So, HP, What Exactly Are You Trying To Sell Us? 312
billtom writes "There's an article over at c|net news where the normally fawning technology business press actually takes an HP VP to task for the extremely vague statements that usually surround enterprise software 'products.' With some gems like 'That could be boilerplate applying to any company,' and 'But again, how does that differ from what's been around?' and 'But hasn't that always been the goal?'" I'd like to see Charles Cooper interview whoever came up with .Net, too.
Marketsp'aek (Score:5, Interesting)
The jargon coming from HP, is to try and market to company types with buying power, to give them a new slogan or saying that could be used to grab onto and use in the office, so that they don't have to do any work.
Scott Adams' Dilbert cartoon captures the reality of what's going on today. Executives would rather appear to be working, than actually working, so they invent new descriptions of what they are doing that sound really busy!
I think the best slogan is hard work, but nobody likes hard work, unless someone else is doing it.
From the article: "I define AE as a business strategy for customers who want to respond in real time to changes affecting their business."
Translation: We know your business operates in something called time. Time is money. We want money, so therefore we will trade you your own time for money. We accomplish this by selling you your own time back, but we change it to something called real-time. Or ideally I have no idea what those geeks in research have come up with and it's not my job to know, so I'll just make something up and hope you bite. Besides, none of the marketing based people will understand what they came up with anyway, so who cares?
Re:Marketsp'aek (Score:5, Funny)
Q: What's the difference between a used car salesman and a computer salesman?
A: The used car salesman KNOWS when he's lieing to you!
Re:Marketsp'aek (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Marketsp'aek (Score:3, Interesting)
She said, in essence, that HP will help you automate everything, and will do so in such a way that you can still change things. She cited a real-world reason to do so, and how it saved money.
Is it revolutionary? No... And she did back off from admitting as such. But it is useful, and it is how IT is supposed to be done. She might not know exactly how the technology is implemented, but she knows what
Re:Marketsp'aek (Score:4, Insightful)
this is at the core of what's wrong with buzzwords. they start as meaningful and then get hijacked by the marketing department and media and are bled dry of all content.
witness "enterprise". back in the day of "client server" computing it was realized that there were environments that were so big that each server was the client of other servers and the peer to yet more. clusters of lans in wans that were themselves clustered. do describe the feudal structure that was built to accomodate this size and complexity of network, we came up with a word: enterprise.
of course, marketing realized that since enterprise-class products were the most expensive they should really work at making sure everybody felt they had to have them. a buzzword got born by the appropriation of a valid term and now i can buy an "enterprise desktop" solution for numerous products. "enterprise desktop"? what the hell is that? marketing, m'lad, marketing.
anyway. glad to see someone call the sales team on their buzzwordery. if we want to protect the meaning of our tech descriptions we'll have to fight the sales team for them - or stick to six-letter acronyms that they won't want (call the vpn the "iskampd" box fr instance)
Re:Marketsp'aek (Score:3, Insightful)
No, she didn't. She just kept saying "you need to tie the business to the resource". That's just as much gibberesh as anything else. What exactly am I supposed to tie to what? Applications to hardware? My business goals with IT expenditures? There is no such thing as "business" in this sense. Is your business your customers? Your shareholders? Your inventory? Your employees? Which of those am
Re:Marketsp'aek (Score:3, Insightful)
I have to ask: (Score:3, Insightful)
Recognizing that you have experience I do not (no, I don't have an MBA), what soci
HP hires Scott Adams (Score:3, Funny)
This looks like it came directly from the Dilbert [dilbert.com] mission statement generator.
Re:Marketsp'aek (Score:2)
It was an enjoyable read, simply because I hate the white shoe types.
HP Adaptation (Score:3, Informative)
Instead of all of this unintelligble claptrap, HP needs to devote a decent amount of concentration to their Enterprise systems division, and make some hard choices.
HP is no longer saying "bet the company" on Itanium, but currently HP-UX and VMS are totally wagered on Intel's unproven architecture.
The Alpha base has been easy pickings for Solaris and Linux, and the rest of the HP Enterprise customer base is watching as HP "burns the boats" and our systems investments vaporize.
I realize that HP believes
Re:HP Adaptation (Score:2)
be fair (Score:5, Insightful)
"I define AE as a business strategy for customers who want to respond in real time to changes affecting their business."
