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Browse: Home / Globalisation

Globalisation

On the insignificance of (Re)tweets to a post

On the insignificance of (Re)tweets to a post

By Martijn Linssen on December 4, 2012

In a discussion about blindly ReTweeting yesterday, I remembered that I once did a short analysis on auto-tweets. An auto-tweet is a schedule you set up against an RSS-feed or any other trigger, which tweets the URL with a title, some of the post itself, a fixed word or hashtag, etc. Some “thought-leaders” use it [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Trends & Concepts | Tagged 1.0, business exceptions, business rules, Data quality, Globalisation, maturity, stats, trust, twitter

GoDaddy... Go... Gone

GoDaddy… Go… Gone

By Martijn Linssen on September 10, 2012

Today the Godaddy servers have been hit by a simple DDOS – a distributed denial of service involving a few dozen clients or servers that fire off hundreds or even thousands of requests a second at their servers. It’s a simple attack, and very effective. It’s like Arnold Schwarzenegger in Kindergarten Cop, standing in the [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged 1.0, adopt, architecture, Arnold Schwarzenegger, business exceptions, cloud computing, Denial-of-service attack, education, Globalisation, godaddy, guaranteed delivery, Kindergarten Cop, trust | 2 Responses

Resource identification is not a REST invention

Resource identification is not a REST invention

By Martijn Linssen on August 3, 2012

An article on programmable web – pointed out to me by Fred Verheul (thanks Fred!) – gave me an adrenaline rush. It was so full of bollox that I almost started to hyperventilate – which is a pun on the abundant use of the word hypermedia in that same post Let me just quote one [...]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts | Tagged 1.0, application development, architecture, business exceptions, business rules, Globalisation, integration, Supply Chain, transactions

No Custom Code, No Customization, No Requirements. And No Integration

No Custom Code, No Customization, No Requirements. And No Integration

By Martijn Linssen on June 8, 2012

The title comes from a conversation between Ron Tolido and me in which we perused the joys and challenges of SaaS. Ron has a very sharp mind and an even sharper tongue, although he somehow magically manages to give people the idea of adressing them in their comfort zone – I never said I was [...]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts | Tagged 1.0, 3.0, application development, architecture, cloud computing, Globalisation, maturity, standardisation | 1 Response

Hybrid mobile apps will conquer the mobile enterprise

Hybrid mobile apps will conquer the mobile enterprise

By Martijn Linssen on June 4, 2012

[Image by HLundgaard] There is a difference about how we thinks things will evolve, and how they do. I’ve been wondering about Mobile and app stores for a while – they seem contradictionairy. Mobile has taken such a great flight because of lowered cost and increased availability of Internet for mobile, the old-fashioned telephone has turned [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Mobile | Tagged 3.0, android, application development, architecture, edi, Globalisation, html5, HYBRID, integration, iOS, Mobile Computing, Mobile web | 1 Response

REST definition and its place within Enterprise Integration

REST definition and its place within Enterprise Integration

By Martijn Linssen on May 29, 2012

In a previous post I explained why REST is useless when it comes to Enterprise Integration. Even though at the very beginning I explicitly stated that Roy Fielding wrote his dissertation entirely in the context of Web and that REST has absolutely no business benefits whatsoever with regards to Enterprise Integration I got surprised to [...]

Posted in Application Software, Enterprise, Featured Posts | Tagged 1.0, 3.0, application development, architecture, b2b, B2C, business exceptions, business rules, EAI, edi, Globalisation, REST | 6 Responses

Avoid dashes and fancy quotes in blog titles

Avoid dashes and fancy quotes in blog titles

By Martijn Linssen on April 1, 2012

John Reed pointed me to a post by Jeremiah Owyang, which I failed to retrieve on my phone: Coping With Twitter’s Unfollow Bug bit.ly/H6rUUz – by @jowyang (via @jonerp) #ensw — Jon Reed (@jonerpnewsfeed) maart 31, 2012   Ironic as it may seem, this is due to another bug which doesn’t have clear ownership: let’s [...]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts | Tagged enveloping, Globalisation, messaging, Supply Chain, twitter

Apple margin per device - expressed in Chinese

Apple margin per device – expressed in Chinese

By Martijn Linssen on January 24, 2012

[Image by Sven Teschke] An article in the New York Times published 2 days ago suddenly gained a lot of traction and got discussed, reposted and reblogged today: Apple making money off of the United States, while directly employing “only” twice as many employees in the US than overseas – but indirectly more than ten [...]

