Where does trial and error belong in OSS?
I hold a somewhat philosophical view of where OSS (and IT in general) fits within its overall timeline. It’s all pretty nascent in the grand scheme of things. Whilst communitications technology is the common thread, I’ve worked in many industries including construction, mining, engineering, government, utilities, emergency services, healthcare, farming and more. Most of these […]
Here’s a long-play OSS analytics strategy for you to try
Analytics is a term that has caught fire in IT relatively recently. In many ways, our OSS have been doing “analytics” for years, albeit not necessarily with the same tools at their disposal. If we simplify the term down to the use case of “being able to ask questions of a massive data store” then […]
Can you imagine how you’ll interact with your OSS in 10 years?
Here’s a slightly mind-blowing fact for you – A child born when iPhone was announced will be 10 years old in 2 months (a piece of trivia courtesy of Ben Evans). That’s nearly 10 years of digitally native workers coming into the telco workforce and 10 years of not-so-digitally native workers exiting it. We marvelled […]
How quickly could your OSS set up a pop-up shop?
When I last looked, Passionate about OSS had been seen from over 180 countries. Many of those countries have probably witnessed the pop-up shop phenomenon. I suspect many have not (yet). For those who aren’t familiar with the concept, it sees organisations taking up short-term residence to deliver customer experience, most often in retail environments […]
The risk of doing nothing with your OSS
“When facing a reputation problem, most organizations simply rebrand. This is the safe route: stick with what you know but tell the public you are innovating, hoping they won’t notice you’re doing nothing of the sort. But Avaya CEO Kevin Kennedy saw the deeper problem behind Avaya’s NPS score and knew radical change was necessary… […]
What are you afraid that your competitors might do?
Here’s a quick strategy idea for you to extrapolate upon. Whether you represent a service provider, OSS vendor, integrator, consultant, etc, what are you most afraid your competitors might do? Chances are that your answers will represent a quantum leap in some form. Does your answer to the question help to articulate what your ideal […]
We’re doomed! Destined to ossifying
Do you know what the word ossify means? If not, can you guess? No, it’s not another of my made-up words to describe OSS in an obscure way. For those of you who didn’t already know that it’s a real word and what it means, wait for it… it means to cease developing; to stagnate. […]
Does your organisation have the culture to handle new OSS models?
We’ve recently talked about the two service provider business model extremes – OTT / DSP (Over the Top or DSP) versus REIT / TaaU (Telco as a Utility) are affecting OSS. The fast-twitch OSS that services the OTT / DSP model is bringing about some fascinating changes in the way service providers procure “assets.” They’re […]
Have you noticed the different races being run in OSS?
Yesterday’s blog discussed innovation at the speed of data being even faster than innovation at the speed of software. But not all aspects of OSS need to evolve at the sames speeds. In the Olympics, sprinters need fast-twitch muscles and training to hone for speed, whilst marathon runners need slow-twitch muscles and appropriate training for […]
What’s faster than innovation at the speed of software?
Marc Andreessen famously wrote an essay entitled, “Why software is eating the world,” in the WSJ in 2011, which has proven to be an accurate insight. I thought he was also responsible for the term, “innovation at the speed of software,” but a search only reveals PAOSS and a few other references, so perhaps I’ve […]
How does OSS architecture cope with exponential growth
Yesterday’s blog covered how exponential growth in ICT industries has been (and will continue to be) a challenge for all of us in OSS-land. We’ve already seen some fundamental changes in OSS in recent years to be able to cope with the massive growth in device counts, bandwidth demands, etc. We’ve seen hyper-scaled hardware/software platforms […]
How can OSS keep up with exponential progress?
We’ve all heard of Moore’s Law, which predicts the semiconductor industry’s ability to exponentially increase transistor density in an integrated circuit. “Moore’s prediction proved accurate for several decades, and has been used in the semiconductor industry to guide long-term planning and to set targets for research and development. Advancements in digital electronics are strongly linked to […]
More cars registered for phone numbers than did handsets in Q1/16
“In the first quarter of 2016, more cars were registered for phone numbers in the US than were personal cell phones.” From an article named, “Five technologies for the next ten years” The article starts, “Over the next decade, mobile, the Internet of Things, machine learning, robotics, and blockchain technologies will change a great deal…” […]
How channel disintegration can show us a more valuable OSS
I’m currently working on an assignment that is slightly left-field for the typical OSS consultant, but is giving me a different angle on OSS than I’ve had before. I’m working on a predominantly IVR-based project, but considers journeys through multiple customer contact channels. In theory, it has nothing to do with OSS, but I’m finding […]
Build-measure-learn loops in OSS
“Whilst doing rather than planning has been a hugely successful tactic for entrepreneurs and their investors, before I go any further I want to note that as with everything you can take it too far. To get the best chance of achieving huge success, and avoid getting stuck at a local maxima, a certain amount […]
Using deduction
“Eric Raymond proposed that a computer should ‘never ask the user for any information that it can autodetect, copy, or deduce’; computer vision changes what the computer has to ask. So it’s not, really, a camera, taking photos – it’s more like an eye, that can see.” Ben Evans here. There’s a big buzzword going […]
When phones swallowed physical objects
“…after a decade in which phones swallowed physical objects, with cameras, radios, music players and so on turned into apps, AR might turn those apps back into physical objects – virtual ones, of course. On one hand cameras digitise everything, and on the other AR puts things back into the world.” Ben Evans here. Similarly, […]
Sankey diagrams go with the flow
There can be many parts that make up an operator’s provisioning factory. There can also be multiple different software packages that contribute towards getting an order through the factory. In addition to that, there are usually many different activities that need to take place, some automatic, some manual, some as external dependencies, conditional gates, etc. […]
Customer demand influence
“Global telecommunications study: navigating the road to 2020.” In the study listed above, executives at some of the world’s largest CSPs indicate that the players most likely to disrupt their industry is OTT app providers. Any thoughts on why they might be perceived to be 30x more influential than technology specialists, or 5x more influential […]
Contingency planning in real-time
“Instead of asking: do we have enough capacity? telcos should be asking: when (and where) will we run out of capacity? And what are we doing to mitigate? Instead of simply reacting to outages, telcos should have a real time view of the current risk points, failure scenarios and their impacts – with recovery plans should the […]