Morning Coffee 112
- The Lee Holmes over at the Powershell Team Blog writes
about
alternatives to the “decades-old” Windows console host. Powershell
Plus looks awesome.
PoshConsole also looks pretty
cool (though far from finished yet) and is free.
- WL IDWeb Authentication
SDK
has been released.
Details
on the WL ID team blog. It looks like what Passport SDK provided for
quite some time, but now it’s free. There’s also a client auth
SDK
in development. (via Dare
Obasanjo)
- Libor Soucek leaps to the wrong
conclusion
about not
differentiating
enterprise & support systems. Of course, different systems will have
different availability requirements. But what happens when we connect
them together? We can’t let the support system effect the availability
of the enterprise system, right? To me, that implies either a) the
support system now needs to conform to enterprise system availability
requirements or b) we need some other mechanism (like async durable
messaging) to act as a buffer between them. Personally, I like “b”.
- Nick Carr points
to an
article The Trouble with Enterprise
Software by Cynthia
Rettig. Cynthia writes that while the massive complexity of enterprise
software, especially large-scale ERP systems like SAP, significantly
hinder it’s value. It’s a must read. Choice quotes:
- “It is estimated that for every 25% increase in complexity in the
tasks to be automated, the complexity of the software solution
itself rises by 100%.”
- “The notion of reusable software works on a small scale. Programmers
have successfully built and reused subroutines of standard
functions. But as software grows more complex, reusability becomes a
difficult or impossible task.”
- “Hope, unfortunately, has never been a very effective strategy.”
- “Is enterprise software just too complex to deliver on its promises?
After all, enterprise systems were supposed to streamline and
simplify business processes. Instead, they have brought high risks,
uncertainty and a deeply worrying level of complexity. Rather than
agility they have produced rigidity and unexpected barriers to
change, a veritable glut of information containing myriad hidden
errors, and a cloud of questions regarding their overall benefits.”
Posted by devhawk.net on August 17, 2007. Filed under Morning Coffee. Tagged PowerShell & Windows Live.
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