February 6, 2009
Carahsoft is a fantastic company in Reston, VA run by the hardest working, most modest, ethical, business leader I have ever met. His behind the scenes style means he would probably not want me to mention much more about him, but if I have your curiosity up about them you can read more here (read the one about their winning the Smart CEO magazine Future 50 in Jan 2009, or Fairfax County economic development authority award for 2009, or other award after award after award).
One thing I like about Carahsoft is their desire to help government customers think through hard problems and their desire to help their extended team mates and partners learn about customer hard problems so enterprise solutions can be developed. One of the many ways Carahsoft does that is by hosting venue like the Intelligence Community Executive Forum (ICEF). This periodic venue brings together executives and thought leaders from government and industry to listen to lesssons learned, hard problems and successes in creating CONOPs to address mission needs.
I’ll be helping Carahsoft with the next ICEF on 17 Feb 2009. This one will focus on collaborative enterprise solutions like those provided by Adobe. Panels will be held on topics like real-time collaboration, secure information sharing and Integration/web2.0.
Please check out the agenda and register if you can make it. More info is here: http://www.intelligencecommunityexecutiveforum.com/
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Posted by Bob Gourley
January 12, 2009
Movable Type recently announced an exciting new way for blogs like CTOvision.com to leverage the Facebook Connect API. I’ve just integrated these capabilities into my blog and have deployed a Facebook application page to act as the hub for these features. I would greatly appreciate it if you would test this out and give me some feedback.
Background: The Facebook Connect API lets users share their information with third party websites and applications. Users can dynamically connect their identity information in ways that respect their privacy choices. Basic profile info, photos and information can be shared. The current version of this capability offers more trusted authentication, better ways to stay in touch with friends and family, and stronger, more dynamic privacy. Movable Type has provided plugins and integration guidance to enable blogs like CTOvision.com to leverage these capabilities.
Potential Benefits: When you log into the CTOvision.com site using your Facebook account, you get the full features of a CTOvision.com account without having to create a new login. If you choose, your Facebook profile name and picture can automatically be shared with this and other Movable Type blogs. And you will be able to see which other friends of yours are commenting on this site. Additionally, when you comment, you will have the option of having your comments posted to your Facebook wall.
The Request: I would really appreciate it if you would help me test out these features on this site. Please try logging into CTOvision.com with your Facebook account and after you do, leave a comment on this post. If you share your comment on your Facebook page that would be appreciated too.
Please let me know if you have any suggestions/comments/thoughts on ways this can be better integrated into the site.
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Posted by Bob Gourley
January 1, 2009

2008 was a year of rapid changes for Chief Technology Officers. We should expect 2009 to move even faster. Where will the biggest trends take us? I offer some considerations below. Please
look these over and give me your thoughts. Push back if you have
disagreement.
First, my overall advice for CTOs in 2009… Just like the new thin interfaces you will be testing in your lab… be flexible. Now here are some more thoughts on what's in store for CTO s in 2009:
- Here is a no-brainer: Increasingly CTOs will leverage social media to
collaborate. Things are moving so fast that we all like to network to
seek help on big things and to get advanced warning on what is coming
next. More of us will be on Twitter, in Facebook, and writing blogs.
And this is a good thing.
- "Mashups" will still be very
important as an enterprise objective in 2009 (and beyond). And the
company that will help accelerate them into the federal enterprise is
JackBe. They do things in a way that enterprise CTO s like. They build
in connections to governance, security, identity management. And they
play well with the entire ecosystem so you don't have to rework all
legacy just to use them. Of course web2.0 will remain a key trend, but mashups takes web2.0 to a new, more mission-oriented level and for enterprise players the mission is what is important.
- An approach we will all learn to love and follow is "context
accumulation". This very important term was coined by Jeff Jonas, and
I think Jeff is going to have all of us moving out on that in the next
12 months. If you agree, visit his blog and by all means help others
understand why this is really the only way we humans stand a chance of
surviving/thriving in the onslaught of data.
- Federal acquisition of IT will still be criticized for all the
reasons it always has been. But there will also be an acceleration of
a dramatic positive change brought about because of open source
software and a new appreciation that IT acquisition processes
(RFI/RFP/FAR/DFAR based purchases) do not apply to software that is
free. Free software is not being bought, it is being used, for free.
The whole reason the FAR exists is to ensure when the taxpayer's money
gets spent it gets spent wisely. When things are free the FAR has less
applicability. Services for open source are being bought and since
that uses government money of course the taxpayers will continued to be
served by the same FAR-type processes that are meant to ensure open
competition, but that is not for free open source software, that is for
services to configure and manage the software.
