Data as a Utility

12Apr07

GigaOM has an interesting article about the impact of web 2.0 on network engineers. Namely, that the maturation of the internet has made the skills of a good network person a lot less important:

I see the current state of the Internet as the ultimate success … You can deploy a wildly successful Web 2.0 application that serves millions of users and never know how a router, switch or load-balancer works. Even network security and firewalls that were making headline news not more than a few years ago are considered perfunctory. The success of these networking devices and technologies has enabled them to become part of the technology landscape that exists for all to use as they see fit, similar to the microprocessor or electricity.

It is always odd to see the once-glamorous jobs of your youth thrown onto the scrap heap of history (think about the differences in perception between the masons of the middle ages and your local bricklayer). Network Engineers were once the masters of a difficult and arcane field, literally bringing information from chaos. Now, the wizards have been trapped in tiny control panels for now, until they can be embedded in silicon for all time.

This has really got me to thinking about my own field, and its future. What specialties are going to dissapear if data becomes as reliable as electricity? For one thing, I think we would see ETL and Business Analysis become a single career path that is much more abstract and tools-based. With the advent of good BPM, I could see a lot of the scheduling and other mechanics pushed off towards the DBA’s and Systems Administrators. Also, I think that a lot of the hardware could be appliance based, or outsourced completely. Of course, this leaves a great opportunity for open source BI and for nimble players to attack the market and take advantage of the innovators dilemma.

A brave (an infinitely more useful) new world!



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