Weblog of Mark Vaughn, and IT professional and vExpert specializing in Enterprise Architecture, virtualization, web architecture and general technology evangelism

Month: January 2010

Be Good On Purpose

You do a little online research, pick a mature technology that is well established, perform a quick install and everything just works. The sun is shining, deadlines are met, birds are singing and you are a hero. That scenario is not a stretch, it happens every day. Many tools have dedicated significant effort to making their installation “idiot proof”, but what happens next?

As your environment grows, cracks begin to emerge in the foundation of your new tool. They may start small, but they grow and spread. Where did these cracks come from, where will they appear next, what damage can they cause? At every step of the installation, you accepted the default settings and moved on. Each of those options were forks in the road and you took a direction, without knowing the options available and without knowing why. Now, you do not know where you are, how you got there or how to correct course.

Maybe you did everything right, but did you do it on purpose? If you do not know why your deployment was successful, if you did not develop and enact a careful plan to result in a solid environment…then you got lucky, at best. The initial results may look the same, but the long term results and the value provided will be miles apart.

Too often in IT, I meet people willing to simply get a task done and move on, literally leaving a mine field in their wake. It would be better to fail following a plan than to succeed without one. When you follow a plan, you can retrace your steps, correct course and move forward. When you have blind success, you create a false sense of security that can cripple an organization when things finally go “bump” in the middle of the night. Trust me…eventually, everything goes “bump”.

Be good, be bad, be deliberate or be careless, just do it on purpose.

Who Buys Zimbra…Who’s Next?

After a week of new year’s buzz, the rumors were confirmed by VMware’s CTO  Steve Herrod. When he tweeted a link to his blog entry at http://blogs.vmware.com/console/2010/01/vmware-to-acquire-zimbra.html, Steve Herrod not only set off a retweet storm, he also unleashed a storm of speculation that had been brewing for days.

I actually think that this  is a good strategic move for VMware. I liked it when I first began hearing rumors last week, and I have grown to like it more as I have continued to think about it.

I do not see this as a challenge to Exchange, at least not in principal. I see the Zimbra purchase as adding value to the cloud, and a perfect example of an application that thrives in a cloud environment. As email delivery has become somewhat of a commodity, the barrier of entry for an email tool wanting to compete with Exchange has been lowered dramatically. An email infrastructure that leverages the flexibility and ease of use of a virtual application will be very interesting to many organizations.  It not only carries its own value, but it also adds value to the infrastructure that hosts it.

As I continue to contemplate the upside of adding Zimbra to the cloud catalog, I begin to think of who may be next. Drupal? Joomla? Maybe some other portal or collaboration tool? Not to compete with SharePoint, though it will be seen that way, but simply to add value. It looks to be a very interesting 2010.

Welcome to my blog

After gaining so much value from blog sites, I have finally created my own blog to try and give some back. I will be posting entries on leadership, technology (especially virtualization) and many other topics.

Thank you for stopping by, and look for several new articles to be posted soon.