- Will this be the year of enterprise security? We have been banking on that for a long long time. We know the answers on how to make enterprises more secure. There is a great recap of some of the most important components of security in the CSIS report. But there are many more things that can be done as well. My goal, as captured here, is to improve security by two orders of magnitude within the next 24 months.
- Netbooks, Thin Clients and Cloud Computing will accelerate
throughout the technology landscape, especially inside the federal
government. These trends in both devices and the cloud components are directly related and are also benefiting from the global, unstoppable trend toward open computing
(open software and open standards). One to watch in this area: Sun
Microsystems. But also track the dynamics of the netbooks providers.
Dell will get serious about netbooks, but Acer will continue to grow
market share.
- A key accelerator of Cloud Computing has been the powerful technologies of virtualization, especially those of VMware. Open source and other virtualization capabilities are coming fast too. Trend to watch in 2009 is the arrival of higher order, more elagant capabilities to manage virtualizaiton accross large enterprises. VMware and Opsware (HP) will continue to evolve to do this, but Appistry, Vizioncore, Xsigo and Sun (and others?) are coming fast.
- Increasingly leaders will recognize that concepts of operation that
require humans to tag and create metadata are sub-optimized. When busy
people are tasked with burdensome tagging operations they too
frequently become tempted to cut corners and rush the process. Over
time, meta data generated this way just becomes meta crap. This
growing recognition in the federal space will sweep in new technologies
and new approaches to discovery of content. One to watch to solve this
issue: Endeca, because of their approach to visualizing information and enabling human to computer iterative examination of data.
- Flexible computers will arrive in production this year for early
adopters and many CTOs will use them in labs to assess applicability
for massive deployment in the coming years. These flexible computers
are the ultimate thin clients. Backends/servers/architectures
developed for the cloud perfectly suit ultra thin, flexible computing
devices. For more on this hot topic, start at the site of the Flexible Display Center at ASU.
- Collaboration will increasingly be seen as the means to link human
brains together. Collaboration tools that are stand alone stovepipes
will be a thing of the past. Users will collaborate using the entire
technology environment: voice, video, data, whiteboard, chat,
application sharing, info discovery will increasingly be integrated
into a single fabric. Key players here: Adobe, Microsoft and Cisco.
- In a big change for how money is moved in major enterprises, the CIO
will be given responsibility for the energy budget. This will encourage
CIOs to modernize to conserve energy, since money saved from energy
costs can be invested back in modern IT. This will be a very virtuous
cycle, that saves money for organizations, saves energy, and modernizes
IT.
- In a stunning turn, IPv6 will be rapidly adopted, not by enterprises,
but in homes. The major home communications provider that delivers
full IPv6 to home environments (and to cell phones) will have an incredible advantage over
competitors and will dominate. The many rich features of IPv6
delivered to consumers will finally push enterprises everywhere to move
out on IPv6.
- In 2009, as in every year prior and for most into the future, there
will continue to be bad people using technology to do bad things.
Enterprises will move to protect info, but bad guys will keep moving to
get the data. And the use of social networking tools by terrorists
will likely grow. This is not a foregone conclusion, but I'm not
personally sure what can be done to mitigate the use of advanced
technology by bad people, other than to say that we good people need to
work together more to stop them, and my hope is that we can keep 2009
safe and secure.
Thoughts/comments/suggestions? Please let me know what you think.
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Posted by Bob Gourley
September 17, 2008
Nicholas Carr writes in ways that makes people think. I really enjoyed reading his latest in the Atlantic titled "Is Google Making Us Stupid?" This article covers some rather significant trends that IT is pushing into the global social fabric. The changes he talks about are disturbing. They are infecting people like a fast spreading disease.
There is a chance you are suffering some of these symptoms yourself, so by all means read the article.
Or if your attention span is going, here is how Nicholas Carr describes the symptoms :
" Over the past few years I’ve had an uncomfortable sense that someone, or something, has been tinkering with my brain, remapping the neural circuitry, reprogramming the memory. My mind isn’t going—so far as I can tell—but it’s changing. I’m not thinking the way I used to think. I can feel it most strongly when I’m reading. Immersing myself in a book or a lengthy article used to be easy. My mind would get caught up in the narrative or the turns of the argument, and I’d spend hours strolling through long stretches of prose. That’s rarely the case anymore. Now my concentration often starts to drift after two or three pages. I get fidgety, lose the thread, begin looking for something else to do. I feel as if I’m always dragging my wayward brain back to the text. The deep reading that used to come naturally has become a struggle. "
I hope you dive deep into the Carr article for more details, but if you have the disease yourself you might not. So here is a gist of key points:
-
Google and others have made research simple and fast and easy.
