When your ideas get stolen
When your ideas get stolen. A few meditations from Seth Godin: “Good for you. Isn’t it better that your ideas are worth stealing? What would happen if you worked all that time, created that book or that movie or that concept and no one wanted to riff on it, expand it or run with it? […]
Re-writing the Sales vs Networks cultural divide
“Brand, marketing, pricing and sales were seen as sexy. Networks and IT were the geeks no one seemed to speak to or care about. … This isolation and excommunication of our technical team had created an environment of disillusion. If you wanted something done the answer was mostly ‘No – we have no budget and […]
Does the death of ATM bear comparison with telco-grade open-source OSS?
Hands up if you’re old enough to remember ATM here? And I don’t mean the type of ATM that sits on the side of a building dispensing cash – no I mean Asynchronous Transfer Mode. For those who aren’t familiar with ATM, a little background. ATM was THE telco-grade packet-switching technology of choice for most […]
Blown away by one innovation. Now to extend on it
Our most recent two posts, from yesterday and Friday, have talked about one stunningly simple idea that helps to overcome one of OSS’ biggest challenges – data quality. Those posts have stimulated quite a bit of dialogue and it seems there is some consensus about the cleverness of the idea. I don’t know if the […]
Blown away by one innovation – a follow-up concept
Last Friday’s blog discussed how I’ve just been blown away by the most elegant OSS innovation I’ve seen in decades. You can read more detail via the link, but the three major factors in this simple, elegant solution to data quality problems (probably OSS’ biggest kryptonite) are: Being able to make connections that break standard […]
I’ve just been blown away by the most elegant OSS innovation I’ve seen in decades
Looking back, I now consider myself extremely lucky to have worked with an amazing product on the first OSS project I worked on (all the way back in 2000). And I say amazing because the underlying data models and core product architecture are still better than any other I’ve worked with in the two decades […]
Is your data AI-ready (part 2)
Further to yesterday’s post that posed the question about whether your data was AI ready for virtualised network assurance use cases, I thought I’d raise a few more notes. The two reasons posed were: Our data sets haven’t had time to collect much elastic / dynamic network data yet Our data is riddled with human-generated […]
Are your existing data sets actually suited to seeding an AI engine?
“In the virtualization domain, the old root cause technology is becoming obsolete because resources and workloads move around dynamically – we no longer have fixed network and compute resources. Existing service assurance systems in the telecommunication network were designed to manage a fixed set of resources and these assurance systems fall short in monitoring dynamic […]
One sentence to make most OSS experts cringe
Let me warn you. The following sentence is going to make many OSS experts cringe, maybe even feel slightly disgusted, but take the time to read the remainder of the post and ponder how it fits within your specific OSS context/s. “Our OSS need to help people spend money!” Notice the word is “help” and […]
How smart contracts might reduce risk and enhance trust on OSS projects
Last Friday, we spoke about all wanting to develop trusted OSS supplier / customer relationships but rarely finding them and a contrarian factor for why trust is so hard to achieve in OSS – complexity. Trust is the glue that allows OSS projects to happen. Not only that, it becomes a catch-22 with complexity. If […]
The challenges in transforming network assurance to network healing
A couple of interesting concepts have the ability to fundamentally change the way networks and services are maintained. If they can be harnessed, we could replace the term “network assurance” with “network healing.” The first concept is SON, which has been formulated specifically with mobile radio networks in mind, but has the potential to extend […]
Dan Pink’s 6 critical OSS senses
I recently wrote an article that spoke about the obsolescence of jobs in OSS, particularly as a result of Artificial Intelligence. But an article by someone much more knowledgeable about AI than me, Rodney Brooks, had this to say, “We are surrounded by hysteria about the future of artificial intelligence and robotics — hysteria about […]
Bringing Eminem’s blank canvas to OSS
“When you start out in your career, you have a blank canvas, so you can paint anywhere that you want because the shit ain’t been painted on yet. And then your second album comes out, and you paint a little more and you paint a little more. By the time you get to your seventh […]
50 exercises to ignite your OSS innovation sessions
Every project starts with an idea… an idea that someone is excited enough to sponsor. But where are your ideas being generated from? How do they get cultivated and given time to grow? How do they get pitched? and How do they get heard? How are sponsors persuaded? How do they then get implemented? How do […]
How the investment strategy of a $106 billion VC fund changed my OSS thinking
What is a service provider’s greatest asset? Now I’m biased when considering the title question, but I believe OSS are the puppet-master of every modern service provider. They’re the systems that pull all of the strings of the organisation. They generate the revenue by operationalising and assuring the networks as well as the services they […]
Posing a Network Data Synchronisation Protocol (NDSP) concept
Data quality is one of the biggest challenges we face in OSS. A product could be technically perfect, but if the data being pumped into it is poor, then the user experience of the product will be awful – the OSS becomes unusable, and that in itself generates a data quality death spiral. This becomes […]
I’m predicting the demise of the OSS horse
“What will telcos do about the 30% of workers AI is going to displace?” Dawn Bushaus That question, which is the headline of Dawn’s article on TM Forum’s Inform platform, struck me as being quite profound. As an aside, I’m not interested in the number – the 30% – because I concur with Tom Goodwin’s sentiments […]
The concept of DevOps is missing one really important thing
There’s a concept that’s building a buzz across all digital industries – you may’ve heard of it – it’s a little thing called DevOps. Someone (most probably a tester) decided to extend it and now you might even hear the #DevTestOps moniker being mentioned. In the ultimate of undeserved acknowledgements, I even get a reference […]
A summary of RPA uses in an OSS suite
This is the sixth and final post in a series about the four styles of RPA (Robotic Process Automation) in OSS. Over the last few days, we’ve looked into the following styles of RPA used in OSS, their implementation approaches, pros / cons and the types of automation they’re best suited to: Automating repeatable tasks […]
RPA in OSS feedback loops
This is the fifth in a series about the four styles of RPA (Robotic Process Automation) in OSS. The fourth of those styles is as part of a closed-loop system such as the one described here. Here’s a diagram from that link: This is the most valuable style of RPA because it represents a learning […]