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Browse: Home / architecture

architecture

SAP, Integration and Star Trek: the future is now

SAP, Integration and Star Trek: the future is now

By Martijn Linssen on February 7, 2012

I commented ranted on an SDN post yesterday. Submitting it failed, and I lost the +/- 500 words. A bit more miffed after that, I wrote the comment anew in Notepad, and copy/pasted that – it worked. I got a few reactions, some of which inviting me to post on the topic on SDN via [...]

Posted in Application Software, Enterprise, Featured Posts | Tagged 1.0, application development, architecture, EAI, edi, EDIFACT, ESB, integration, messaging, sap, SAP SDN, standardisation, Starship Enterprise | Leave a response

Photo by John Kerstholt

SAP meets Cloud: something needs to vaporise first

By Martijn Linssen on December 15, 2011

I have been comfortably following SAP Influencer Summit 2011 from my chair, and reading up on the various posts and vids released throughout the process. It won’t surprise anyone that yesterday’s keywords were cloud, ByD, business, SAPonDemand and sales – thank you, you 350 participants who produced 1,500 tweets during the last day Many people [...]

Posted in Application Software, Enterprise, Featured Posts | Tagged application development, architecture, change, cloud computing, growth, integration, sap, successfactors, Supply Chain, tibco | Leave a response

Twitter needs a radical change of security NOW

Twitter needs a radical change of security NOW

By Martijn Linssen on December 8, 2011

I wrote a post a while back titled Your Twitter security is an egg, not an onion, explaining how Twitter only has one front door, like your house, and if you let people in, you let them in – after which they have access to everything, including your Direct Messages. A few months after that, [...]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts | Tagged application development, architecture, education, maturity, password, trust, twitter, User profile | 1 Response

Asphalt that controls traffic type and flow?

Asphalt that controls traffic type and flow?

By Martijn Linssen on November 29, 2011

This weekend I attended the SAP Inside track NL event, held at Ciber HQ in Eindhoven. The event was great, and I really enjoyed it but would have loved to stay longer and gotten more involved. What has followed are great conversations and discussions, new people to follow on Twitter and elsewhere, and lots of [...]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts | Tagged 1.0, architecture, big data, edi, iDoc, integration, messaging, Service Oriented Architecture, soa, social business design

High Availability From Non-High Availability: OpenStack, Dell, Crowbar, Private Clouds, and Moving the Enterprise Forward…

High Availability From Non-High Availability: OpenStack, Dell, Crowbar, Private Clouds, and Moving the Enterprise Forward…

By Adron Hall on November 1, 2011

The Environment Recently a conversation came up about high availability in a traditional Enterprise Environment. Let me paint the picture for this environment; “This environment has several hundred servers, and several hundred applications. These application range in simple client server applications to n-tier applications strung across multiple services and machines. Some are resilient, some are [...]

Posted in Infrastructure, Open Source | Tagged architecture, aws, azure, Cloud Speak

Telotecture – architecture’s complement

Telotecture – architecture’s complement

By Martijn Linssen on November 1, 2011

Architecture – as I took 4 years of Greek it’s always meant the same word to me: that what stands at the beginning of construction, “ἀρχι-τέκτων”. Tekton is a builder / carpenter, and I was sure there was a verb tektein, but after looking for hours I’m afraid that this is it. At least arche [...]

Posted in Application Software, Enterprise | Tagged application development, architecture, business exceptions, business rules, change, standardisation

Did Apple finally get hitched?

Did Apple finally get hitched?

By Martijn Linssen on October 25, 2011

[Image by Roberta F.] Thanks to Peter Hicks for inspiring me for this title Lately I’ve noticed quite a few complaints regarding the upgrade to Apple’s iOS5. A few examples of that: the upgrade itself failing to complete, having to restore factory settings and lose all apps and files, battery draining like mad, Twitter failing [...]

Posted in Application Software, Business, Featured Posts | Tagged Apple, application development, architecture, change, growth, iphone, iPod, itunes, maturity, Microsoft Windows, operating system, transactions, twitter

Cloud API’s don’t exist, but become costlier over time

Cloud API’s don’t exist, but become costlier over time

By Martijn Linssen on October 12, 2011

 I had a discussion with George Reese on Cloud and API’s, starting with me saying I’d support a maximum of 3 different API versions, and off went the discussion. His “Max 3 versions? Do you hate your ecosystem?”, “What do you mean there’s no such thing as a public cloud API?” and “When you cease [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged A2A, application development, architecture, b2b, B2C, cloud computing, integration | 2 Responses

Image via Dave Spicer

The project versus product dilemma in Enterprise IT

By Martijn Linssen on October 9, 2011

I’ve often run into the project-product dilemma over the last decades: a company does business by supplying products and services, which -after it’s reached a certain size- can only be implemented with the help of IT. Over time, that “help” turns into “sole reliance on” Strangely enough, these IT-implementations are project-driven, and have increasingly become [...]

