Posts Tagged ‘innovation’
TL;DR Coding is no longer the constraint. It’s now cheaper than ever to make software. But there are supply side constraints on innovation, and getting apps to market. Who dreams up something worth making? How do apps get in front of users? There’s also a demand side constraint on adoption – how do people learn […]
Filed under: code, technology | Leave a Comment
Tags: AI, attention, cloud, coding, demand, DevOps, economics, ideas, innovation, saas, supply, theory of constraints
Dealing with Policy Debt
TL;DR Start writing down why decisions are made. Future you may thank you. Future other person who’s wondering what you were thinking may also thank you. Then keep a dependency graph of the things impacted by the decision. It will help unravel what gets woven around it. Background I was at an excellent AFCEA event […]
Filed under: security, strategy, technology | 1 Comment
Tags: ADRs, AFCEA, Agile, architecture, change, compliance, culture, debt, decisions, innovation, policy
RISC-V[1] is something that I’ve been aware of via the Open Source Hardware Users Group (OSHUG) for a little while, and their most recent meeting was a RISC-V special, with talks on core selection and porting FreeBSD to the platform. Suddenly it seems that RISC-V is all over the news. A sample from the last […]
Filed under: technology | Leave a Comment
Tags: ARM, hardware, innovation, open source, RISC-V, x86