Archive for March, 2010

Location Intelligence At Solutions Linux

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

The presentation on Location Intelligence I gave at Solutions Linux last week is now online on slideshare

Many thanks to all the ones who attended to it and to OW2 for the great organization of the event.

I would also thank Altic, one of our technological partner, and especially Charly and Fedia for the great work they have made using and promoting the new GeoReportEngine. The demo they have made on top of it was really impressive and I know that they are working on something even more interesting. I will give more infos about that as soon as possible.

Last but not least I would like to thank all the ones that share with me their ideas and feedbacks on how to improve Location Intelligence functionalities provided by SpagoBI.

So what’s coming next? I have a lot of ideas in mind. First of all I would like to start dedicating some of my next posts on this blog to further analyze some topics introduced in the presentation above, like, for example:

  • location intelligence’s adoption barriers and drivers,
  • location intelligence’s system architectures,
  • cultural differences between GIS and BI communities,
  • SpagoBI’s location intelligence vision and roadmap,

Stay tuned !

OW2 at Solutions Linux 2010

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

I’m back from Paris where I attended Solutions Linux exhibition and OW2 events last week. Very important to be there because it is the right place in Europe to meet OS, to network with people and follow-up previous contacts. Not so much novelties, but friends and improvement for everyone. About OW2, I was a little skeptical when I planned to go, because last year was a challenging period for the Consortium aiming to be a vibrant community and a living business ecosystem. I attended all OW2 main events (BoD, Village, Cocktail, Conference:  good attendance – specially at the Conference, nice new and already known people, good network and interesting talks.  Now I can testify of an half-full glass: the challenge still exists, but happy 2010 OW2! If more people works to build a community, and not only software and marketing (very important as well) we could be a real vibrant and open ecosystem.

Notes from Solutions Linux 2010

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

I just returned from Solutions Linux 2010 in Paris, and I have some considerations on what I saw.

A lot of vendors is proposing similar solutions, for example as project leader of Spagic I was encircled by competitors working on the theme of Open Source SOA: there was PetalsLink with their Petals ESB solution, BonitaSoft with Bonita BPM solutions, just to make few names.

But also on Business Intelligence (we exposed also the solution SpagoBI) the history was exactly the same: a lot of competitors was very near to our stand, and in some cases I confess that I asked a demo for looking the competitor offer.

The problem is: how a customer can choose between all these different but similar solutions ?

One possible answer is looking the solutions at the technological level: this is not always possible because it requires to much time and too much technical skills.

In the case of Spagic, for example, I know without doubt that it’s the best technological solution for Open Source SOA in the world, because it’s based on the wonderful OSGi technology, it provides a user friendly BPMN editor for designing processes, a winsome monitoring console, and so on. But the problem is that when I talk to customers about all of these fantastic technologies, usually they know only 20% of the acronym that I use. But this is right, because the technology is “my problem”, not their problem: their choice should be based on others criteria such as

  • Licenses availables (GPL, LGPL, commercial, ..)
  • Support policies
  • Maturity of the solution
  • Availability if Enterprise Features (High Availability, Transaction Management, …)
  • and obviously the functions available.

I hope to write next post returning from a conference in a nice place like Madrid, or New York ;)

View lemma information winsome

EclipseCon 2010…

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

This is mI am speaking at EclipseCon 2010y first post in this blog and what a better occasion to write about EclipseCon 2010, which will start on Monday 22 March. I’m going to present the two upcoming Eclipse projects sponsored by Engineering eBPM and eBAM.

Who has already met me knows that I’m a passionate Eclipse programmer and supporter, since Eclipse was born. So I’m very happy that since 2010 my company has been an official Eclipse member. I strongly think that this could be a very important occasion to make our projects be better known and help their growth abroad. Obviously I’ll take the opportunity to take a tour at SanFrancisco bay area, where there are a lot of interesting things to see and to enjoy.

In my following post I’ll make a detailed report about.

Open Quality

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

Image from http://www.webdesign-guru.co.uk/icon/rubber-stamps-free-graphics/With this post I’m starting my new adventure in the SpagoWorld blog. I’m going to write, mainly, for the so called Open Quality category, which purpose is to collect the investigations about Quality and Open Source relationship. As directly involved on these two elements (Quality and Open Source) my personal aim is to make them work togehter in the most effective possible way during my everyday work; highlight what are the benefits for the different roles, from developers and managers to clients.

I’ll keep an eye on software quality, trying to elaboarate on that by talking about topics, such as:

  • tools for code development and tools for it’s quality measurement;
  • reference models and indicators used for evaluation and comparison activities;
  • projects (where I’m also involved in: QualiPSo) in charge of defining the rules to prove the trustworthiness of open source software projects, with the final goal of helping industries and governments to use them;
  • (real) use cases, about the usage of quality monitoring platforms for software development products, and their adopted process, as well as the monitoring of the level of a service provisioning.

There’s a lot of things to analyze under the software quality topic (just look at the number of results you have for a Google search on that) and, with my humble contributions, I hope I can at least turn on curiosity about some of those. Stay Tuned!