My translation: AE is (an expensive product which helps companies setup) a business strategy under which trends trigger actions. The use of 'business strategy' sounds meaningless, but it's actually two words which imply two paragraphs. 'Strategy' in this case is an overloaded term referring to a collection of tools, policies, and proceedures.
The use of 'real time' in business means something very different from its meaning in computer science. It means 'today' instead of 'eventually'. I work for a large media company with an animal for a mascot, and it takes us years to respond to changes in the marketplace. Most of our innertia is rooted in size, conservative management, and fear of risk. However, if we had a system of automation which identified potentially interesting changes in the marketplace, especially in merchandising, it could save us a lot of money.
For example, how much should we invest in online sales, and how much in more traditional sales? We make money from both, now, so it's a very serious question. A missed sale is a lost sale, but there's no point in trying to extract blood from a turnip. We have people who try to figure out where the tastiest blood is, but they are limited by their tools and proceedures. This AE might actually be just the thing they need.
I don't know if AE is any good, or if it's what it claims to be, but I do know that marketing speak CAN have a real meaning in a marketing context. When we geeks ridicule the suits for talking gibberish, it's no better than when they ridicule us for our acronyms, l33t, tech talk and other not-quite-english that we use. "We aggregate packet-based transactions, over-selling a large pipe to small nodes who could collectively saturate that pipe, but in practice don't" would mean nothing to a marketing type, but to an ISP sysadmin it's her raison d'etre.
If we hope to make any progress in the things that really matter (digital freedom), we need to learn to communicate with these people. Their protocols may be bad, but it works for them, and marketing types don't have firmware upgrades, so we need to learn to speak their protocols if we hope to route any traffic through them, or to comandeer them for our noble purposes.
Re:Marketsp'aek (Score:5, Interesting)
This is the height of corporate arrogance. If someone doesn't understand an idea that has been presented to them, then it is by definition unclear . I would think that it would be the responsibility of the entity selling something to be able to clearly communicate what the product actually is and what it's benefits are.
As far as I can tell, AE is the same thing that independent consultants have been offering for years. It's a classic case of ''The Emperor Has No Clothes,'' and the whole point of this asinine jargon that HP is using is to bully the prospective buyer into thinking that it must be far more complicated than their simple minds can handle. I almost spewed my diet cola through my nose when Nora (presumably with a straight face) said that ''you can't buy an Adaptive Enterprise.'' If you can't buy it, then how can they sell it? Whoops--better call HP and buy a 55-gallon drum of their HP Special Snake Oil to straighten it all out for us!
Much of what I do is helping the average business owner/manager with 8 workstations understand that they don't actually need the $18,000 server that was pitched to them by some IT Barnum with a handful of glossy brochures touting ''industry-leading scalability and resource utilization.'' When they find out that their old P3 workstation with an extra hard drive, TRAVAN drive and SAMBA is up to the task of tossing 4MB data files across their peer-to-peer network, they're quite surprised.
I quit my Fortune 500 job two years ago when I just couldn't take the idiocy anymore. True, I make half of what I used to, I work 50% more hours, and my medical benefits suck, but at least I don't have to talk to people who can't finish a sentence without using the words ''dynamic,'' ''deploy,'' ''real-time,'' or ''paradigm,'' and that makes it all worth it.
Kudos to Charles Cooper for taking this Carly Fiorina sycophant to task. Unfortunately, if this writer keeps it up, he either won't have a job or nobody in the IT business will give him interviews.
Re:Marketsp'aek (Score:2, Interesting)
Another example of HP confusion (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, HP can be confusing sometimes
Re:Another example of HP confusion (Score:4, Interesting)
So can most big companies with thier fingers in lots of pies. Take Sony - it sells music and complains about P2P and copyright issues, yet it also makes hardware that makes is very easy to infringe those same copyrights. They were also threatened with legislation by Philips, their partners in designing the CD, about selling non standard CDs with the official logo on them.
All part of the fun and games that is big business.
A plus sign (Score:3, Funny)
What is CNET smoking? (Score:4, Funny)
That said, check out this gem:
He should never have needed to ask that twice. HP's response was clear to anyone who's been struggling to cultivate dynamic convergence in their disintermediate, yet robust, technologies.
