I’ve just made the latest version of my IT Strategies from Oracle mindmap available via the XMind maps site (http://www.xmind.net/m/cPQH/)
ITSO Mindmap
05 Thursday Nov 2015
05 Thursday Nov 2015
I’ve just made the latest version of my IT Strategies from Oracle mindmap available via the XMind maps site (http://www.xmind.net/m/cPQH/)
03 Tuesday Nov 2015
So we’re back home from a week in San Francisco and the city dominating Oracle Open World conference and almost straightened up after the jet lag (don’t remember ever suffering from it this much).
A very interesting, very busy week that was absolutely shattering (it didn’t help our Hotel was in the middle if the city, but not very sound insulated or air conditioned – so if you don’t sleep well not the best).
I’ll piece together a presentation deck, but briefly, what we picked up/did:
Checkout blogs such as this one and I’m sure a lot of other material will start coming through.
26 Monday Oct 2015
Tags
We’re into the 1st full day of Oracle Open World conference; Sunday being sessions driven by the user groups with the kickoff key note from Larry at the end of the day. That’s not to say that the Sunday is a leisurely day with the 1st session at 8am, and the evening networking with UK customers and #UKOUG representation. With yesterday being ‘active’, today we’re flying – with a keynote this morning, then time to say hello to #OTNArchBeat guru Bob Rhubart. Then conference sessions with brief breaks between long enough to touch base with an Oracle Product Manager so we can have a follow up discussion on the #ICS product. The still has a lot to do with more sessions including the middleware keynote to come and then the evening talking with a vendor.
Oh, and somewhere among this fielding some emails from the office and keeping in touch with the family.
23 Wednesday Sep 2015
Tags
'For Dummies', book, Cloud, Dummies, ebook, HR, Oracle, SaaS, virtualization
It seems to becoming the done thing to license the use of the ‘For Dummies’ brand and publishing books (or are they large booklets) on a specific subject. These can then often be picked up as print freebies at conferences. I saw a couple at the Oracle Cloud Event today – though I’d share the ebook versions here:
20 Sunday Sep 2015
Posted in General, Technology
So despite wha Steve Jobs has said I have always wanted to have a stylus or pen with an ipad as I can’t type fast enough to keep up in meetings. So the iPad pro having a pencil is a good thing. But that kind of spend is a little over my budget just for a pencil.
Anyway the other day l read an article on Geek.com about styluses and decided to try their recommendation of the Jot Pro . That arrived today, and then installed the myScript Stylus app that replaces the normal keyboard with a writing area.
I have to say the combination is impressive. The jot’s tip being a clear disk means that you can see what your’re writing. Combined with the excellent handwriting recognition from the mystylus keyboard.
The screen protector helps as well giving a bit more resistance so feels more like wnbmg on paper.
09 Wednesday Sep 2015
Posted in General, Oracle, Technology
Aside from being big users of Oracle Middleware we use make use of a range of Oracle application capabilities from the EBusiness Suite family. This includes several of the ‘hub’ products such as Product Data Hub which is central to our Master Data Management strategy for product data definition and creation. A commitment to remove all the different components in the legacy estate that can author or modify product data was made and has been rolled out – not all legacy authoring solutions have been decommissioned although this is more the nature of our legacy deployment strategy.
When we setup PDH the organisation went through a lot of internal debate on whether to deploy PDH as part of our core transactional EBusiness Suite which performs all our accounting (and a lot more complex than may appear to be) or to adopt a separate deployment approach and keep the instances in sync using the Product Data MDM Process Integration Pack (PIP) which includes an extension to integrate with EBusiness. This later approach prevailed. However we are now in a place where we are having to re-examine this decision as a result of the PIP’s EBusiness extension hitting end of life (Oracle’s declared position being that the extension has so little adoption that it is economically not sensible to maintain it).
Rather than drag through our decision history, I thought it might be insightful to share the considerations being made on how do we go forward. So what are the perceived options? We see it as:
Clearly several of these options challenge the reasoning for separating the instances in the first place. So it is worth looking at the arguments for the separation and against it.
The key factors for separate instances:
The factors for keeping everything as one large EBusiness suite are:
The Fusion apps option creates some interesting questions. So the messaging around Fusion is that you can migrate from the non Fusion environments in a phased approach through the idea of co-existance (effectively data replication and transformation). However, despite the fact Fusion apps are maturing, the capability atleast here we’re told this green, although the migration process is well established as a mix of automation and manual process all packaged up as a consulting engagement. In addition to this the AIA Product MDM connector which supports EBusiness needs some small changes to work with the Fusion application.
Why even look at Fusion, aside from we know that Fusion is Oracle’s long term strategic product, from the information provided to us, it has a number of handy features for us that are unlikely to be retrofitted to the EBusiness product.
30 Sunday Aug 2015
Posted in General, Oracle, Technology
Tags
I have been looking at API catalogue tools to help facilitate reuse particularly given we use a lot of 3rd party vendors and System Integrators where having a tool that can be used to easily pickup integration points. We don’t monetise the interfaces but having a means to harvest the interfaces and generate documentation that can be published.
It is interesting that a lot of the tooling requires manual loading of the interface information and focuses on monetisation and security (Apigee, 3Scale etc). Oracle provides these capabilities through the API Management product. But the API catalogue offers the documentation, publication and critically the harvesting capabilities. The only downside is the API Catalogue can only describe SOAP and REST interfaces today. It would be great to be able to describe other interfaces such as XML over JMS as well. The one advantage that 3Scale and Apigee have at present is the fact they are cloud solutions, Oracle’s API tools are presently not offered as discreet solutions, that said I’d not bet against Oracle launching API Management and API Catalogue as cloud services.
26 Wednesday Aug 2015
Posted in General, Oracle, Technology
When I first heard about the Oracle & Xamarin tie up to support Oracle’s Mobile Cloud Service – MCS(to use one of those xaaS acronyms we’re talking MBaaS – Mobile Backend aaS) I was little surprised and puzzled as for any Java/Javascript developer Oracle already their Mobile Application Framework which includes Apache Cordova and some Xamarin style cross compiling for native capabilities for Java.
It’s when you look at information such as that provided by DeveloperEconomics.com some sense becomes apparent. Oracle aren’t so much as abandoning MAF as trying to create conditions where all roads lead to MCS as the 2 most popular cross platform/x-compile mobile frameworks which represent 75% or more of the framework usage. It is also likely (but I speculate here) that providing an Xamarin API and SDK probably isn’t that significant an investment given all of it has been built to support MAF already.
As late comers to the cloud service market, his sort of approach stands to increase Oracle’s potential to gain market share. The fact that they have got Xamarin onboard and the commitment (regardless of how easy it may have been to leverage existing work) Oracle’s decision to seek global domination in PaaS and SaaS markets. For this to pay off though Oracle need to shed the image of its only for the big boys with deep pockets.
Some helpful other resource:
22 Saturday Aug 2015
Packt Publishing have been running a scheme where each day they give away a book. Today is the Business Analyst’s Guide to Oracle Hyperion Interactive Reporting 11.
20 Thursday Aug 2015
Posted in General, Technology
I regularly encounter arguments where people justify relaxed security in a design with the argument of – well the connection between systems will be protected by a VPN (Virtual Private Network) – so everything is fine.
Trying to dissuade a someone like a project manager or business end user that just trusting to just a VPN is challenging, after all private networks are safe aren’t they. So I have tried to identify a few resources – that can simply and clearly explain why this approach alone is not good. Just pointing to the principle of ‘security in depth’ is difficult to sell. So hopefully the following will help:
You must be logged in to post a comment.