During this
assignment of reading pages 77-136, there were three main aspects and “world
flatteners” as they’re called, that I was supposed to learn about and put my
thoughts to. The first world flattener of this 2nd module was
workflow software. Picture this, in the old days as warehouse would get a phone
call from someone placing an order. The person who answered the phone would
then have to walk to shipping to deliver the order. From there, the shipping
department walks to the billing department with all the necessary paperwork,
for them to create an invoice. Now things are quite a bit different. A
warehouse receives an order, through one of many facets of business. Could be a
phone call, email, or and online order. Someone receives that order and puts it
into the computer. That order goes to shipping and billing and prints out the
invoice, all simultaneously.
Workflow software
enables more people in more places to design, display, manage and collaborate
on business data previously handled manually. The workflow software was also a
type of interpreter for all the different computers back in the 90’s. With this
software it didn’t matter if you had a Novell, or an IBM computer. Early on these
computers all spoke their own languages and could not mix from one manufacturer
to another. That turned out to be a huge problem. Even inside the same company
Accounting couldn’t talk to shipping etc. Workflow software bridged that gap.
Another flattener
that helped software and technology take leaps and bounds was something called
Open Source Software. When Netscape started up, they asked you to pay for their
software, but if you couldn’t afford to, they still wanted you to use it. There
was a reason for that. They knew that if everyone was using their browser it
would stimulate massive growth. Open Source Software is a lot like that. Open
source software pioneers felt that by making available online the source code,
then letting anyone who has something to contribute, improve it and let
millions of others download it for free for their own personal use, it would
also stimulate growth and perfect the product.
A perfect example
as to why this free downloading works better than buying a version from a
certain company came when IBM was developing their own server. They had to
compete with the Apache servers. Well Apache was an open source server from the
beginning and because of that, it had been refined and improved thousands of
times. IBM realized there was no way their engineers could come up with
anything nearly as efficient as Apache servers, so they scrapped their whole
project and adopted Apache.
There was another
example of open source software in this portion of the book. A company named
Goldcorp Inc. created a competition for geologists. They gave the scientists
all the data they had about the Red Lake gold mine and asked geologists around
the world to find the next 6 million ounces of gold. The winner would win
$105,000. Goldcorp Inc. drilled 4 of the winner’s top 5 locations and hit gold
on all 4 sites. So by allowing others, who may be smarter than you, to
collaborate with you, you come out with a better product.
The last flattener
was outsourcing. I didn’t realize that outsourcing and Y2K went hand in hand.
In the late 90’s everyone started freaking out about the Y2K bug that was going
to destroy mankind and technology as we knew it. Well apparently, the US had
millions of computers that needed this computer remediation and it just so
happened that India was the only country with the amount of Engineers it would
take to do all the tedious, time consuming work. So, we allowed them to do it,
for much less than if we were to do it ourselves. From then on, India put
themselves as the front runner for outsourcing. They have highly trained
engineers that work for 1/10th the price.
We are to the
point now where companies are seeing a need to remove their accounts payable
department and use a company like Infosys, located in India for a fraction of
the price. I can’t say I blame them.
2 comments:
I like the part you wrote about open source software and how it encourages the software to grow and improve. Also, your ideas are very well put toghether.
I like your essay because you put a lot of comments about what you thought workflow software, open source software and outsourcing meant to you. So it was a little more personable.
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