Tuesday, October 6, 2009

8 8 88 8 8

Enterprise mashups transform the way organisations combine IT applications to make people and processes more effective. However, in common with most new ideas, if they remain an abstract concept, or if people form preconceptions based on isolated examples (such as the ubiquitous map based mashup), then those who stand to benefit most may find it hard to get a feel for their power or relevance. In my experience, the missing link is a set of examples or usage patterns that make these possibilities concrete.

Gartner have taken a step in this direction by setting out “Five Mashup Application Types”:

1. Personal dashboards – allowing individual users to choose the gadgets they need
2. Packaged application extension – providing a flexible alternative to application customisation
3. Location awareness – allowing spatial distribution of data and assets to be visualized and explored
4. Panoramic awareness – bringing together a single view of an “object” of interest from different sources (such as a customer, competitor or place).
5. Situational awareness – allowing events and data relevant to a “situation”, to be tracked and responded to.

While these are helpful (and Corizon supports all these categories, most frequently being used in categories 2 and 4) – they don’t go far enough to bring real-life use cases to life. Likewise, the patterns recently set out by Michale Ogrinz offer a great set of possibilities – but almost too many and slanted towards the developer.

Specific examples of how the mashup can be deployed to increase user productivity in the context of known integration and development challenges are required to bring the potential of mashups to life for both the line of business and IT.

As a result we have developed some key deployment patterns that w

Labels: ,


77777777777

Enterprise mashups transform the way organisations combine IT applications to make people and processes more effective. However, in common with most new ideas, if they remain an abstract concept, or if people form preconceptions based on isolated examples (such as the ubiquitous map based mashup), then those who stand to benefit most may find it hard to get a feel for their power or relevance. In my experience, the missing link is a set of examples or usage patterns that make these possibilities concrete.

Gartner have taken a step in this direction by setting out “Five Mashup Application Types”:

1. Personal dashboards – allowing individual users to choose the gadgets they need
2. Packaged application extension – providing a flexible alternative to application customisation
3. Location awareness – allowing spatial distribution of data and assets to be visualized and explored
4. Panoramic awareness – bringing together a single view of an “object” of interest from different sources (such as a customer, competitor or place).
5. Situational awareness – allowing events and data relevant to a “situation”, to be tracked and responded to.

While these are helpful (and Corizon supports all these categories, most frequently being used in categories 2 and 4) – they don’t go far enough to bring real-life use cases to life. Likewise, the patterns recently set out by Michale Ogrinz offer a great set of possibilities – but almost too many and slanted towards the developer.

Specific examples of how the mashup can be deployed to increase user productivity in the context of known integration and development challenges are required to bring the potential of mashups to life for both the line of business and IT.

As a result we have developed some key deployment patterns that w

Labels: ,


66666666666666

Enterprise mashups transform the way organisations combine IT applications to make people and processes more effective. However, in common with most new ideas, if they remain an abstract concept, or if people form preconceptions based on isolated examples (such as the ubiquitous map based mashup), then those who stand to benefit most may find it hard to get a feel for their power or relevance. In my experience, the missing link is a set of examples or usage patterns that make these possibilities concrete.

Gartner have taken a step in this direction by setting out “Five Mashup Application Types”:

1. Personal dashboards – allowing individual users to choose the gadgets they need
2. Packaged application extension – providing a flexible alternative to application customisation
3. Location awareness – allowing spatial distribution of data and assets to be visualized and explored
4. Panoramic awareness – bringing together a single view of an “object” of interest from different sources (such as a customer, competitor or place).
5. Situational awareness – allowing events and data relevant to a “situation”, to be tracked and responded to.

While these are helpful (and Corizon supports all these categories, most frequently being used in categories 2 and 4) – they don’t go far enough to bring real-life use cases to life. Likewise, the patterns recently set out by Michale Ogrinz offer a great set of possibilities – but almost too many and slanted towards the developer.

Specific examples of how the mashup can be deployed to increase user productivity in the context of known integration and development challenges are required to bring the potential of mashups to life for both the line of business and IT.

As a result we have developed some key deployment patterns that w

Labels: , ,


4 gggg

Enterprise mashups transform the way organisations combine IT applications to make people and processes more effective. However, in common with most new ideas, if they remain an abstract concept, or if people form preconceptions based on isolated examples (such as the ubiquitous map based mashup), then those who stand to benefit most may find it hard to get a feel for their power or relevance. In my experience, the missing link is a set of examples or usage patterns that make these possibilities concrete.

Gartner have taken a step in this direction by setting out “Five Mashup Application Types”:

1. Personal dashboards – allowing individual users to choose the gadgets they need
2. Packaged application extension – providing a flexible alternative to application customisation
3. Location awareness – allowing spatial distribution of data and assets to be visualized and explored
4. Panoramic awareness – bringing together a single view of an “object” of interest from different sources (such as a customer, competitor or place).
5. Situational awareness – allowing events and data relevant to a “situation”, to be tracked and responded to.

While these are helpful (and Corizon supports all these categories, most frequently being used in categories 2 and 4) – they don’t go far enough to bring real-life use cases to life. Likewise, the patterns recently set out by Michale Ogrinz offer a great set of possibilities – but almost too many and slanted towards the developer.

