Network Computing is part of the Informa Tech Division of Informa PLC

This site is operated by a business or businesses owned by Informa PLC and all copyright resides with them. Informa PLC's registered office is 5 Howick Place, London SW1P 1WG. Registered in England and Wales. Number 8860726.

Industry Insights: Wearing Two Hats

• Inventions improve your life by enabling you to do things you couldn't do before. Take the World Wide Web, which didn't even exist 13 years ago, yet Tim Berners-Lee's invention is, arguably, the single most revolutionary force of the new century. Then there's Ethernet, which Bob Metcalfe invented in 1974. Imagine life without those happy little packets flying down the wire.

• Innovations simplify your life by taking those things that you could do before, and using new technology, or modifications of current technology, to let you do them much more easily. A good example here is the iSCSI protocol: It builds on Ethernet and lets you replace complex, expensive Fibre Channel links with something that, if done right, should reduce the complexity of storage networks.

Has the Pendulum Swung Too Far?

Tech innovations make the corporate side happy because they often lead to greater efficiency--a good thing for the bottom line but not necessarily for the IT pro. We're doing more with fewer bodies, and that's not likely to improve in the foreseeable future. In fact, the Information Technology Association of America's annual survey of hiring managers shows little new demand for IT workers--less than a 1 percent net gain in IT jobs for the first quarter of 2003 (see www.itaa.org).

To technologists, the frosted side of the invention/ innovation mini-wheat is enticing. We thrive on newness--new technologies, new gadgets, new problems to solve. But doing so can put us at a disadvantage: We see the glittering lights, bells and whistles as necessary requirements to move our companies along. We got a little too exuberant in the late 1990s and created solutions for problems that didn't exist. And we learned that the hard way when market forces whacked us in the back of the head.

  • 1