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A homework assignment for people who think the United States is a "bully" for using tariffs:
Pick a random country. Any country.
Then, go to your favorite LLM and type in "what tariffs does (country of choice) have in place?"
Proceed to be enlightened, and then shut up.What is the truth about alcohol consumption
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Consultants Saying Things
- Episode 80: The One About Why Whynde and Chris Got Into Consulting
- Episode 79: The One About Enterprise Architect Skills for the Future
- Episode 78: The One About Building a Career Narrative
- Episode 77: The 2024 Christmas Special
- E76-01: Be Empathetic to Win Business
- Episode 76: The One About Winning New Business
- E75-01: Oliver Talks Ikigai
- Episode 75: The One About Existential Angst
- E73-02: Technologists Should Ask Better Questions
- E73-01: Phil talks good questions
architecture Archive
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Responding to Change: EA & Agility
Posted on July 23, 2010 | No CommentsEA doesn't institute agility. When adopted and executed properly, it helps structure an enterprise so that it can move with agility if it chooses to do so. The practice of Enterprise Architecture enables a company to respond to change. -
Developers vs Architects: Cage Match
Posted on July 16, 2010 | No CommentsWhy on earth would an enterprise place it's architects in the AppDev organization? There they'll be suffocated by groupthink geared to see solutions as the first step in addressing business problems. They'll slowly begin to lose the context, the big picture. The discipline of architecture simply requires a different view of the world that vanishes from sight when the architect is mired in the muck and the lost in the weeds. -
Yes, SOA is Still Dead (or is it?)
Posted on July 12, 2010 | No CommentsAnytime a technology or concept means different things to different people, it is effectively meaningless. Let Forrester and Burton/Gartner hash out whether SOA is alive or dead or morphed or evolved or reborn. Representing technical capabilities as services that people can understand will breach the business-IT language barrier.