Specific examples of how the mashup can be deployed to increase user productivity in the context of known integration and development challenges are required to bring the potential of mashups to life for both the line of business and IT.

As a result we have developed some key deployment patterns that w

Labels: , , ,


3 boohoo

Enterprise mashups transform the way organisations combine IT applications to make people and processes more effective. However, in common with most new ideas, if they remain an abstract concept, or if people form preconceptions based on isolated examples (such as the ubiquitous map based mashup), then those who stand to benefit most may find it hard to get a feel for their power or relevance. In my experience, the missing link is a set of examples or usage patterns that make these possibilities concrete.

Gartner have taken a step in this direction by setting out “Five Mashup Application Types”:

1. Personal dashboards – allowing individual users to choose the gadgets they need
2. Packaged application extension – providing a flexible alternative to application customisation
3. Location awareness – allowing spatial distribution of data and assets to be visualized and explored
4. Panoramic awareness – bringing together a single view of an “object” of interest from different sources (such as a customer, competitor or place).
5. Situational awareness – allowing events and data relevant to a “situation”, to be tracked and responded to.

While these are helpful (and Corizon supports all these categories, most frequently being used in categories 2 and 4) – they don’t go far enough to bring real-life use cases to life. Likewise, the patterns recently set out by Michale Ogrinz offer a great set of possibilities – but almost too many and slanted towards the developer.

Specific examples of how the mashup can be deployed to increase user productivity in the context of known integration and development challenges are required to bring the potential of mashups to life for both the line of business and IT.

As a result we have developed some key deployment patterns that w

Labels: , , ,


2 boohoo

Enterprise mashups transform the way organisations combine IT applications to make people and processes more effective. However, in common with most new ideas, if they remain an abstract concept, or if people form preconceptions based on isolated examples (such as the ubiquitous map based mashup), then those who stand to benefit most may find it hard to get a feel for their power or relevance. In my experience, the missing link is a set of examples or usage patterns that make these possibilities concrete.

Gartner have taken a step in this direction by setting out “Five Mashup Application Types”:
t almost too many and slanted towards the developer.

Specific examples of how the mashup can be deployed to increase user productivity in the context of known integration and development challenges are required to bring the potential of mashups to life for both the line of business and IT.

As a result we have developed some key deployment patterns that w

Labels: , ,


1 hello world

Enterprise mashups transform the way organisations combine IT applications to make people and processes more effective. However, in common with most new ideas, if they remain an abstract concept, or if people form preconceptions based on isolated examples (such as the ubiquitous map based mashup), then those who stand to benefit most may find it hard to get a feel for their power or relevance. In my experience, the missing link is a set of examples or usage patterns that make these possibilities concrete.

Gartner have taken a step in this direction by setting out “Five Mashup Application Types”:

1. Personal dashboards – allowing individual users to choose the gadgets they need
2. Packaged application extension – providing a flexible alternative to application customisation
3. Location awareness – allowing spatial distribution of data and assets to be visualized and explored
4. Panoramic awareness – bringing together a single view of an “object” of interest from different sources (such as a customer, competitor or place).
5. Situational awareness – allowing events and data relevant to a “situation”, to be tracked and responded to.

While these are helpful (and Corizon supports all these categories, most frequently being used in categories 2 and 4) – they don’t go far enough to bring real-life use cases to life. Likewise, the patterns recently set out by Michale Ogrinz offer a great set of possibilities – but almost too many and slanted towards the developer.

Specific examples of how the mashup can be deployed to increase user productivity in the context of known integration and development challenges are required to bring the potential of mashups to life for both the line of business and IT.

As a result we have developed some key deployment patterns that w

Labels: , , ,


Monday, October 5, 2009

5 gggg

Enterprise mashups transform the way organisations combine IT applications to make people and processes more effective. However, in common with most new ideas, if they remain an abstract concept, or if people form preconceptions based on isolated examples (such as the ubiquitous map based mashup), then those who stand to benefit most may find it hard to get a feel for their power or relevance. In my experience, the missing link is a set of examples or usage patterns that make these possibilities concrete.

Gartner have taken a step in this direction by setting out “Five Mashup Application Types”:

1. Personal dashboards – allowing individual users to choose the gadgets they need
2. Packaged application extension – providing a flexible alternative to application customisation
3. Location awareness – allowing spatial distribution of data and assets to be visualized and explored
4. Panoramic awareness – bringing together a single view of an “object” of interest from different sources (such as a customer, competitor or place).
5. Situational awareness – allowing events and data relevant to a “situation”, to be tracked and responded to.

While these are helpful (and Corizon supports all these categories, most frequently being used in categories 2 and 4) – they don’t go far enough to bring real-life use cases to life. Likewise, the patterns recently set out by Michale Ogrinz offer a great set of possibilities – but almost too many and slanted towards the developer.

Specific examples of how the mashup can be deployed to increase user productivity in the context of known integration and development challenges are required to bring the potential of mashups to life for both the line of business and IT.

As a result we have developed some key deployment patterns that w

Labels: , , ,