Exactly what is an OSS’s “intuition age”
I’m currently reading a book entitled, “Jony Ive. The genius behind Apple’s greatest products.” I’d like to share a paragraph with you from it (and probably expect a few more in coming days): “…Apple’s internal culture heavily favored the engineers within the product groups. The design process was engineering driven. In the early days of […]
Moving from traditional assurance to AIOps, what are the differences?
We’re going to look into assurance models of the past versus the changing assurance demands that are appearing these days. The diagrams below are highly stylised for discussion purposes so they’re unlikely to reflect actual implementations, but we’ll get to that. Under the old model, the heart of the OSS/BSS was the database (almost exclusively […]
Is your service assurance really service assurance?? (Part 6)
Seems this post from last week has triggered some really interesting debate – Is your service assurance really service assurance?? (Part 5). It was a post that looked into collecting end-to-end service metrics rather than our traditional method of collecting network device events/metrics and trying to reverse-engineer to form a service-level perspective. Thought I’d give […]
Going to the OSS zoo
“There’s the famous quote that if you want to understand how animals live, you don’t go to the zoo, you go to the jungle. The Future Lab has really pioneered that within Lego, and it hasn’t been a theoretical exercise. It’s been a real design-thinking approach to innovation, which we’ve learned an awful lot from.” […]
Is your service assurance really service assurance?? (Part 5)
In yesterday’s fourth part of this series about modern network service assurance, we wrote this: I also just stumbled upon OpenTelemetry, an open source project designed to capture traces / metrics / logs from apps / microservices. It intrigued me because just as you have the concept of traces / metrics / logs for apps, […]
Is your service assurance really service assurance?? (Part 2)
In yesterday’s article, we asked whether what many know as service assurance can rightfully be called service assurance. Yesterday’s, like today’s, post was inspired by an interesting white paper from the Netrounds team titled, “Reimagining Service Assurance in the Digital Service Provider Era.” Below are three insightful tables from the Netrounds white paper: Table 1 […]
Is your service assurance really service assurance??
I just came across an interesting white paper from the Netrounds team titled, “Reimagining Service Assurance in the Digital Service Provider Era.” You can find a copy here. It’s well worth a read, so much so that I’ll unpack a few of the concepts it contains in a series of articles this week. It rightly […]
I’m really excited by a just-finished OSS analysis (part 3)
This is the third part of a series describing a really exciting analysis I’ve just finished. Part 1 described how we can turn simple log files into a Sankey diagram that shows real-life process flows (not just a theoretical diagram drawn by BAs and SMEs), like below: Part 2 described how the logs are broken […]
I’m really excited by a just-finished OSS analysis (part 2)
As the title suggests, this is the second part in a series describing a process flow visualisation, optimisation and decision support methodology that uses simple log data as input. Yesterday’s post, part 1 in the series, showed the visualisation aspect in the form of a Sankey flow diagram. This visualisation is exciting because it shows […]
Completing an OSS design, going inside, going outside, going Navy SEAL
Our most recent post last week discussed the research organisations like DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) and Google are investing into group flow for the purpose of group effectiveness. It cites the cost of training ($4.25m) each elite Navy SEAL and their ability to operate as if choreographed in high pressure / noise environments. […]
Lightning strikes in OSS
Operators have developed many unique understandings of what impacts the health of their networks. For example, mobile operators know that they have faster maintenance cycles in coastal areas than they do in warm, dry areas (yes, due to rust). Other operators have a high percentage of faults that are power-related. Others are impacted by failures […]
OSS change…. but not too much… oh no…..
Let me start today with a question: Does your future OSS/BSS need to be drastically different to what it is today? Please leave me a comment below, answering yes or no. I’m going to take a guess that most OSS/BSS experts will answer yes to this question, that our future OSS/BSS will change significantly. It’s […]
Cool new feature – An OSS masquerading as…
I spent some time with a client going through their OSS/BSS yesterday. They’re an Australian telco with a primarily home-grown, browser-based OSS/BSS. One of its features was something I’ve never seen in an OSS/BSS before. But really quite subtle and cool. They have four tiers of users: Super-admins (the carrier’s in-house admins), Standard (their in-house […]
Two concepts to help ease long-standing OSS problems
There’s a famous Zig Ziglar quote that goes something like, “You can have everything in life you want, if you will just help enough other people get what they want.” You could safely assume that this was written for the individual reader, but there is some truth in it within the OSS context too. For […]
NaaS is to networks what Agile is to software
After Telstra’s NaaS (Network as a Service) program won a TM Forum excellence award, I promised yesterday to share a post that describes why I’m so excited about the concept of NaaS. As the title suggests above, NaaS has the potential to be as big a paradigm shift for networks (and OSS/BSS) as Agile has […]
Inverting the pyramid of OSS and network innovation
Back in the earliest days of OSS (and networks for that matter), it was the telcos that generated almost all of the innovation. That effectively limited innovation to being developed by the privileged few, those who worked for the government-owned, monopoly telcos. But over time, the financial leaders at those telcos felt the costs of […]
Could you believe it? An OSS with less features that helps more?
All OSS products are excellent these days. And all OSS vendors know what the most important functionality is. They already have those features built into their products. That is, they’ve already added the all-important features at the left side of the graph. But it also means product teams are tending to only add the relatively […]
Would you hire a furniture maker as an OSS CEO?
Well, would you hire a furniture maker as CEO of an OSS vendor? At face value, it would seem to be an odd selection right? There doesn’t seem to be much commonality between furniture and OSS does there? It seems as likely as hiring a furniture maker to be CEO of a car maker? Oh […]
What are OSS “platform wrapper” roadblocks?
OSS can be cumbersome at times. Making change can be difficult. We tend to build layers of protections around them and the networks we manage. I get that. Change can be risky (although the protections are often implemented because the OSS and/or network platforms might not be as robust as they could be). Contrast this […]
I sent you an OSS helicopter
“There’s a fable of a man stuck in a flood. Convinced that God is going to save him, he says no to a passing canoe, boat, and helicopter that offer to help. He dies, and in heaven asks God why He didn’t save him. God says, “I sent you a canoe, a boat, and a […]