Posted in Business, Featured Posts | Tagged 1.0, 3.0, Apple, change, china, financials, Foxconn, Globalisation, ipad, iphone, iPod, stats, Supply Chain | 1 Response

Afraid of socmediots? Email works just as well.

Afraid of socmediots? Email works just as well.

By Martijn Linssen on January 2, 2012

A giant reputation drama has been unfolding in the past days: Ocean Marketing’s Paul Cristoforo has made a complete ass of himself and his company. A nice compilation is provided by Doug Collins on his blog, and it’s aptly called How to Commit Career Suicide The (apparently almost) entire email thread can be found on [...]

Posted in Featured Posts, Marketing | Tagged 1.0, B2C, Globalisation, Marketing and Advertising, Penny Arcade, Social Business, social media, trust

Public chats on Twitter - invading your timeline?

Public chats on Twitter – invading your timeline?

By Martijn Linssen on October 25, 2011

After a conversation with Alan Berkson, I wondered about the public chats on Twitter. They’re conducted by following / naming a hashtag, which usually happens at conferences, but there are also various chats going on such as #lrnchat, #influencechat How do you chat on Twitter? That is the question. And it is a difficult one, [...]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts | Tagged business exceptions, change, Globalisation, hashtag, management, Online chat, social media, twitter

Open Source and Cloud, Mobile, Data: what goes where?

Open Source and Cloud, Mobile, Data: what goes where?

By Martijn Linssen on October 13, 2011

After an interesting question from Matt Asay I gave a few answers, then decided that Twitter’s not always suited for long conversations (ahem) I’m working on the theme for OSBC2012. I want to highlight the connection btwn cloud/mobile/data. Can someone help me express that? My first reaction was that these words are big, and could [...]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged application development, business exceptions, business rules, cloud computing, Data quality, Globalisation, growth, information, integration, knowledge, trust, twitter

The myth of standardisation

The myth of standardisation

By Martijn Linssen on September 26, 2011

After reading the ERP paradox by Kailash Awati, I had that “Oh yes” feeling of recognition: someone was hitting the nail right on the head here. Standardisation is a myth, especially when you go global. There are two simple reasons for that: customer demand and business supply Ask a CEO what makes his business so [...]

Posted in Application Software, Enterprise, Featured Posts | Tagged 3.0, adapt, application development, business exceptions, business rules, Enterprise resource planning, erp, Globalisation, growth, IBM, standardisation, Standardization

The lifecycle and stages of a social network

The lifecycle and stages of a social network

By Martijn Linssen on July 8, 2011

Thanks to Scott Berkun for triggering me here, and of course this was related to Google+: @drmstream there is a blog post waiting to be written about the lifecycle/stages of a social network. There is. And this is one. I don’t believe in having to behave differently on social networks. I believe that we all [...]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts | Tagged 2.0, B2C, Globalisation, google, google plus, growth, maturity, social media, Social network, twitter

How @mezmerrett became a Twelebrity overnight

How @mezmerrett became a Twelebrity overnight

By Martijn Linssen on May 31, 2011

On the 24th of May 2011, Mez Merrett sent out a brilliant tweet: If you prefer TWITTER over FB then please retweet, i’m trying to show @Jessmayporter how far one tweet can actually go, Thanks for helping Mez has a hot avatar and bio, so does Jessika. The tweet is hot too: it’s got the [...]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts, Marketing | Tagged 1.0, 2.0, business exceptions, Data quality, Globalisation, Klout, social media, stats, twitter

Skype - the mysterious money bubble

Skype – the mysterious money bubble

By Martijn Linssen on May 10, 2011

This morning I wrote this post already in one tweet: 2003: Skype founded. 2005: bought by eBay $2.5B (60m users). 2009: sold by eBay $2.8B (450m users). 2011: bought by MSFT $8B (700m users) That was after a very quick 5 minute analysis of a few tweets, posts and web sites. Now I’ve finally found [...]

Posted in Application Software, Business, Featured Posts | Tagged change, cloud computing, Ebay, Globalisation, microsoft, skype | 1 Response

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