Posted in Enterprise, Featured Posts | Tagged application development, architecture, change, maturity, Supply Chain

How to queue – that is the question

How to queue – that is the question

By Martijn Linssen on September 8, 2011

The other day my attention got drawn by a very large national company that claimed to have a performance problem: sometimes it would take ages for messages to reach their destination, and entire applications would come to a screeching halt. After a few questions and answers, it was clear that they didn’t have a performance [...]

Posted in Application Software | Tagged 1.0, 2.0, 24/7/365, application development, architecture, b2b, EAI, edi, ESB, guaranteed delivery, integration, Supply Chain, transactions

Enterprise Architecture: it’s like measuring the coastline

Enterprise Architecture: it’s like measuring the coastline

By Martijn Linssen on August 1, 2011

I’ve made the mistake once again: underestimating an enterprise’s business and process flow while looking at it from a conceptual or logical point of view, before hitting what we call the physical layer. Call me an idiot please, yes you can.
Let me use a few metaphors and make this an easy one to understand. I’ll follow the model above.
My client sells candy. Red, green and blue.

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts | Tagged application development, architecture, Candy, Capgemini, Data quality, Enterprise architect, Enterprise architecture, knowledge, maturity, Supply Chain | 2 Responses

1.0, 2.0, 3.0 – Tibbr shows the way

1.0, 2.0, 3.0 – Tibbr shows the way

By Martijn Linssen on June 29, 2011

For those who are familiar with me and my posts, you’ll now that I’m passionate about Integration. My Integration eBook, my posts – even though I cover a wide range of topics – all are about diversity, evolutionary growth and change, while standing with both feet on the ground and keeping a pragmatic view I [...]

Posted in Application Software, Enterprise, Featured Posts | Tagged 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, adapt, adopt, architecture, change, EAI, growth, tibbr, tibco

The packages – customisation MQ

The packages – customisation MQ

By Martijn Linssen on April 28, 2011

I got Rt’ed today on the #ITF11 hashtag: RT @MartijnLinssen: @johnrrymer @TomGrantForr There is no one-size-fits-all. Pure packages is wrong, as is pure customisation #ITF11 >YES and that’s basically all I have to say about it – not. There is a human tendency to do either-or. Black or white, good or bad, pretty or ugly [...]

Posted in Application Software, Enterprise, Featured Posts | Tagged A2A, application development, architecture, b2b, B2C, business exceptions, business rules, customization, erp, implementation, integration, sap, siebel, standardisation

Cloud Failure, FUD, and The Whole AWS Oatage…

Cloud Failure, FUD, and The Whole AWS Oatage…

By Adron Hall on April 25, 2011

Ok.  First a few facts. AWS has had a data center problem that has been ongoing for a couple of days. AWS has NOT been forthcoming with much useful information. AWS still has many data centers and cloud regions/etc up and live, able to keep their customers up and live. Many people have NOT built [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged Amazon Web Services, architecture, aws, azure, Bob Warfield, cloud, cloud computing, Cloud Speak, Frédéric Bastiat, PSA, rants | 2 Responses

How Google’s Android language architecture is dead wrong

How Google’s Android language architecture is dead wrong

By Martijn Linssen on April 4, 2011

I love my HTC Desire. I held on to my Sony Ericsson P800 for 5 years, turning from an early adopter into a laggard, sending mobile text-only tweets via WAP up until the early Summer of 2010 – that started to feel awkward at some point. So in August I entered the “always on” world, [...]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts, Mobile | Tagged android, application development, architecture, business rules, Dictionary, Spell checker, standardisation, Translation, twitter

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February 2012
M T W T F S S
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  • Jennifer Bulotti: LinkSource’s IronTrap™ offers...
  • Adron: I’ve been in this industry a solid...
  • Krishnan Subramanian: Well, I am open to...
  • Mathew Lodge: Thanks for the clarification. You...
  • Krishnan Subramanian: Mathew, Thanks for your...
  • Mathew Lodge: Krish, I run the vCloud team at...
  • Krishnan Subramanian: It doesn’t have any...
  • Clark Updike: Can you elaborate on the tie-in...
  • Owen: Guess I’m more cynical than that....
  • Krishnan Subramanian: Thatz exactly what I told...
  • Aswath Rao: Scoble is misframing his arguments...
  • Krishnan Subramanian: I never said DevOps goes...
  • Adron: I’m late on this article…...
  • Chirag Mehta: I agree that iMessage exists, but...
  • Can OpenSocial Be Resurrected In The Enterprise?: ...

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