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November 4, 2009 1:50 PM PST

Fads aside, IT is not a fashion industry

by Jonathan Eunice
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It's been said that information technology is a fashion industry--that we just keep following the latest hype and fads. Oracle CEO Larry Ellison last year referred to cloud computing this way.

Ellison loves this dig, and he uses it least once every technology generation. He's not alone. I, however, disagree with the entire curmudgeon corps' "It's just hype!" attitude.

While it's true that we in IT have our fashions, just like any field of human endeavor, we're generally pretty practical. It's hard to see either IT's executives or its technicians as highly subject to the whims of style or flights of fancy. The truth is closer to the notion that we're an evolving industry--one constantly struggling to find better ways.

It's not easy to grapple with the fantastic, relentless progress afforded by Moore's Law (on the supply side), nor the constant demand for more capacity, capability, and integration (on the demand side).

In a few short decades, IT has undergone a massive shift from an engineering-oriented support role to driving the beating heart of the global economy. IT is now central to large swaths of all human activity.

As new technologies and strategies come online--whether network computing, open source, agile development, service-oriented architecture (SOA), cloud computing, virtualization, or whatever--we seek to employ them to improve our outcomes.

There's always a bit of experimentation and a bit of hype involved in the early days. Indeed, without that willingness to "try it out" and a strong shot of enthusiasm on the side, we wouldn't be advancing as well as we are. That's not just hype you're hearing; it's also the will to progress. And for the most part, the recipe works.

Most of the major new approaches touted over the past few decades have become workaday parts of the IT landscape. Most apps, for example, are now "client-server" in design. Linux and other open-source engines run much of the Internet. SOA is how enterprise IT is designed.

The same Web services that Ellison derided years ago now underpin much of e-commerce, as well as high-interactivity Web 2.0 services such as Google Maps. And virtualization and orchestration--frequently discounted at the top of this decade--are now fundamentally changing how data centers are operated.

Indeed, when one of these previously experimental, previously hyped approaches recede from view, it's usually not because they've failed but because they've succeeded so well that we don't need to talk about them anymore. They've been burned into the way we do IT.

Each wave of technology builds on the last, incorporating its best parts, weeding out what didn't work, and often re-emphasizing themes that had appeared years before but weren't quite workable at that time--though often using different names. The utility computing, grid, and application service providers of years past, for example, have become the software as a service (SaaS, or more generally, ITaaS) and cloud computing of today.

So when something new comes your way--a new approach, a new strategy, a new way of looking at or doing IT--by all means, be skeptical. Try it out in careful, measured ways. But do try it out--and have enthusiasm for those new things. That's how we advance.

Jonathan Eunice, co-founder and principal IT adviser at Illuminata, focuses on system architectures, operating environments, infrastructure software, development tools, and management strategies in networked IT. He has written hundreds of research publications and several books. Jonathan is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not a CNET employee.
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Fads aside, IT is not a fashion industry
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by ReigningChamp November 4, 2009 2:22 PM PST
Couldn't have said it better myself. Consumers may follow fashion trends, but the actual IT professional follows what works in a given situation. It may not be those most eye pleasing piece of equipment or the latest and greatest, but a lot of it is tried and true measures. Thank you to those who are willing to push new tech to it's limits and see where it takes us. If it weren't for you, we wouldn't be posting on CNET right now.
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by ewelch November 4, 2009 3:39 PM PST
Ellison? The guy who gave us the thin client?

Talk about winds of fashion...
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by lincch01 November 5, 2009 11:30 AM PST
Title reads: "Fashionable trends aside, IT doesn't have fashionable trends."

Fashion and innovation are not exclusive. If anything, fashion is an integral consideration of innovation (e.g. how else can one think "outside of the box" if no box (i.e. convention/fashion) has been defined).

Also, let's not forget the numerous superior technologies and solutions that failed to inferior competitors. If fashion were irrelevant, superiority would always prevail (which is obviously not the case).

Fashionable innovation is the key to acceptance of innovation.
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About Apps Meet Ops

Virtualization, unified networks, service-oriented management, and cloud computing have changed data center operations deeply and aggressively, as application development has undergone its own frenetic revolutions. With agile development methods, rich Internet apps, middleware wars, dynamic languages, and live data analytics, the apps side of IT is zigging and zagging as fast as the ops side.

Illuminata Principal IT Adviser Jonathan Eunice bridges these two halves the IT brain--the creative and the rational, the developer and the operator. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.

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