I work IT for one of the lower-end Fortune 500 companies (I won't mention any names, but we're the 2nd largest manufacturer of Internet-enabled personal sanitation devices in the U.S.), and we're seriously looking at HP's AE technology for our next round of upgrades. I am so tired of having to re-virtualize all our front-end functionalities every time the boss-man wants to streamline our synergistic e-services. Now, if I simply had a frictionless front-end action-item, right there in my real-time vortal (vertical portal) I'd be made.
Anyway, Slashdotters, don't believe this CNET FUD. I think AE definitely has the potential to recontextualize the debate on revolutionary mindshare schemas.
Re:What is CNET smoking? (Score:3)
I couldn't have put it better. It isn't enough to say "well, this product implements configuration management!" the issue is having the IT systems that are either in place or soon-to-be in place accurately reflect the delicate intricacies that are our living business process. Being in the embedded control field, we have a dedicated audit trail for all of our netwo
Re:What is CNET smoking? (Score:2)
Re:What is CNET smoking? (Score:2)
Re:What is CNET smoking? (Score:2)
A: I define AE as a business strategy for customers who want to respond in real time to changes affecting their business.
Q: That could be boilerplate applying to any company. What's the special sauce?
A:The secret sauce that HP brings is the ability to link business processes--which obviously are a manifestation of a company's strategy--to IT gear. The big breakthrough is when those two
Re:What is CNET smoking? (Score:2)
Funnily enough... look at the copyright statement at the bottom of the page...
Re:What is CNET smoking? (Score:2, Funny)
I'm not sure if you fully grasp the difference between eigenvectors and eigenvalues, so we will all have to cover donkey shows together.
Do we really ne
Re:What is CNET smoking? (Score:3, Funny)
A:The secret sauce that HP brings is...
This? [hpfoods.com]
Software companies and their buzzword generators. (Score:5, Insightful)
Every software company is guilty of this. A program that does general ledger and billing sounds much sexier when called a "best-of-breed integrated calculation solution, designed to drive your business into the 21st century and beyond." And a server-monitoring tool sounds better when you call it a "proactive fault-finding and troubleshooting environment, making your data center fully autonomic and self-healing."
It's kind of wierd for the press to actually start asking hard questions. Think tanks like Gartner et al live and die by techno-hype. The latest thing going around in CIO-land is Utility Computing, so we'll see what comes of that.
Re:Software companies and their buzzword generator (Score:5, Insightful)
Our manager asked why we didn't mention we could do that before, which shocked me. My response was that he never mentioned this new "system" until it was already paid for. We were his programmers, and this was a programming issue. In the future he should consider talking to his programmers before he spent massive sums on ideas.
He's since been fired.
Is it just software companies? (Score:3, Insightful)
Imagine an interviewer with a Nike exec, asking why consumers should pay more for their products than a functionally equivalent (maybe even better-built) shoe. I doubt the suit would even acknowledge such a question as being valid. It is not a question companies feel obligated to answer.
It seems that software companies are behind the game with res
This is familiar! (Score:4, Informative)
She, not he (Score:2)
Except that the Senior VP from HP in the article is a woman. Of course, C|Net certainly buried that by only putting her name+picture in the non-print version of the article and not using her name anywhere in print(I smell something foul here, but anyway).
Look on the bright side, at least you didn't call -Fiorina- a man(she's probably the best known female executive in the world today aside from maybe Oprah or Martha Stewart. Not that it's a good thing though- she's som
Utility computing by another name... (Score:5, Interesting)
That said, I think utility computing is applicable only to a narrow market so far. You need compatability between various applications to host them within a single environment that shares data center resources. When I look around my company (a $1.5 billion worldwide manufacturer), for example, I see dozens of applications on several different operating systems at various versions. How does utility computing address such a heterogeneous environment?
About the only time she made sense was at the very end:
How true...
Problem of perception on the VPspeak (Score:5, Insightful)
The VP's real problem is her attitude to information that suggests potential customers don't understand what the hell their AE angle is supposed to be about. When prompted that no customers understood Carly's presentation, she said she thought the customers were wrong and that she thought it was very clear.
While kissing the boss's ass is usually a good thing, it doesn't matter how clear you think something is - if the customers don't understand it, it's NOT CLEAR. And that's the bottom line.
The interviewer was a good litmus for that too. He is (presumably) somewhat well versed in IT, had the benefit of asking follow-up questions, and still couldn't figure out what the hell HP is doing. Not good for HP.
