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This blog consists of my (Matt Ballantine's) views and opinions, and doesn't necessarily represent the views of employers past or present.
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Metaphorical Management of IT by Matt Ballantine is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 UK: England & Wales License.
View Article  The noughties
It's the end of the decade in a year and a bit, but as we all seem happier dealing with the patterns numbers make rather than mathematical precision, here are a few of my thoughts about the ten years that have just passed (the decade with the slightly embarassing name)...

The decade when the internet became ubiquitous (if you are rich)

In 2000, broadband was reasonably available, not particularly broad (half a meg) and from memory about thirty pounds a month. Ten years later and I'm paying a fifth of the money for 16 times the bandwidth. But that is hardly Moore's Law rates of capacity improvement.

In the UK we are held back by a nineteenth century infrastructure (copper), the mess that was the implementation of cable tv in the 80s and 90s, and our peculiar attachment to individual dwellings. Proper ethernet is easy to run into apartment blocks, but an expensive and time consuming exercise to houses.

However, and this is the thing that we all need to remember (especially anyone who works in digital media)... only around 2/3 of households in the UK have internet access. And the UK, despite the best efforts of Fred Goodwin and co., is still one of the richest economies in the world.

The decade when we went mobile...

The solution to some of those issues about ubiquity of access might be answered by the explosion of mobile phone usage in the past ten years. The average Brit at the beginning of the year had 37 mobile phones in their sock drawer until the likes of Mazuma Mobile started advertising heavily.

The mobile phone is increasingly a portal onto the web. Apple changed the rules with the iPhone, and the rest of the industry is now starting to catch up. Looking ahead it's going to be fascinating to see how much mobile devices are going to evolve in the next ten years.

The decade the music industry changed

Apple, again... The iPod, and more importantly, iTunes, made a dramatic change in the nature of the music business.

An ex-music industry exec sat me down at the beginning of the decade and explained the then industry to me. Record companies worked as investment capital providers. Signing a band they would make and investment, essentially a punt on the future success of the artist. For every Elton John, Michael Jackson or Cheryl Cole, there are dozens of Brilliant Corners or Jazz Butchers who never really make any money for the labels. However, the music industry had come up with a genius wheeze... The various artists compilation; or, the flogging of cheap old stuff at a premium.

When the internet (and specifically, MP3) came along, the record industry was caught on the back foot. Unable to decide whether it was merely a piracy platform, or just another new channel to market (like CD, cassette, eight track and vinyl before it), Apple was able to produce desirable consumer electronics products allied to a powerful distribution engine and, in a matter of a few years, take over a substantial piece of the market.

The future, however, could lie elsewhere. As I write this I am listening to yet another album on Spotify mobile...

The decade we got all social (2.0)

Music was also influential in the explosion of social networking that happened in the latter half of the decade. MySpace was one of the first big names of Web 2.0.

There's a lot of competition in the social networking arena, and huge volumes of bullshit as well. My single biggest area of concern is that an industry (software, IT etc) so stereotypically populated by people with such low social and interpersonal skills defining how we should all communicate with each other is deeply scary. Just look at how 'successful' email has been...

The decade we didn't upgrade Windows

There's an ongoing debate at work about how the Apple Mac OS look and feel is so much better than that of Windows. The thing is, it's not really a fair comparison. Whilst most of the Macs in the firm are running an operating system launched about a year ago, because of Apple's forced upgrade paths that come from having OS & Hardware so tightly coupled, our PCs are running a near-nine-year-old OS, Windows XP. Comparing that against OS 9 might be fairer.

The noughties were remarkable in that so few businesses moved their core operating systems for PCs beyond XP. Windows 7 looks like a good product, but people are so unused to doing major OS upgrades these days, it will be interesting to see how many people make the switch soon.

The decade the clouds appeared...

Something I've spoken about at length in these pages, the decade has seen the commercial blossoming of the concepts of cloud computing, software as a service, and utility computing.

The teens (jeez- another embarassingly-named decade to get through) will see cloud take over, and that's something that I'm staking my career on as in the spring of 2010 my company will be Going Google.

So there you go. My threepence-worth of idle tittle-tattle....
View Article  A brief political interlude:



I received a letter from David Cameron yesterday. In it, he told me that it was very important that the Conservative Party won my constituency for them to form the next government.

I'm lucky enough to live in Richmond, in south-west London. Other than being on the flightpath to Heathrow, it's a fairly idyllic place to live. Our prospective parliamentary candidate, however, is Zac Goldsmith.

I've become pretty much apolitical these days. But there are a few things that get me cross, and just about top of the list are lecturing politicians who are looking for the right to decide how to spend this country's tax income, but actually have never had to do a day's work in their lives and then have the temerity to set up a complex off-shore tax arrangement which means that they can avoid paying just about any tax on the money that daddy gave them. By "them", I of course am referring to Zac Goldsmith, born and schooled in Richmond, domiciled in the Caymen Islands.

Included in the letter that David Cameron sent was a (hilariously biased) questionnaire that I could return giving my views on what was important to me. I'm sure you can imagine what I told David and Zac. There's a freepost address if you'd like to let them know too. Maybe you have similar views to me on grand-scale tax avoidance schemes. Maybe you don't, and just want to give Zac your support. Either way, you can write to them both at:

Zac Goldsmith
Richmond Park & North Kingston Conservative Association
Freepost RC49
372 Upper Richmond Road West
East Sheen
London SW14 7BR

Just make sure that you do it on something nice and heavy, like a brick. Maybe with enough bricks he can build himself a house in the UK from where he can start paying some tax. And the Freepost charges might help to save the Post Office to boot...
View Article  Spam 2.0


After many years of being reasonably smug about how little email spam I receive (which I put down to having a relatively uncommon name and, over the years, being relatively careful about where I use my email address online), I have found in recent months a big increase.

That escalation has been due to my increasing use of social networking services. The spam takes two forms... friendly young ladies who want to be my friend on Twitter, and then regular infringements of friends' and acquaintances' Facebook, Twitter or Linked In accounts to allow me to find out about (usually) another haphazard get-rich-quick scheme.

As my friend Sharron in Canada put it yesterday after her account had somehow been hacked, this is a right "pain in the arse".

Password-based security has a stack of challenges, API's that allow for entire clients to be built up (do you know where the passwords you enter into your Twitter client really end up?) also, and the possibility that security had not necessarily scaled with the explosion of some Web 2.0 services are all probably partly to blame. However, like water seeping through a leaky ceiling, the inexorable drive for some to make money through slightly dodgy means will always eventually force open the cracks in what are otherwise seen as secure services.

At the root of that? Well, sadly, some of us are just plain greedy. And the rest slightly gullible.