Entries Categorized as 'EA'
by Bruce Robertson | September 10, 2009 | 27 Comments
I’m presenting at two upcoming Gartner EA Summit events in London (Sept 14-15) and Orlando (Oct 7-9) on the topic of “Architecting for Emergence: New EA Models Embracing Change.” I’ll also be describing case studies for Emergent or Middle-Out EA approaches in separate presentations. Gartner’s EA team has been discussing emergent or middle-out EA approaches (we’ve [...]
Category: EA Tags: EA lite, emergent EA, middle-out
by Bruce Robertson | July 10, 2009 | 22 Comments
Found this post while lurking a #EA twitter search: ARCHITECTS ARE GOING GREEN (Cute pic, btw.) Are architects going green? IT is trying, but I don’t really hear many EA clients I talk to bringing this up. There are certainly things to do, and green can mean lower cost as well as sustainable. So, why no [...]
Category: EA Tags: EA
by Bruce Robertson | July 9, 2009 | 21 Comments
Yet again, my colleage Lydia Leong has mentioned something that reminded me of something in EA. In her “A hodgepodge of links” blog entry, she mentioned enjoying Malcolm Gladwell’s “Priced to Sell: Is free the future?” retort in the New Yorker to Chris Anderson’s thesis in his book Free — that information will be free. [...]
Category: EA Tags: EA
by Bruce Robertson | July 3, 2009 | 20 Comments
To quote from my Gartner colleague Lydia Leong’s recent post on cloud computing: “Capacity planning equals budget planning, so it’s rarely an, “eh, because we can scale quickly, it doesn’t matter.” I read this three times before it sunk in. Capacity = budget? Yes! We’ve often in our Gartner EA practice discussed that EA should [...]
Category: EA IT Governance Strategic Planning Tags: cloud computing, EA
by Bruce Robertson | July 2, 2009 | 7 Comments
Defining EA as a set of services are a new way to describe what EA does and what the outcome or result or deliverable of EA activity will be. Using the service term certainly gets a useful clarifying discussion going about who the consumer and provider are, and what is provided by the provider to [...]
Category: EA Tags: "EA Services"
by Bruce Robertson | May 8, 2009 | 19 Comments
Lately, news in my feed reader (Google), people/entities I follow on Twitter (Twitterfon), and even good old paper newspapers (NY Times, Washington Post) seem to be doing more with trends. You can get trends on Twitter search terms (http://www.twitscoop.com/), trends on searches on Google (http://www.google.com/trends), even trends on American Idol futures. Gartner’s own web site [...]
Category: EA Strategic Planning Tags: EA, metrics, value
by Bruce Robertson | April 29, 2009 | 2 Comments
While Google’s App Engine is basically free for users (up to quota limits), it has significant constraints in development languages supported (Python and soon Java) and indeed requires writing code. Amazon Web Services do not require specific languages and can even run existing applications (there are limitations of course). But, you have to pay. Until [...]
Category: EA Tags: Amazon, cloud computing
by Bruce Robertson | April 24, 2009 | 594 Comments
One goal, but I hope never the only goal, of Enterprise Architecture (EA) is to help understand and manage and indeed improve the value of IT spend. Many techniques are employed, including tying EA strategic requirements to project portfolio decision making, planning lower cost alternatives, and many others. However, one technique that is now [...]
Category: EA Tags: EA, EA, EA Example, FEA, Federal Enterprise Architecture, OMB-300, VUE-IT
by Bruce Robertson | April 21, 2009 | 19 Comments
I’m now blogging on the Gartner Blog Network (GBN). Everyone else blogging at Gartner is here too. To get started, I suppose it’s good to set a few goals for my efforts. Among the things I’d really like to do are these: Link to interesting EA content available online — to help those who don’t [...]
Category: EA Fun Tags: EA, EA