Really, the HP crowd give the impression that they've talked this up so much between each other that it must be gold. Sounds like some serious groupthink. They think they've got this great operation defined by killer buzzwords, we think they're an IBM knockoff with a bad PR campaign.
If you ask me, it sounds like .Net all over again. What the hell was .Net? I still don't know. They need to learn from IBM - clearly explained yet funny commercials. IBM's commercials tell me their software puts customer data together. HP's tell me that vigilante plus-signs put bad guys in jail. How? I dunno.
And that's a problem for HP.
Our people are better than your people... (Score:2)
Here is their source (Score:2)
What they're really saying... (Score:5, Funny)
A: We proudly adapt to the needs of our enterprise: namely, the CEO, the CIO, and our board members. Screw the rest of the employees and the customers. Aside from that, we really have no idea what the heck we're talking about. We need to make up big words in long sententces to justify our existence in the company. This is the same mindset that allowed us to have fantastic ideas like merging with Compaq, laying off thousands of employees, while giving Capellas the goodbye gift that one can only dream about.
Q: That could be boilerplate applying to any company. What's the special sauce?
A: The special sauce is no different than what you find in Burger King. We sit around all day long whacking off in an effort to come up with this sh--.
Q: Can't you get that by going to any reputable company out there? Sun, IBM--that's what they're about. Am I missing something here?
A: Nope. They're all the same formula. Same sauce. Right down to the last drop.
This is the real gem right here: (Score:5, Funny)
Why do they let people like this run companies, or even speak? I mean christ, MS APIs are more well-understood than that buzzword soup.
Re:This is the real gem right here: (Score:2)
Yes, I'm sure that's what he was talking about. Or perhaps he might have been refering to things like:
Now, I hate busines
Re:This is the real gem right here: (Score:2)
Now, I hate business-speak as much as the next guy, but the "gem" you quote made perfect sense.
And the statement quoted is Adaptive Enterprise defines an entity where a company will be able to dynamically readjust to changes that affect its business.
I am confused as to which part made 'perfect sense'. "Adaptive Enterprise defines (no, it LABELS) an entity (a thing, something that exists as a distinct, independent, or self-contained unit, a being or existence -
Re:This is the real gem right here: (Score:2)
Actually, this was funny. But I am a CS major.
If
Re:This is the real gem right here: (Score:2)
Easy:
MS Access and Excel
Does Nora Denzel even know what AE is? (Score:2)
Q: Stripped of all the jargon and market-speak, can you succinctly define what Adaptive Enterprise is supposed to be about?
A: I define AE as a business strategy for customers who want to respond in real time to changes affecting their business.
So what is it?
It's a business strategy for customers who want to respond in real time to their businesses. The secret is when you link the business processes together to your IT gear, then you can automatically roll tho
Re:Does Nora Denzel even know what AE is? (Score:2)
"But aren't Sun and IBM doing that to make that happen? And IBM and Sun are investing a lot of money to make sure their software works with their respective utility computing programs. What are you doing besides saying we'll sit down with you and work on it?It's interesting. We've spent $2.5 billion in Adaptive Enterprise. That's a pretty healthy R&D investment, so I disagree that we'
PLEASE DON'T RTFA (Score:2, Informative)
Not nearly as bad as it sounds (Score:5, Insightful)
AE is more just a term to associate with a different way of looking at the enterprise. While, it is not terribly different from what went on before, it is an evolutionary change. As the HP VP says, it's not a product or a technology, just a way of looking at using technology in an Enterprise.
I can tell you in the Enterprise space 10 years ago, folks used to get excited about being able to add new products to their IT systems within 6 months (I kid you not). The notion of AE is that it should be measured in days. I'm sure some day it'll be down to hours or even minutes.
Traditional Enterprise systems were increadibly static and rigid, and over time they are evolving to be much more dynamic and malleable. While this is nothing new to tech folks like us, it's a bit of a wake up call to the business folks who are just getting used to implications of how to mix business and IT based on how things were 5 years ago.
Again as the VP says, it's not that you can't work towards AE without HP. You can go to anybody for it. His claims about HP's uniqueness are another story (let's face it, all that can be unique when you're talking about providing expertise to execute on an abstract busines strategy is the brand name, and the trust/confidence associated with it).
So yeah, on one hand it is marketing BS, but on the other hand you need a marketing message in order to communicate to business folks how IT capabilities have evolved and how they can go beyond the existing set of limitations they have come to expect of IT.
