Category: PKF Avant Edge (Page 18 of 18)

Convergence of the entire world with Tech

Convergence.

We’ve been talking about it for years and years. When I first started out as a young, hippie programmer who had long hair and bad breath, toiling in the underworld of Siemens, working out their WAP (Wireless Application Protocol) projects, I first came across the word convergence. There I was, fresh out of high school, on a salary that was so small that I wasn’t even in the tax bracket and they paid me monthly by cheque, where after everything paid for (my small car, and food), I had about Rm100 to spend on fun each month – the word convergence was thrown around like burgers in a high school food fight.

Of course, we all knew what happened to WAP. It evaporated. But it’s still the grandfather of much of the technologies we take for granted today. EDGE, 3G, 4G etc all got their start from the wonderful WAP speed of 14.4kpbs, much like how today’s gigaspeed lines stemmed from the noisy Motorola Modem running 14.4 on the internet when I first came to know of it.

Convergence is basically the coming together of different technologies. Telephony, voice, data, video etc. These are basically all converged now in our smart phones. Smart TV that can browse the internet and videoconference your friends. Phones that let you operate your gate and send a message to your video recorder to record the Liverpool match. Computers that double up as a coffee-holder…which has been there since the beginning of time.

And now, we see another range of convergence with Tech. The entertainment world. The recent news of Will.I.Am, the front man of Black Eyed Peas (remember, their hit, Where is the Love?) who is now Intel’s Director of Innovation, gives credence to the movement that we’ve known all along: Technology will blanket entire industries, including the entertainment and music world.

Many of course are bewildered.

According to Intel:

In his unique role, will.i.am will collaborate with Intel on many creative and technology endeavors across the “compute continuum” that may include such devices as laptops, smart phones and tablets. Complimenting his visionary role as the front man for The Black Eyed Peas, will.i.am is also already working on music expressly for Intel.”

The bewilderment stems from the fact that Intel makes chips. Not potato chips. As in computer chips. If he fronted a consumer product, it would make sense. But a chip? What are they going to do, have a “Will.I.Am Inside” Logo?

Intel knows their number is on the board. If they keep doing what they do, they will go down the path of Lucent, TI and some of the other big boys that became, not so big. Intel makes chips, but their recent foray into mobile computing with their ultrabooks wasn’t a smash hit, and possibly why they had to let their CEO go. But it makes sense. For Intel’s survival, they will need to move up the food chain and start controlling more of the hardware/software line, and possibly even come out with their own brand of consumer products. That, or start shoring up battle with guys like ARM, Qualcomm and mobile chip players. It will likely be the former, and that’s where a guy like Will.I.Am plays the role. He will be like a vehicle to transport Intel from chip giant to snazzy new tech company.

Now, time for me to get a “Will.I.Am Inside” Ultrabook!

The Trouble With Convenience

It’s probably not the best time to be working in a bank.

Especially if you’re in Europe of US.

Number 1, the global layoffs occuring, with HSBC announcing 30,000 job cuts in 2013. 30,000. That’s roughly 10% of its workforce. This is mainly due to operations streamlining and of course, cost cutting. Which actually doesn’t mean bad news to our region, since we’re considered as the backend of the world, and possibly, one analysts’ pay in US is equivalent to our CIO’s take home income. That’s just a wild, ignorant and completely ungrounded guess.

Number 2, more than ever, banks will be targeted by hackers, crackers and everything in between. Of course, with internet banking on the rise, and the fact that passwords are absolutely worthless these days, it only takes a very focused and somewhat skilled individual to exploit money away from other people. Even if they don’t they can still cause mischief by laying down DOS (Denial of Service) attacks on the target. We can’t really avoid it, using internet banking. That’s the trouble with convenience. It gets exploited.

Again, HSBC, which seem to have fallen from one of the world’s best and most beloved bank to one that is constantly being targeted by various groups. In October, the first wave of DOS hit them, and took out their UK site and many others. On November 4th, the similar attacks took out the UK site again, and reported, “As of yet, HSBC doesn’t know what’s causing the failure, though the spokesperson said it was likely to be something affecting the “servers or mainframe”.”

Hacktivists have taken credit for HSBC downtime, but whoever it was, it was certainly disruptive to the business.

Could the bank have done anything to avoid this?

They probably could have made it harder. But DDOS is one of the most annoying thing ever invented for an operational guy. And I would know it. I ran the global DHL network and DDOS was on our menu. Everyday.

One of the ways we did for our global website was running it on Akamai service, which alleviated the risk somewhat. But then, even Akamai gets hit so I suppose no one is safe. Until someone claims he/she has full proof solution, I guess it’s something we all have to live by.

Just make sure you have a backup and IT continuity plan ready.

PKF AvantEdge First Post

It’s always a little difficult to decide on how the first post should be created. Do we immediately go into what we do as a company? Do we state our vision, mission and all that corporate talk? Do we jump into what our industry is currently facing, at this moment, I am looking at the theft of secured information in NASA. How on earth does someone in NASA loses his laptop and not have whole disk encryption?

I think there will be plenty of time for that later.

Instead this first post simply states the philosophy of PKF Avant Edge. Not as an IT consulting company. Not as a professional service group. Not as a project management company. But simply, as an entity.

I have had more than 10 years of experience in the corporate world before I decided to set up the company. 10 years in 3 companies: Siemens, DHL Asia-Pacific Information Services and BlueCoat Systems. 2 German companies. 1 American. Along the way, I’ve met with people who had shaped me somewhat into what I am, people who had imparted their own brand of management, philosophies, methods, giving me waysigns to follow, and showing me characteristics I should avoid.

When PKF AvantEdge started, it had a simple goal. Make positive history. It doesn’t matter how. I wasn’t interested to be recycled into the myriads of System Integration businesses out there. We’ve dealt with principals, resellers all our lives, and we were following a well beaten path. This time, we needed to create our own history. Become a company that people want to be a part of. Create a culture of creativity. Create an environment of constant change. Find the patterns of tomorrow and pursue it today.

The last part proves the toughest. Wayne Gretzky, commonly known as the greatest ice-hockey player in history, says, “I skate to where the puck is going to be, not where it has been.” Through 2 and half years, that quote epitomizes our company. We envisioned a technology landscape that is so integrated to the major portions of the business that regulatory compliance is unavoidable. We saw the advent of hacktivist groups like Anonymous when we started, and pitched for companies to strengthen their technical resolves. We see a movement to information plundering using social networks and medias, trawling literally across the vast ocean of data to steal identity  and information assets.

The future of our business landscape will be defined by corporate earthquakes like Knight Capital, which saw a $440 million trading loss caused by a software glitch, and their shares free-falling 80% in two days. Or Adobe losing 150,000 user accounts based on SQL injection. Or take-your-pick ERP implementation disasters that run into the millions with no results at the end.

While I’m not saying that we are market leaders in tech consulting currently (by any stretch of imagination), I believe this is where the puck is going. Regulatory controls, more stringent requirements, certified and accredited qualifications of practitioners. It will look more like the banking landscape in a few years time.

Now, we can move on and discuss about how those geniuses at NASA can fail to encrypt their laptops….

Newer posts »

© 2025 PKF AvantEdge

Up ↑