• Home
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact
CloudAve
Software in Business. The Business of Software.
  • Business
    • Analysis
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Marketing
    • Strategy
    • Small business
  • Technology
    • Application Software
    • Infrastructure
    • Open Source
    • Mobile
    • Platforms
    • Product reviews
    • Security
  • Misc
    • Design
    • Just for fun
    • Trends & Concepts
  • Your POV
  • Sponsors
Browse: Home / adapt

adapt

Innovation and inclusion - a matter of space and time

Innovation and inclusion – a matter of space and time

By Martijn Linssen on October 29, 2012

I am not sure anymore on relationship between innovation and inclusion . Need to think through it during the long flight to India tomorrow — Vijay Vijayasankar (@vijayasankarv) October 26, 2012 Vijay Vijasankar and Ethan Jewett dragged me into a conversation on innovation and inclusion. Well of course they didn’t, I butted in as usual […]

Posted in Trends & Concepts | Tagged 3.0, adapt, business rules, management, maturity, trust

Android? Car mode? Speakerphone auto-on? Bluetooth volume fail? Micro-USB design-flaw!

Android? Car mode? Speakerphone auto-on? Bluetooth volume fail? Micro-USB design-flaw!

By Martijn Linssen on October 23, 2012

Are you -that is, your phone- suffering from the following symptoms? weeks or even months ago, “car mode” started to seemingly randomly get enabled ever since, that seemed to happen more often at some point, when you made or received a call, the speakerphone would sometimes be automatically turned on since a while, when you […]

Posted in Technology | Tagged adapt, architecture, chatter, maturity, standardisation | 1 Response

Twitter is NOT where the party is at

Twitter is NOT where the party is at

By Martijn Linssen on July 31, 2012

You couldn’t possible have missed the messy story around NBC and Twitter, resulting in suspension of Guy Adams’ Twitter account. Guy’s latest reaction on that is here, and contains the concise version. I do have to say that “which is widely listed online” is an exaggeration for sure, as it’s only to be found on […]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts | Tagged 1.0, adapt, business exceptions, change, management, social media, standardisation, trust, twitter

Need a mindset for adaptation? Team up

Need a mindset for adaptation? Team up

By Martijn Linssen on June 22, 2012

My latest post told my story of a week of hiking. In essence, it was a classical story of engaging a new venture, preparing for it as best as you can, being confronted with (utter) failure and adapt to the changed circumstances by listening to yourself, your peers, experts in the field – and then […]

Posted in Featured Posts, Trends & Concepts | Tagged 3.0, adapt, change, growth, social business design, social media, trust

Will adopting social tools leverage adaptation?

Will adopting social tools leverage adaptation?

By Martijn Linssen on June 19, 2012

After a week of hiking in Ireland (hence the picture), it’s hard to pick up blogging again. Thankfully, Michael Brito got me going and an interesting conversation, with an old theme, unfolded: RT @martijnlinssen: @Britopian I think the need to adapt rather than adopt is what stalls #socbiz. Takes a few times longer than usual […]

Posted in Enterprise, Featured Posts, Trends & Concepts | Tagged 3.0, adapt, adopt, change, growth, social business design, trust

Simple Service Enterprise - part 6

Simple Service Enterprise – part 6

By Martijn Linssen on May 23, 2012

In my latest post, I recapped on the previous posts and started to take Integration from a business point of view. I’ll continue to do that here, and try to mix in technical details without it getting too confusing. Wish me luck! Here’s the conversation again: Hey Tom! What did the Red Sox do last […]

Posted in Application Software, Enterprise, Featured Posts | Tagged 3.0, adapt, architecture, b2b, B2C, EAI, edi, ESB, integration, Simple Service Enterprise, soa

Simple Service Enterprise - part 5

Simple Service Enterprise – part 5

By Martijn Linssen on May 11, 2012

In my first post on SSE I explained why and how I want, and can achieve, and have achieved, an Enterprise Integration paradigm that will give you a device-agnostic, platform-agnostic, tool-agnostic architecture that will free you from being crushed by the two tectonic plates in IT at the moment: diversity in devices, platforms and tools on the […]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged 3.0, adapt, architecture, b2b, B2C, EAI, edi, Enterprise integration, ESB, integration, Simple Service Enterprise, soa

Simple Service Enterprise - part 4

Simple Service Enterprise – part 4

By Martijn Linssen on May 8, 2012

Today we’ll take a REST from REST and I’ll touch upon one of the issues I ran into today: the two types of data there are. REST assured however that at least a few of the next posts will be about yesterday’s topic, as it has led to fierce debates here and there over the […]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged 3.0, adapt, architecture, b2b, B2C, EAI, edi, ESB, integration, Simple Service Enterprise, soa

