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January 1st, 2007

What for 2007? guilt, monopoly guilt

Posted by Paul Murphy @ 8:27 am

Categories: Enterprise Policy, General, Vistabulations

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In Focus » See more posts on: The Year Ahead

For 2007? Guilt

It's that time of year when everyone sets out to assimilate the lessons of 2006 and make new resolutions and new predictions for the coming year.

In IT the big changes for 2006 were foundational - there's sweeping change coming in both hardware and software and 2006 saw some of the foundation products for this hit the market. Thus IBM got its first grid on a chip CPUs into the market, pioneered ground breaking new compiler technology for embedded PPC, and moved its high gigahertz technology from the labs to pre-production for the coming 6Ghz Power6. Similarly, Sun got its first SMP on a chip processor into the market where it set new records for both performance and sales, ZFS made it into production Solaris, and Java tilted dramatically toward its natural markets - in handhelds and set-tops, not commercial computing.

All great, but what changed in IT management? Energy awareness happened: IT management started to become aware of IT's own energy use, and more and more managers started to consider energy use as something other than a nuisance issue best left to building engineers. That change didn't just come out of nowhere, of course, people like Sun's McNealy were talking about Intel's space heaters as early as 2001 - the same year IBM tried to build an entire consolidation argument on energy savings. But the issue became mainstream last year - finally becoming a real factor in many acquisition decisions.

So what's likely to have a comparable impact next year? monopoly guilt. Basically, people who now automatically choose Microsoft server products will start to become aware that their fiats force other people to make choices many of them might rather not make. For example, choose Exchange Server for your campus wide system, and you force Mac and other L'Unix users on your campus to choose between bypassing you, living with a layer of unwanted, unreliable, and inconsistent middleware that fails at the drop of a Microsoft patch, or accepting the need to pay for a PC and licensed software just to get along with your email server choice.

Bottom line: every Microsoft server choice in IT taxes users by forcing them to choose between going along or finding work arounds - choices that IT could avoid imposing simply by choosing servers supporting open standards.

What's needed is an attitude adjustment in IT, and I see that as coming - driven first by an evolving sense that forcing people to choose between their way and IT's commitment to Microsoft is both organisationally expensive and unfair to users, and in the long run by the recognition that doing this is, like plugging in Xeons, not in IT's own best interests.

 

Paul MurphyPaul Murphy (a pseudonym) is an IT consultant specializing in Unix and related technologies. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.


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Just a tip
You can't make an omelette without breaking eggs, but it's easier if you break the eggs against the edge of the pan rather than by throwing them at your boss (you get less lint in the omelette too).... (Read the rest)
Posted by: jorwell Posted on: 01/03/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Another one out of the ballpark  D. T. Schmitz | 01/01/07
More like a swing and a miss  mdemuth | 01/02/07
or a Pop Out . . .  Roger Ramjet | 01/02/07
I've no need to whine  mdemuth | 01/02/07
Word vs Wordperfect  murph_zZDNet Moderator | 01/02/07
Murph, you're discussing Microsoft.  Anton Philidor | 01/02/07
Proposals  Erik Engbrecht | 01/02/07
Happy new year Murph  Roger Ramjet | 01/02/07
Nice to hear from you  murph_zZDNet Moderator | 01/02/07
I got my package  Roger Ramjet | 01/02/07
If you are right, OSX and Linux must SUCK!!!  NonZealot | 01/02/07
Yes  murph_zZDNet Moderator | 01/02/07
we are in a similar position  jjgitties | 01/02/07
Many / most organizations can work with Microsoft...  Anton Philidor | 01/02/07
"Lesser Evil" arguments do not fly  Roger Ramjet | 01/02/07
Who's that?  Anton Philidor | 01/02/07
Observations  Erik Engbrecht | 01/02/07
Unchallenging.  Anton Philidor | 01/02/07
Consider the humble omellete  murph_zZDNet Moderator | 01/02/07
Just a tip  jorwell | 01/03/07
That depends  mdemuth | 01/02/07

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