-
Almost all data can come into your head via your browser.
-
People read fewer (or no) books.
-
People are loosing the ability to read and retain info from long articles.
-
The Internet, through your browser, is the medium of choice. Newspapers and print are on the out. TV is heading out fast.
-
We also write through the web, and that is changing the way we think.
-
We too frequently are relying on computers to mediate our understanding of the world.
What do we do with this cautionary info? One immediate think all of us should do is remember to carve out time in the day, every day, to read, write and think.
But if you are an enterprise technologist you should also consider what this means for you and your organization. Some ideas:
-
The systems you are designing, developing and fielding to your workforce may serve your workforce better if their interfaces are more intuitive and less textual. People will want to interface with enterprise systems they way they interface with the Internet (present your applications through browsers and summarize results and seek rapid human feedback on what they like or don't like about the results).
-
To the greatest extent possible, build systems that present fast results.
-
And present information in ways that let humans interact with it.
-
And present information in ways that ensure the humans are in charge of the process and in charge of assessing the relevance of results.
-
Don't stop innovating.
-
Stay on the net yourself so you can track where it is going.
-
Get engaged in social media (if you are not already). That means Facebook, Plaxo, LinkedIn, and Twitter (especially Twitter– it really changes your mind).
-
Translate those many lessons into the enterprise technology you field.
If you can do that and if you can stay focused on the mission all your users will thank you, and in many ways I think you will be helping make your organization smarter. If you don't do that then the odds are great that you will just be part of the noise. You may even be contributing to making your organzation stupid.
Any thoughts/comments/suggestions on that topic?
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Posted by Bob Gourley
July 23, 2008
Looking for a little inspiration and motivation to drive your innovation? Take a
short break from the daily grind and watch the top ten TED talks of all time:
http://www.ted.com/talks/top10
From the TED site:
With speakers like neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor and global health
expert Hans Rosling, the list proves one of the compelling ideas behind
TEDTalks: that an unknown speaker with a powerful idea can reach — and
move — a global audience through the power of quality web video.
My favorite, for some reason, is the incredible undersea videos of David Gallo (see Underwater Astonishments). I’ve already written a bit about another favorite, the Photosynth demos of Blaise Aguera y Arcas (see “Jaw-dropping Photosynth demo“).
As for TED, it stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design. It started out (in 1984) as a conference bringing together people from those three worlds. TED holds an annual conference where the world’s greatest thinkers come together to exchange thoughts. These talks are made available to the public. So you don’t have to be invited to the conference to benefit from the knowledge exchanged there.
After watching the top ten talks, you may want to consider signing up on the TED site. Membership is free (but joining the site doesn’t mean you can attend the conference! read more about that on their site).
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Posted by Bob Gourley
July 13, 2008
The list of the positive technologies I believe all enterprise Chief Technology Officer s should be tracking has now been updated. Please check it out at:
http://www.ctovision.com/disruptive-technology-list.html
I try to keep this list up by remaining in dialog with enterprise CTO s and soliciting their feedback on the list. I also keep watching what the venture capital folks are investing in and try to closely track what the big IT firms are up to. The result is the list.
I’ve also started writing slightly more detailed reviews of key positively disruptive technologies. I post them under titles “Disruptive Tech:…” and you can find links to those pages on the right hand side of the CTOvision.com blog.
For now this list includes:
See also:
http://www.ctovision.com/2008/02/it-disruptivity.html
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Posted by Bob Gourley
July 8, 2008
With the help of vizu.com I have just created an online survey I’d appreciate you taking a quick look at. The survey is located at this link: http://www.ctovision.com/collaboration-tool-survey.html and is also, for now, along the lower right hand column of the CTOvision blog. You can enter your responses either place for a look at results.
The point of the survey is to get a quick feel for collaboration tools that CTOvision readers use. I don’t know what results to expect, but if there are conclusions of note I’ll blog about them here.
Thanks in advance
Bob
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Posted by Bob Gourley
July 3, 2008
My last post was all about a conclusion I made in my personal collaborative tool of choice. After evaluating many capabilities I settled on Acrobat Connect, a hosted collaborative environment that has a version that exceeds my needs for a very low cost.
Then I saw the new online system just announced by Adobe called Acrobat.com Acrobat.com provides even more collaborative features, like a better way to share audio (you can still use their free conference bridge but can also use VOIP by sharing your microphone, for example). But Acrobat.com also ties together all the other online office capabilities, including a word processor (Buzzword), PDF file format converters and means to save and exchange files with others. There is also a developer API.

The entire interface is GREAT looking. But also of note, Acrobat.com is free to sign up for. That beats the low price of Adobe’s connect.
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Posted by Bob Gourley