Re:Not nearly as bad as it sounds (Score:2)
No man, that's a stupid enterprise. If Adaptive Enterprise was described as a strategy and technique for building better communication channels between business and IT within an organization to facilitate rapid rollout of reliable, rock-solid new applications at minimal cost and effort, then why
Re:Not nearly as bad as it sounds (Score:2)
If Adaptive Enterprise was described as a strategy and technique for building better communication channels between business and IT within an organization to facilitate
Re:Not nearly as bad as it sounds (Score:2)
>day it'll be down to hours or even minutes.
Um, not to be a jerk, but HOW?
Re:Not nearly as bad as it sounds (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, if I knew the answer to that I'd be out looking for venture capital. However, there are some obvious pieces of the puzzle needed in order to make that happen. Probably the biggest one is on the IT interface side of things. You'd need a way for the IT system to have business changes communicated to it very quickly and efficiently. This could be through an active interface, something that provides a really clear model of the business such that someone can just manipulate
Re:Not nearly as bad as it sounds (Score:2)
What would be a good response for the VP? Exactly what you just said
Finally, it's sad that a VP ca
Re:Not nearly as bad as it sounds (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, you know you are seeing an interviewer who's cutting through the fluff when the interviewer (as opposed to the interviewee) introduces terms like "special sauce" and "paradigm shift".
I drew my comments entirely from the content in that interview. What's different was that I had a clue about the subject matter, unlike the interviewer. The interviewer's agenda appears mostly to be just to make
Re:Not nearly as bad as it sounds (Score:2)
Re:Not nearly as bad as it sounds (Score:2)
Given that this is at a high level, there aren't specific products and services out there that make one company better than the other in anything other than trivial ways (you'd laugh pretty hard if I said "Java" or "Itanium" or "HP-UX" wouldn't you?).
All that an
I'm sold... (Score:2)
AE = Let HP help you cut your staff (Score:5, Informative)
First, I don't think that the VP ever really answered the questions that were asked. I think the whole point behind trying to sell the Adaptive Enterprise is that it is not something you can clearly define. I'd hate to actually do contract negotiations with them as I'm sure both parties will have different thoughts on what is covered under HP services.
The whole line about being able to dynamically restructure your IT resources to me means HP can help you figure out how to axe 1/3rd of your workforce and still "adapt" to your business needs. As the interviewer pointed out, aligning IT with your business it nothing new. Hiring outside consultants to help do it is nothing new.
It begs the question, what is new about adaptive enterprise? Answer: Nothing. I don't see any proof that it is anything more than another marketing strategy designed to sell billable hours and support/consulting contracts.
Just a touch of a rant here.... (Score:4, Insightful)
If I say something is unclear, generally, I mean "It is unclear to me." I believe that's true of, oh, everyone, when they say that something is unclear.
So, I feel obliged to ponder: How do YOU disagree with my opinion that something is unclear?
Especially when I'm interviewing you saying, in essence, "What the heck is this about?"
I guess I just hate marketing people.
Re:Just a touch of a rant here.... (Score:2)
Or as I like to call them, Liars.
Only the Polygoniest technologies (Score:5, Funny)
A pirate ("Arr, we'll return on yer investment, matey, just hand over the doubloons...")
A Parrot ("Squawk! Polly wants leverage, polly wants synergies leveraged, squawk!"
A dog trainer ("Sit, marketing rep! Now, demonstrate CRM, demonstrate CR- SIT! bad rep! Shame on you!")
Mr. Hainey from Green Acres ( "I bet you'll be wantin' one o' these here market share segments, to go with that product, won'cha?")
Krusty the Clown ("Hey hey!! Now 'does not cause instant bankruptcy' in every box!")
Dr. Evil ("I'll give you ten minutes to amuse me. Begin your presentation....NOW.")
Personally, i think HP is counting on non-technical word of mouth and goodwill, which is why all these ads focus on things like preserving artwork and capturing criminals- if your other managers like the HP ads, they're more likely to approve HP-related spending... and think that it's worth it, even if they don't understand the product or the language describing it.
new interview request (Score:2, Interesting)
I'd like to see Charles Cooper interview whoever came up with .Net, too.
Forget about .net. Get this guy to interview Darl.
