is willing to buy more expensive products produced elsewere. Even so called luxury products like apple products are manufactured in china."
- andrej koelewijn
"People are not willing to buy things at the right price. The only right price is the cheapest. Why do you think everything is produced in china? Everybody complains that all jobs are moving to china, but nobody is willing to buy more expensive products produced elsewere. Even so called luxury products like apple products are manufactured in china."
- andrej koelewijn
"There are costs to create content, but there are many ways to pay these costs: adds, selling info about the readers, marketing value (just look at the great posts written by fred here, often a lot better than material written by professional journalists). There is too much content payed for in alternatives ways that content that demands readers to pay cannot survive."
- andrej koelewijn
"There are costs to create content, but there are many ways to pay these costs: adds, selling info about the readers, marketing value (just look at the great posts written by fred here, often a lot better than material written by professional journalists). There is too much content payed for in alternatives ways that content that demands readers to pay cannot survive."
- andrej koelewijn
"There are costs to create content, but there are many ways to pay these costs: adds, selling info about the readers, marketing value (just look at the great posts written by fred here, often a lot better than material written by professional journalists). There is too much content payed for in alternatives ways that content that demands readers to pay cannot survive."
- andrej koelewijn
"Scarcity is business, but what is scarce here is customers, not goods. There Is too much information on the web, and too little customers. Basic supply and demand economics say that this means that the price of goods will drop to zero. Not all news will be taken of the web, as some companies are able to offer this news for free and pay for it through ads. This means that customers have a choice, and why pay when the same goods that are also offered for free?"
- andrej koelewijn
"Scarcity is business, but what is scarce here is customers, not goods. There Is too much information on the web, and too little customers. Basic supply and demand economics say that this means that the price of goods will drop to zero. Not all news will be taken of the web, as some companies are able to offer this news for free and pay for it through ads. This means that customers have a choice, and why pay when the same goods that are also offered for free?"
- andrej koelewijn
"Scarcity is business, but what is scarce here is customers, not goods. There too much information on the web, and too little customers. Basic supply and demand economics say that this means that the price of goods will drop to zero."
- andrej koelewijn