Free Newsletters
Technology & Business Daily

InfoWorld
Log-in | Register
CTO CONNECTION  

The battle for decentralization

The Internet revolution represents only one front in the push toward decentralization, but will IT continue to resist?

By Chad Dickerson  
May 02, 2003
 

Remember the opposition of traditional IT departments when the Internet pushed its way into corporate America ? Technology visionaries foresaw an interconnectedness of people, software components, and information that would ultimately transform business and culture in as-yet-unimagined ways.

Free IT resource

TechNet: More ways to know it, share it, and keep it running.

Sponsored by Microsoft

Free IT resource

Attend the SOA Executive Forum: Breaking SOA Bottlenecks SOAExecForum.com/may2007

Sponsored by InfoWorld

But IT naysayers grumbled in their cubicles, complaining about all the impending security threats they would have to fend off, and hoping that the Internet would just go away so they could go back to defending the LAN. These folks tried to suppress an impending Internet revolution, but the demands of end-users, driven by the utility of simple tools such as e-mail, won the fight. Laggard IT departments were ultimately forced to get with the Internet program.

The emergence of the browser-enabled Internet in the enterprise signaled an early, clear triumphs of the end-users breaking free from the fetters of IT. Access to important information was no longer limited to those who knew SQL, or those who could run FoxPro on Windows, or those who could work the command line. The obscure commands scribbled on Post-It Notes affixed to monitors in offices everywhere were replaced with two simple words: Click here.

Unfortunately, the lessons provided by the failure to stifle the Internet have not been learned by many IT leaders. Yes, the Internet has been broadly accepted in IT. Anyone in IT who didn't finally get the value of the Internet during the past five years would be lucky to now be working the closing shift at the cash register at your local CompUSA. But the core IT revolution, of which the Internet represents just one front, is decentralization -- a shift that still goes unrecognized in many IT environments.

The days of the paternalistic top-down IT department are nearly gone. My message to chief technologists everywhere: Your users have left the nest; the best thing you can do is hope they make the right choices and occasionally call you for advice.

For now, you can try to keep your employees on a cluster of centrally managed Lotus Notes servers for "collaboration," but once they take 10 minutes to download and install Groove Workspace, they will ultimately self-organize within "shared spaces" that require no server -- and your role as collaboration traffic cop will quickly become irrelevant. You can forbid IM within your company, but savvy users will figure out how to tunnel IM through open ports in your firewall and bypass any tiresome finger-wagging by IT guards on security watch. You can make open-source software off limits to your own developers, but they will likely build much-needed apps leveraging the distributed development model of MySQL while you're yawning through the inevitable Gartner "magic quadrant" slide a half-hour into a proprietary database vendor's presentation. Didn't the rise of Linux teach everyone a lesson?

Furthermore, if you've taken a wait-and-see attitude toward Web services, Wi-Fi, distributed software development models, and peer-to-peer technologies, you're not just ignoring budding technologies -- you're resisting an inexorable force that should be leveraged, not feared. Decentralization is the proverbial forest, and technologies such as these are just some of the trees. Individually, you might able to dismiss them, but missing the broader context of decentralization could be a career-limiting mistake. In the end, those chief technologists who work to connect the distributed dots will survive in the enterprise. But I'm not so sure about those who continue to resist it.





 


 
Chad Dickerson is CTO of InfoWorld.

  More of Chad Dickerson's column
  Chad Dickerson's Weblog

Newsletter Get Chad's column delivered weekly.
Enter e-mail address:




 

TOP NEWS:


»  You don't know tech: The InfoWorld news quiz
Match your weekly tech news wits against our snarky quiz master

»  Antitrust review of Google-Yahoo deal no surprise
While serious antitrust problems are unlikely, both Google and Yahoo expected their partnership to be subjected to instense DOJ scrutiny

»  Top 10: Coreflood, more Microsoft-Yahoo, iPhone plans
This week's wrapup of the top tech news stories includes more Microsoft-Yahoo rumors, iPhone updates, Flash searches, Oracle's BEA roadmap, and more

»  Four 'important' Microsoft patches due Tuesday
Not rated "critical," fixes apply to "Elevation of Privileges" and "spoofing" bugs for Windows, Exchange, and SQL

