Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Simplify Unix and dominate the world

Today I began musing on the place of Unix within the computing world.  When I first began working in IT it was clear Unix would be a minority operating system for bigger more powerful systems.  A few years latter I began to use a product called Knopix a Unix variant and in the Mid 90's first encountered Linux, but these were command line programs difficult to install and use.  That is difficult if you were not pretty technically competent.

Linux and the other "free" Unixs have developed immeasurably since those days.  Ubuntu is really easy to deploy and use, but even so they remain fairly tightly focused on the technology savvy users list and it takes patience to learn to do all that you would wish to achieve.  The Unix desktop is clearly not going to replace the PC anytime soon or anytime ever, and yet it now pretty much dominates the computing marketplace.

I don't think this would have been foreseen but both IOS and Android have Unix at their core and overall far more computing is now done on these platforms than is done on PC platforms.  Suddenly the world has turned on its head and this has happened because first Apple and then Google realised these OSs had the potential, if you shielded the user from the complexity.  Shielding the user from complexity should be the first thing we do in the IT world because we are about enabling their ability to work but before the iPhone people just missed this obvious point.  Cloud computing plays to this too and the whole thing begins to assemble into a working way for the future.

Fighting complexity should be the first thought of an IT professional especially if they are architects or solutions designers.  Simple systems will result in better usability, smoother more easily managed services and a reduction in cost.  Think about this next time you review a solution, just ask if you think your Mum or your Grandmum could work it.  If she could you may be on to a winner.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

The Kraken wakes


Earlier today I read this article in the Guardian. I found it interesting because it reflected a lot of what I have said and talked to people about over the last few years.  Microsoft for me used to be thought leaders and providers of the coolest tech, but now I barely think about their products.

One of the key drivers for the message from Steve Ballmer is the nearly 1 billion pound write off of the Windows RT tablets.  Everyone that I have talked to in the last year or two was well aware this was yet another knee jerk reaction to Apple and most of us knew this would bomb.  A windows PC that did not run windows software was going to fail, in much the same way as the linux netbooks did.  Even now, almost a year after Windows 8 was launched there is still not a native Facebook application for the platform!

The recent release the new XBox One displayed the same arrogant set of we know better hallmarks Microsoft has been famous for recently.  This was followed by a series of rapid turn arounds as they suddenly realised they had just ditched their "hook" from their customers at the same time as delivering serious upset.

Now I read that Microsoft is ditching product groups to go back to a functional organisation structure.  This will be a significant change for them and perhaps shows they have at last realised that we are no longer in thrall to them.  This is really good news for all of us, this could be the giant reawakening and turning to truly face the threat.  Make no mistake that threat is huge, between the Cloud, Apple and Google the space is getting thinner and thinner.  Microsofts key benefits though are still hanging in there, it's not too late for them to realise the true value of windows and stop copying Apple.

I truly love my 18 month old Samsung Series 7 tablet it was great on Windows 7 and okay on Windows 8 but on either is much more of a tablet than an iPad.  Had they just stayed focused on devices like the first ever windows tablet I used in 2003/4 (above picture) then maybe things would have been different.  I really hope that the lesson has been learned, but I fear that it is just more rhetoric.