Category Archives: Uncategorized

Reading the Landscape

Sometimes, it’s useful to pause for a moment and look around to scan the environment. Of course, we help our clients do that all the time, because it’s a key part of the design process. But it’s not so often that we do it for ourselves.

When our developers got started in this business, the landscape consisted of a handful of big companies providing services on mainframes and a few types of microcomputer. Then the desktop computer revolution arrived, and things exploded. Some big companies failed or broke up (hello, Ma Bell and Unisys), and many smaller players came into the space.

When the Internet revolution happened a decade or so later, the process repeated. Today, with the ubiquity of the technology and the near-universal need for companies and brands to leverage web, mobile, and social technologies, demand is high. And so are the suppliers.

We recently conducted a more in-depth look at who (besides us) is providing quality services out there — and who, ahem, was providing less-good services, shall we say. The results were not too surprising, but remarkable nonetheless.

While there is still a coterie of small providers and one-person shops, the largest segment of the community is more the medium-sized agency (like Square Lines, really), combining anywhere from a few to a couple of dozen professionals in the company. At the larger end, there are relatively few companies of great size.

Given the lessons of history, it will be interesting to see what happens to this group. If (or, more likely, when) we come across the next disruptive technology, it seems likely that some of the bigger players (and perhaps a fair amount of the medium-sized ones) will be in trouble.

This is why keeping up with emerging technologies is such a big part of what we do, and why it is a big part of what other successful firms do as well. As the paths of the past tell us, those who don’t are destined to fail.

Whiz Kids promo photo

Retro Tech: Whiz Kids

From time to time here, we like to go into the wayback machine and look at some our formative tech influences from early in our development. Well, this week, it’s a pop culture tech entry: the TV show Whiz Kids.

Never heard of it? It ran only for one season. And it featured plotlines like trying to defeat Russians who break into US databases and steal the data — or, in another episode, cybercrimes like online theft. Ripped from the headlines, no?

Except this show ran from 1983 until 1984! Talk about ahead of it’s time…

Of course, there, we lose the realism a bit. Sure, the technology that was employed in the show was pretty true to what was current in that time, and some of the storylines were prophetic. But the overarching plot was about some precocious young hackers who ended up saving the day each week. Which made it pretty unrealistic, but made it a must-watch for this young hacker at the time. That could have been me!

It turns out I’m not alone, either. Not only was it pretty popular among the hacker/geek contingent in the US, but it went over to Europe (in France, it was called Les Petits GĂ©nies) and was big among the same group there. According to one French blogger, there are IT professionals across Europe who attribute their interest to watching this show!

Lamentably, in 1983, even though WarGames (a seminal tech movie, and Matthew Broderick’s film debut) was the movie of the summer, the potential audience for Whiz Kids wasn’t big enough for it to last. So after only one season, it went away. (And one of the female leads went on to be on ALF. Talk about adding insult to injury!)

But it still holds a special place in the heart of many, including me.