»  Judge grants RIM a stay in Visto patent trial
Trial delayed from beginning next week while patent office studies validity of certain parts of e-mail provider Visto's patents as requested by RIM

»  Developers satisfied with Apple's enterprise work
Mac developers feel that Apple shouldn't try to make a broad attempt to win over enterprises and should instead focus on certain areas within the enterprise




Remote Access: Maintain Security and Decrease the Burden on IT
Join this interactive webcast to discover how IT Managers can control access rights, end-user security settings and end-point authorization. Sponsor: Citrix(R) GoToMyPC(R) Corporate

»  Click here to view this Webcast
  Zombie PCs Are Attacking Your LAN
A recent study showed that malware-infected zombie PCs are now a bigger threat to ISPs and Web infrastructure than DoS attacks. As this brand new IT Strategy Guide explains, an increased use of peer-to-peer techniques by the attackers has made it harder to fight back. Download now, compliments of Verio:

»  Click here to download now

- Special Advertising Partners -
WHITE PAPERS
 

» Technology White Papers Library

Technology White Papers by Topic

Technology White Papers E-mail Alert

Find out when the latest white paper is available:
 
 
INFOWORLD MARKETPLACE
 
» BUY A LINK NOW
 

FIND PRODUCTS AND COMPANIES
» COMPLETE PRODUCT GUIDE



TECHNOLOGY INDEX
• Applications
• Application Development
• Security
• Networking
• Wireless
• Platforms
• Hardware
• Data Management
• Storage
• Web Services
• Business
• Telecom
• Professional Services
• Standards

TECH WATCH 


What's the 411 on GOOG-411?
Just as Google has become synonymous with "performing a Web search," 411 is understood to mean "information" -- as in "what's the 411?" I was thus surprised to discover, from a billboard, no less, that the king of search is taking on the ...

Apple HTML source reveals 'iPhone Extreme'
"This one's a stretch..." reports AppleInsider. Um, yeah. Reporting on HTML code sightings of product names could be called a stretch, but iPhone Extreme has a ring to it. Now, that sounds like the product Apple should have released first, rather ...

COLUMNISTS

Unified under law
Ephraim Schwartz's Column and Blog (InfoWorld) - In the litigious world we live in, deploying a unified communications platform in your enterprise could...
» MORE COLUMNISTS

MORE INFOWORLD BLOGS


Open Sources 
Product Management
When I joined MySQL four years ago, there was quite a lot of debate about product management. We didn't actually have ...

Zero Day 
Botnet herders tending smaller flocks
New research backs up the theory that botnet operators are keeping their networks smaller in a continued effort to keep ...



• Advice Line
• Database Underground
• The Deep End
• Enterprise Mac
• Geeks in Paradise
• Grid Meter
• The Gripe Line
• InfoWorld Daily
• Inside IT
• IT Troubleshooter
• ITXtreme
• Open Sources
• ProdBlog
• Real World SOA
• Reality Check
• Security Adviser
• SMB IT
• The Storage Network
• Tech Watch
• Virtualization Report
• Zero Day

ADVERTISEMENT


RESOURCE CENTERadvertisement 

GOVERNMENT IT & POLICY
'If you don't go after the network, you're never going to stop these guys. Never.'
From the State Department, All the News for Inquiring Minds
TechPresident, the Internet Citizenry's New Consensus Taker



Sponsored Technology Links

 
 
 HOME  NEWS  BLOGS  PODCASTS  VIDEOS  TECHNOLOGIES  TEST CENTER  EVENTS  CAREERS   About | Advertise | Awards | RSS | Contact Us 

Copyright © 2008, Reprints, Permissions, Licensing, IDG Network, Privacy Policy, Terms of Service.
All Rights reserved. InfoWorld is a leading publisher of technology information and product reviews on topics including viruses,
phishing, worms, firewalls, security, servers, storage, networking, wireless, databases, and web services.

CIO :: ComputerWorld :: CSO :: Demo :: GamePro :: Games.net :: IDG Connect :: IDG World Expo
Industry Standard :: IT World :: JavaWorld :: LinuxWorld :: MacUser :: Macworld :: Network World :: PC World :: Playlist