Arghh Management (Score:4, Informative)
The utility computing aspects of the 'adaptive enterprise' are quite real and you can buy it today in the form of the HP Utility Data Center. In a word, UDC is about infrastructure automation - a data center in which you can rapidly deploy (and redeploy) servers and services with no hands-on work, and not requiring you to have a huge, specialized support staff.
To really have an adaptive enterprise, you need more things layered on top of infrastructure automation, but it is a key building block. Other vendors like Sun and IBM are selling this type of concept, but I think you'll find that HP has more actual products than the competition. HP's marketing does stink though.
Marketing droids.... (Score:2)
Thanks Coop (Score:2)
* They actually buy into stupid products like MS Bob, Lotus Jazz and the internet appliance doomed to failure of the week. Then they lament the product's demise as being ahead of it's time or too powerfull.
* They let executives off the hook way too easy:
Reporter: wh
2.5 billion (Score:2)
No, no conflict of interest here (Score:2)
HP: "Blah blah blah"
Cnet:"Look you weenie, we all know you people talk in marketspeak. What are you REALLY saying you pathetic looooooser?"
SWISH! ZOOM! KAPOW! BUY IBM DB2 PRODUCTS!
HP:"Uh, what was that?"
Cnet:"Nothing, you shmuck."
Pay no attention to the IBM flash ads(or, for that matter, that IBM advertises with Slashdot etc.) Wouldn't it be nice if technical journals held to the same standards as newspapers with regards to journalistic integrity? Then again, i suppose it would be nice if peopl
Re:No, no conflict of interest here (Score:2)
Wouldn't it be nice if technical journals held to the same standards as newspapers with regards to journalistic integrity?
Um, this is a newspaper, not a tech journal.
Re:No, no conflict of interest here (Score:2)
I didn't see anything wrong with the interview. The interviewer asked questions, and demanded straightforward answers. They also had the background to see that this isn't anything different than what Sun, IBM, MS (.NE
What exactly does this prove (Score:2)
Thanks CNET, really (Score:2)
Seriously, what the fuck does that mean?
dynamic and virtual (Score:2)
"In the future, everything will change and won't really exist".
HTH, HAND,
--
*Art
Done before..... (Score:2)
Regrettably when yyou actually want to convert that to cash terms, the result is zero, hense the dot bomb economy. Fiorina should stick to selling ink.
I've found HP's special sauce (Score:2, Funny)
I'm not sure if it "links business processes together", but it does get quite sticky if you dont clear it up prompty when it spills.
Wow (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe that's the plan. Subliminal hypnosis. Only explanation for a CTO giving any money to HP for this pile of BS.
Oh, well, back to my own synergistic business initiatives linking IT to the customer base in a proactive fashion.
Sales Focus (Score:2)
HP itself doesn't know what they are selling (Score:2, Funny)
Recently at my company we tried to contact HP for more KVM cables for our KVM switch. This is an "older" HP product. Talk about a joke trying to get the product.
Upon contact support, the only number findable on the website I was transfered to parts and spoke with someone thier. After giving the part number to the lady, she said "I don't know if we still make that product." How can the company not know if they make something anything more. It took her almost a half-hour to try and find the product or
the T (Score:4, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is a gem! Way to go Carly! (Score:3, Funny)
Their Adaptive Enterprise technology is certainly impressive.
As long as they don't say... (Score:2)
The real answer... (Score:2)
What the grab-bag has i
CALCULATORS! (Score:2)
And, *NO*, PDAs or PocketPCs are not adequate substitutes.
And were Carly Fiorina and Edie Falco separated at birth?
One slipped through! (Score:2)
HP isn't selling anything to us... (Score:3, Insightful)
While HP has made mistakes, they are by no means a stupid company. They pay people a lot of money to tell them what they need to say to make anything sound good. And they know that by using this vague and seemingly cutting-edge vocabulary in their speeches that its going to appeal to those who make the decisions about what sort of system they need to use (IE not engineers working in the IT dept).
This interview is unique in that a top-ranking VP from HP was forced to answer some technical questions about the way her product works. She probably has no idea how AE works, and you couldn't explain it to her in terms she understands because like many others have said she doesn't understand "tech talk". What she does understand is what to tell the people in charge to get them to buy into her idea. That's her job. When they get a company interested and go to close the sale, they probably send a few techies along with some salespeople to explain to some managers IT pet that their product really is worth it.
