Not turning left and the mythical computer-month

Posted by wendyg in Uncategorized at March 26th, 2007

Lunchtime conversation: UPS has decided its drivers are not going to turn left any more. (Apparently they haven’t backed up - reversed - for years.) Saving money through geographical planning. GPS systems don’t know about the amount of time a left turn takes compared to a right one (reverse as needed for UK).

This segued into a conversation about business models and how people decide what to charge for. For example, said one guy, take all those sites that give you, say, 10 wiki pages free but charge for an account that gives you up to 100 wiki pages. Well, wiki pages are text, and they don’t take up much space or bandwidth, so what’s being charged for isn’t actually resource-expensive. Why not find things users really want that *do* cost something to provide? (Which also then prevents, say, Google from coming along and stomping all over you like Bambi Meets Godzilla and promising everybody 1,000 free wiki pages just to scoop up all the traffic.)

Same guy also made the point that often there are hidden costs we don’t register. For example: processing power is cheap. Cheap does not equal easy. “So’s walking, but it still takes a long time.” You add cheap processors - and also expensive communications and integration problems. Plenty of obvious gotchas here for government computing.

wg

There are no comments yet.

Leave a Reply

Contributors to the Blindside wiki and blog should note their input forms part of a collaborative resource that is Creative Commons (by-sa 2.5) licensed. We hope these resources will be reused and remixed in the public interest. You do not need to seek permission before you re-use our works, although we do require that users attribute Blindside as their source, and license the resulting work under the same terms.