A post by Jerry Fishenden has pointed me to the blog of the UK Government's Chief Technology Officer, Liam Maxwell, in which he describes the latest stage in the government's rebalancing or reform of its IT. They have taken a significant shift away from incompatible vendor-dominated services, instead adopting cloud-based infrastructure, shared back-office services, common platforms, and open standards. They intend to allow small, nimble vendors to fill particular niches, in a culture that is open to change. This is a massive change and very welcome.
In this latest iteration, they have released a set of guidance documents for CTO's. This is worth reading - I particularly like the section on technology architecture.
Also this week, Chris Sexton of Sheffield Uni blogged about the Eduserv conference, which had an opening keynote about the same topic.
It occurs to me that these documents are also useful for CTOs to share with their non-technical colleagues, to help explain the ideas and to show that they are now mainstream.
In this latest iteration, they have released a set of guidance documents for CTO's. This is worth reading - I particularly like the section on technology architecture.
Also this week, Chris Sexton of Sheffield Uni blogged about the Eduserv conference, which had an opening keynote about the same topic.
It occurs to me that these documents are also useful for CTOs to share with their non-technical colleagues, to help explain the ideas and to show that they are now mainstream.
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