I personally think this interview was unfair. It would be like interviewing a programmer at microsoft about what he see's for the future of the company, what directions they are taking, etc... He'd probably be just as dumbfounded. Before the interview, it even says "CNET News.com recently met with Nora Denzel, senior vice president of HP's Adaptive Enterprise, to find out what she sees on the IT horizon from the computing giant's perspective." I dont recall anything in the interview regarding the future of HP and where they want to go, but instead trying to bleed technical details out of a marketing rep.
The article should have been titled "Investigation into the details of HP's new Adaptive Enterprise Solutions" and then maybe HP would have been given a fair chance to represent themselves.
Re:Artical Summary (Score:4, Insightful)
She's talking about selling advice, basicly. They'll recommend stuff, and they're not tied down to any one technology, she says. I'm sure they'll recommend HP hardware, but they'll also recommend
It sounds like a shift towards a consulting/service business model as hardware becomes a commodity. They're trying to package it like it's a Product, but when questioned, they have to say it's a Goal or a Mindset or a Process.
It's advice. It's probably biased. And while it's probably better than what you'd get from a dozen O'reilly books at a tenth of a percent of the cost, it's not a magic box that you plug in so no one has to code anymore. It's not a secret technology that lets you turn a dial from '5 day delay' to '1 minute delay.' It's JSEE or
Re:Artical Summary (Score:2)
And, sadly, even that is nothing new. IBM did it years ago.
Not "better." I've gotten advice from such people, and in some case I've been the little Oz guy behind the scenes who's actual
Re:On .NET (Score:2)
Many of them aren't using OOP, Java, or "post-relational databasing" either. Or, what was the computer innovation to end all... hmmm... oh, yeah, COBOL! The "language of business", that makes you taller, more attractive to members of the opposite sex, and gets the crabgrass out of your lawn.
It's a great mystery, but it seems that dressing up the latest incremental modification of existing paradigms with buz
Re:On .NET (Score:2)
Did I say that .NET, J2EE or any other object-oriented software platform is the only way to make money in the software industry?
I was simply saying that the idea that .NET is some sort of mystery technology is absolute bull.
Re:On .NET (Score:2)
Let me guess, you hate most popular music and instead tell everyone how much you love the "Screaming Frog Orgasms", "The Wicket Pence Dog Sperms", or some other fringe group that people bring up when they want to show how elevated their tastes are?
Re:On .NET (Score:2)
Re:On .NET (Score:2)
Re:On .NET (Score:3, Informative)
So now the word "platform" is a buzzword?
The .NET platform includes not only the CLR, but the various servies that are used frequently by .NET like IIS, MSMQ, SQL Server, and even COM+ through Enterprise Services. These are the technologies that work v
Re:On .NET (Score:3, Informative)
Re:On .NET (Score:3, Insightful)
"I swear, this has become almost an urban legend on Slashdot. Ha, ha,
Okay, care to explain to me how B follows A in this conversation? There is NOTHING about timothy's original comment that suggests he doesn't understand
Re:On .NET (Score:2)
The title of the article is "So, HP, What Exactly Are You Trying To Sell Us?". There is an implication there that the details surruonding the .NET platform is simply marketting and buzzword with no real und
Re:On .NET (Score:2)
Re:On .NET (Score:2)
I've already argued over this with enough people and gone through it so many times, I don't care to spend the time to detail out the .NET platform again. I would recommend you check out GotDotNet [gotdotnet.com] and MSDN [microsoft.com] for more info.
Re:On .NET (Score:2)
There is plenty of information out there regarding what the .NET platform involves. I don't think it is my job to detail it every time an editor makes some dumb one-liner to satisify the zealots.
Re:On .NET (Score:4, Informative)
It did get slightly out of control, but calling .NET simply a "java-ish wrapper around the win32 API" is fairly inaccurate. Many of the class libraries do simply wrap the Win32 api, especially things like Windows Forms, but this is only a stopgap measure until the support is built into the OS.
Also, .NET support is being built into more products like SQLServer. The ability to create stored procs in any .NET compliant language is coming soon (Yes, I know you can write stored procs in Java in DB2 and Oracle), along with other features.
So .NET is a lot more than just the CLR and VS.NET. It is seeping into just about every Microsoft product there is. I think the marketing just came too early.
Re:You really don't know anything, do you, Michael (Score:2)
Re:I FIGURED IT OUT. (Score:2)
Re:I FIGURED IT OUT. (Score:2)