Management Speak: We are not interested in helping the users here. We are only interested in clearing the help desk queue.
IS Survivalist Howard Wexler and I agree that no translation will do justice to this sentiment.
Year: 1998
Integrated IS Plan #10: Platform layer integration (first appeared in InfoWorld)
Years ago, I used to tell a joke with no punch line. It went, “How many vendors does it take to print a memo?”
For us, at the time, the answer was 10: (1) IBM – PC; (2) Microsoft – DOS; (3) Automenu – DOS menuing front end; (4) WordPerfect – word processor; (5) Synoptics – Ethernet hubs; (6) Anixter – Ethernet cable; (7) Novell – NOS; (8) Compaq – file server hardware; (9) Hewlett-Packard – laser printer; and (10) Pacific Data – font cartridge.
“Imagine,” I was fond of saying, “how many vendors we’d need to do something complicated.”
Understanding what computing functions are involved in addressing common end-user tasks, and what products deliver those functions, is an important goal in managing technical architecture.
This is our 10th article on creating an integrated IS plan and the sixth on technical architecture. We’ll be done soon. I promise. We do have a few more topics to cover, though, and managing your technical architecture well is awfully important.
As last we left our heroes, they had just finished mapping platform-layer products to computing functions, scoring each product in terms of how well it serves its purpose and also looking for redundancies and incompatibilities. Let’s see what they’re up to now … .
Our product/function grid doesn’t address integration and design; that is, it doesn’t ensure that anything actually works.
To do that, some drawings will help.
The first drawing is a physical connectivity map of your enterprise. It shows, not every device on your network, but every class of device that connects through your network.
Your goal in creating this drawing is ensuring that electrons can flow between any two devices that need to communicate, so next to each connection, list the types of service or session available through it. For example, you may have a mainframe connection that only supports 3278 terminal sessions (LU6.2 sessions, to be precise) through the network.
That’s important to know, because that means your connectivity will have to change when you start using the mainframe as an application server. If your mainframe connection supported TCP/IP communication and T3270 sessions, on the other hand, it would work just fine for the new requirement while still supporting the old one.
The second drawing, really a set of drawings, is a client-centric view of your platform environment. Create a drawing for every device that hosts at least one client process or acts as an end-user workstation. Put that device in the center of the drawing and around the periphery depict the resources – server processes – that device must access.
Then, for each resource, list the client process needed to reach it, where that client process runs, and what protocols and connectivity are required to achieve the connection.
(Remember that “clients” are software processes. Although many clients run on desktop computers, that doesn’t make desktop computers clients, and client processes often run on server hardware. A commonplace example: When you fill out an HTML-based form on your browser, the browser isn’t the client. The client process runs on the Web server, perhaps in the form of a Perl script. That client process interacts with a host computer in the background, formats the results, and sends them back to your browser.)
Your goal in creating this second set of drawings is to look for opportunities to simplify. The more commonality between different connections, the simpler and easier it is to manage your architecture.
Don’t, however, fall into the trap of equating “simpler architecture” with “that’s what we need to do.” When simplifying your architecture reduces the level of functionality you provide, be careful.
It may, for example, seem attractive to use a browser as a universal terminal and Web servers as universal clients. It may to you, but browsers make for second-rate interfaces when compared to a full-featured GUI.
As with the rest of the process of managing architecture, keep the purpose in mind at all times, and that’s making sure you know how to connect resources to the processes that need them. Don’t get lost in the technique, because if you do, you’re just painting by numbers.