Simple Service Enterprise - part 3

Simple Service Enterprise – part 3

By Martijn Linssen on May 7, 2012

My previous post showed the fundamentals of information interchange: exposing business functionality, currently encapsulated in the back-end, to the outside world via services. These services are a one-to-one translation to back-end functions, which are one-to-one translations to business process steps themselves: the smallest level of business transaction. I also showed that the How of exposing […]

Posted in Application Software, Enterprise, Featured Posts, Infrastructure | Tagged 3.0, adapt, architecture, b2b, B2C, EAI, edi, ESB, integration, Simple Service Enterprise, soa | 1 Response

Simple Service Enterprise - part 2

Simple Service Enterprise – part 2

By Martijn Linssen on April 30, 2012

Yesterday’s post was about Simple Service Enterprise, and showed the basics: to keep up with the growing diversity inside and outside your enterprise for getting the same functionality on different devices and platforms, you need an Integration layer (the red in the middle). Can’t argue with that, point-to-point integration is a neat quick and dirty […]

Posted in Entrepreneurship, Featured Posts | Tagged 3.0, adapt, architecture, b2b, B2C, EAI, edi, ESB, integration, Simple Service Enterprise, soa, trust | 2 Responses

Simple Service Enterprise - part 1

Simple Service Enterprise – part 1

By Martijn Linssen on April 29, 2012

I plead for a Simple Service Enterprise. One that is ruled by Business, not IT. One that is interoperable with any other business, customer or consumer, regardless of the platforms they operate on. Regardless of the vendors that dominate those platforms. Regardless of the programming languages used on those platforms. Regardless of the devices used. […]

Posted in Enterprise, Featured Posts | Tagged 3.0, adapt, architecture, b2b, B2C, EAI, edi, integration, Simple Service Enterprise, trust | 4 Responses

Why management rocks, and leadership sucks

Why management rocks, and leadership sucks

By Martijn Linssen on April 24, 2012

[Image by _MG_5503] The past 24 hours I had a fierce conversation on leadership and management, and I love how just everyone joined in on Twitter; especially those that disagree with me because they teach me most in the shortest amount of time I started it with   Every one wants to be a leader, […]

Posted in Trends & Concepts | Tagged 1.0, 3.0, adapt, adopt, business exceptions, business rules, change, growth, management, maturity, social business design, trust | 3 Responses

Why API's suck, and what they lack

Why API’s suck, and what they lack

By Martijn Linssen on March 29, 2012

The Social Media Movement is slowly moving towards monetisation. Social Business, yes even Social Enterprise, is neigh. Infographics bite the dust in an ever-increasing frenzy to prove that social is here to stay, to rule, to conquer the world! And as yet another evidence of that, API’s are brought forward – by the hundreds, no […]

Posted in Application Software, Featured Posts | Tagged adapt, adopt, api, application development, facebook, integration, saas, Social Enterprise, social media, standardisation, twitter | 6 Responses

The benefits and concerns of Social

The benefits and concerns of Social

By Martijn Linssen on March 8, 2012

This post is the last in a series of six that deals with Social Business and Social Enterprise. The goal of the series: to explore the pros and cons of Social Business and Social Enterprise, given the current odds, and fast-forwarding to business opportunities now and in the near future Well, this is it. 1. […]

Posted in Business, Enterprise, Featured Posts | Tagged 1.0, 3.0, adapt, adopt, business exceptions, business rules, change, growth, knowledge, SBSE, social business design, social media, trust

The concerns of Social Enterprise

The concerns of Social Enterprise

By Martijn Linssen on March 2, 2012

This post is the fifth in a series of six that deals with Social Business and Social Enterprise. The goal of the series: to explore the pros and cons of Social Business and Social Enterprise, given the current odds, and fast-forwarding to business opportunities now and in the near future This post is about the […]

Posted in Enterprise, Featured Posts | Tagged 1.0, 3.0, adapt, adopt, business exceptions, business rules, change, growth, knowledge, SBSE, social business design, social media, trust

Next »
feed mail facebook twitter linkedin

Popular Posts

  • Home
  • The Five-Step Maturity Model for Building a Collaborative Organization
  • Looking Back 2010: Key Cloud Acquisitions
  • Uncover latent needs with a simple question
  • From 24SevenOffice to 24SevenTravel and On to ...
  • User Interface and Cloud Computing - Part 1
  • The Discriminatory Dark Side Of Big Data
  • Driving SaaS Growth Through The Customer Lifecycle

Archives

Authors

  • Adron Hall
  • Chirag Mehta
  • Christian Reilly
  • Dan Morrill
  • Derek Pilling
  • Hutch Carpenter
  • Jarret Pazahanick
  • Jason M. Lemkin
  • Joel York
  • John Taschek
  • Krishnan Subramanian
  • Mark Suster
  • Michael Krigsman
  • Ofir Nachmani
  • Paul Miller
  • Quinton Wall
  • Randy Bias
  • Robert Duffner
  • Sadagopan
  • wprss
  • Zoli Erdos
Sponsored by: