Social Networks are top spots for cyber threads in 2010.

January 3rd, 2010
Incredible growth of Social Networks in 2009 has irreversibly changed the Internet landscape. Social networks, micro-blogging and sharing services have opened new communication horizons allowing users to share any type of information, participate in common projects, play games and do many other things in real time being anywhere in the world. Such popularity and growth have created a whole new industries specializing on creating specific applications and services for social networks. Designed to improve and diversify social interaction online yet social networks represent an ideal vector for cybercriminals. The explosion of various applications on services such as facebook along with rise of URL shortening services such as bit.ly and tinyurl.com will help hackers to take advantage of trustfulness of social networks.

According to Web security firm McAfee Labs social networks will face increasingly sophisticated hacker attacks in 2010. McAfee said hackers were expected to try to take advantage of the proliferation of URL shortening services. "These services now appear in all sorts of communications -- making it easier than ever to mask the URLs that users are asked to click," it said. "This trick will play a more predominant role in 2010; it's the perfect avenue to direct users to websites that they would normally be wary about visiting.

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Browsersize – new tool from Google

December 17th, 2009
A new handy tool invented in Google Labs. The tool allows to see what portion of the site users can see without scrolling. Check browsersize

Let’s leave our digital world for 4:33 minutes and immerse ourselves in pure meditation

December 8th, 2009


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Google apologized over racist image of Michele Obama, but refused to remove it. Should search engines take control over offensive search results?

November 25th, 2009
The story with the picture appearing at the top of the list in Google search results for Mrs. Obama query has gained a rather controversial tone lately. As a result Google placed a text ad above the image with title "Offensive search results", however web giant denied to remove the image from search results completely saying that its apologizes someone has an upsetting experience using Google, but the search engine does not remove images simply because of unpopular content or complaints."Google views the integrity of our search results as an extremely important priority" it says.

However, the web giant says it will take down certain images, if required by law to do so. Such cases already took a place in countries like China, where Google conform to moral and cultural principles set by the government of Republic of China.

Is there a need to introduce some kind of regulation for search results? And who should regulate it, search engines or competent authorities?


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Finally, Linkedin and Twitter interconnected!

November 11th, 2009
The largest professional social network Linkedin and the fastest growing social-micro-blogging service Twitter established a linkage.

The two very concepts which just recently might have seen as a complete antagonisms, as Linkedin stand for clear identity online, while anyone can set up an account in Twitter without revealing real identity, nevertheless have combined their efforts in attempt to make social media better.

Now, according to Allen Blue, a co-founder of Twitter, all of those armies of LinkedIn and Twitters members are able to cross-post their updates to each other's services, by checking a box on either Twitter or Linkedin. Blue said users can select what materials send to Twitter.

In addition to increase visibility and audience there are additional searching capabilities for both Linkedin and Twitter users. By cross-posting they appeal to followers and to the broader Twitter audience that searches for tweets by keywords, location and other filters.

Will Twitter take advantage of the strong identity of Linkedin members? And, will Linkedin enhance its delivery power through Twitter wide audience remains to be seen.

Hymn of Offshoring – Chicane

November 5th, 2009

Multi-language web addresses set to appear next year.

October 30th, 2009
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (Icann) has approved the plans to allow non-Latin-script to be used in the names of web addresses.

The board of Internet regulator voted at its annual meeting in Seoul to allow domain names on non-Latin scripts, including Arabic, Chinese and others. It is notable that the internet language issue has recently been raised on the highest political level in Russia, where president Medvedev expressed the necessity of Cyrillic lettering to web addresses. While China and Thailand, have already introduced workarounds that allow computer users to enter web addresses in their own language. However, these were not internationally approved and do not work on all computers.

This introduction has been described as the biggest change to the way the internet works since it has been created more than four decades ago. This change will affect more than a half of the 1.6 billion internet users who speak non-Latin languages.

Plans for Internationalised Domain Names (IDNs) were first approved at a meeting of the regulation body in 2008, however according to Icann testing of the system will be until the next year, and the first Internationalised Domain Names should appear next year.

The main goal of this vote was to create a universal internet address code that will work in any language and every place so all the world's computers can connect with each other. Such action will incredibly facilitate to development of the Internet in countries using non Latin-based languages.

Series of Outsourcing Studies eximining latest industry trends and changes

October 29th, 2009
Dear Readers,


Sorry for the delay in posting. Several reasons for it. First off is that we launched second collaborative blog with real IT Pro's possessing years of experience in programming, cool! The blog is dedicated to Microsoft .NET domain and offering useful information on the latest software releases, testing new technologies and sharing practical knowledge that our technical specialists gained after years of developing on the .NET platform. So, I appreciate if you find several minutes to check this out

The second reason is that we initiated an Outsourcing Research Unit aimed to provide an independent overview on latest trends, emerging practices and business relationships that surround Outsourcing practice at the international level. As world political, economical and social events during last years have irreversibly changed outsourcing industry. The realities of changed world have fully overrun into outsourcing strategies and decisions. Weighing the risks against the savings and improvements provided by outsourcing faces corporate development managers daunted by the task to determine the best solution for their organization. So we tried to help them and undertook series of studies of latest industry surveys and researches and published some useful reviews analyzing latest trends, business practices etc. All materials can found on the following details.

1.Analysis of Outsourcing Relationships Before and During the Global Financial Crisis
2.Specific Research of Outsourcing opportunities in non-BRIC countries
3.Review of Top Security Trends for Outsourcing in 2009 by Black Box Research
4.Central & Eastern Europe IT Outsourcing Review 2008 – Nearshoring Gains Momentum
5.The ORN Survey Report Overview - Offshoring Finally Has The Attention of the C-Suite


Hope it useful for those interested :)

Short URLs for Google

October 9th, 2009
I think each of us at least one time deal with links to a Google search results trying to share something interesting or useful with friends via e-mail or IM, and undoubtedly everyone knows that there are various problems can occur, some of the popular are that the links just can break, or you can accidentally select just a part of line, also many social services mask the ultimate link location.

Previously, I heard about some link shortening services before, but I were lots of other things preventing to think of that. However, when I recently came across one very interesting service I found it very, very useful and would like to share it. The name of that service is Gog.is and it has been developed by one very smart Norwegian Mr. Calzone. The main feature and purpose of the service is to simply create and send a short Google search result URLs.

What you should do is just to type the following line http://gog.is/ followed by your query and the link will automatically redirect to the corresponding Google search result page. Ultimately, it proved to be very fast and useful, you just need to store in your memory that short line: http://gog.is/ + your query.

That's all! Hope it will be useful!

LinkedIn discussion: Outsourcing of small -mid project – Freelancer or Service Provider?

September 14th, 2009
With the recession hit hard companies across industries and economies worldwide are under incredible pressures to cut costs and derive more value from outsourcing contracts. As a result, some of the them are studying their relationships with providers seeking to reduce service level agreements and cost of service delivery, while another are focusing on improving business models and management processes, including provider selection and monitoring of performance and coordination capabilities. The latter ones have contributed to emergence of new business practices, such as multisourcing model, where organizations engage in network partnerships with multiple suppliers, and source various components to best-in-class suppliers. This growth of various outsourcing models along with the shift in focus on cost-saving can also contribute to another trend in global outsourcing industry - freelancing, the model which soon might be considered as an alternative option to classical service contracts.

Although, freelancing model already exists more than a decade it didn't established itself as a serious competitor to service providers in a corporate level yet. However, playing in a smaller scale work playground the model proved to be a viable option by delivering good results in a best-possible delivery and cost way. Among the main reasons preventing freelancing from entering into corporate level experts indicated legal problems with contracts and payments, intellectual property problems, quality supervision, and the handling of resources. Although, freelancers can form teams with different areas of expertise for the project they still lack of processes, effective communication and quality management.

However, there is a number of good examples when companies discovered that there's often a better value for their dollar when they hire freelancers. In addition, with the recession taking away jobs for many and hours for those that are still employed, more specialists joined the ranks of freelancing marketplaces enriching their offerings of highly-qualified resources. That means that clients are able to choose for their work from an almost unlimited field of skill-sets for each specific project they need help with. On leading marketplaces, interesting projects can attract 100 and more bidders. Yes, of course there is sometimes a mess of proposals as there are providers from various parts of world with offerings considerably vary between areas with low cost of living and developed countries, in addition "some" individuals trying to mislead buyers by underestimating how long it takes to complete a project in a good quality and proposing unrealistic bids. As a result there is a risk of poorly finished or failed project.

But, as companies finally take outsourcing seriously and included outsourcing as a part of their corporate-wide strategy they are planning to focus more on all management processes spanning around outsourcing, including resource selection and monitoring of performance, coordination capabilities and optimizing processes. By investing in management and organizational capabilities companies will be more skilled in coordinating outsourcing resources which help them to mitigate freelancing risks, moreover increasing demand for one-off projects and overwhelming desire by leading freelance marketplaces to provide clients with the best service and quality warranties (e.g oDesk’s guarantees that an hour paid is an hour worked, while Guru provides safety payment through their SafePay payment service), of course for the proper commission, nevertheless can provide a good future prospects for freelancing.

At the time there are a lot of questions should be answered and a lot of things should be done for freelancing to comply with all corporate requirements, however freelancing is seemed to be a good option for small businesses and ventures with their initiatives not requiring complicated well-defining organizational and quality processes and methodologies. I decided to appeal to reliable LinkedIn community asking what option they already use or would prefer for small and mid-size project. Beating the gun, I would like to say that the question has been taken rather controversially as it conflict of interest arose, however some interesting theories were expressed by the participants of discussion. And I express my greatest gratitude to the participants of the discussion for their meaningful and valuable answers. I think in this case nothing can deliver the sense of discussion better than discussion itself, and it is my privilege to introduce the LinkedIn discussion "Outsourcing of small -mid project - Freelancer or Service Provider?" that can be found on the link below,

http://www.linkedin.com/answers/startups-small-businesses/small-business/STR_SMB/543477-19925334

Outsourcing – silver bullet for retailers during the recession?

September 2nd, 2009
Recent report by independent market analyst Datamonitor suggests that outsourcing in retail sector set to grow during the recession.

Increasing economic challenges and failing consumer spending have increased importance of operational efficiency and cost reduction in order to mitigate budget and bottom line pressures.

According to the mentioned report IT and Business Process Outsourcing will become an increasing trend in retail. The rise in demand for external service providers will be driven by the need to more efficiently generate revenue, while making cost savings across organization. As retailers forced to cut staff and inventory expenditure they will be looking to technology and services to help reduce operational costs and provide effective solutions to enhance operational efficiency under tough budgets and staff shortage.

From that perspective effective cooperation will require from service providers solid sector expertise and knowledge of demand and challenges of specific retail sectors. According to Datamonitor, retailers will expect strong partnerships that can evolve with their business. This type of relationships, in turn requires closer interaction between both parties and significant initial investment, so that provider understand the nature of business in order to work in partnership with the retail.

However, experts claim that one of the biggest hurdles for outsourcing during the recession is the industry-wide reduction of capital expenditure, and report said something about retailers are looking to change existing contracts requiring flexible payment structures and shorter contracts. Moreover, retailers complain about previous experience with service contracts, with social problems, e.g unrest caused by offshoring jobs, language barriers and lack of retail sector expertise, and expressed concerns whether benefits of outsourcing outweigh the challenges accompanied.

Although, reduced capital expenditure and previous experience could lead to a reluctance in signing new contracts within the sector, yet incredible pressures along with alarming numbers of retailers are going bankrupt will push retailers to outsource in order to improve efficiency and achieve cost reduction so that they can survive the recession. Outsourcing can help retailers to improve and maintain the customer service levels with fewer staff and smaller budget.

Multi-sourcing – Next Generation of Outsourcing?

September 1st, 2009
Brief overview on the history

During its long history originated in the 1960s IT outsourcing has made a long journey. In the early days of IT outsourcing, the focus was primarily on short-term cost reduction. Outsourcing was not much more than a traditional make-or-buy decision where clients normally dedicated projects with control and ownership clearly spelled out in a hierarchical relationships. Focusing mainly on reducing costs and extending productivity clients were concentrated on their short-term benefits without considering outsourcing providers motivation. As a result what was good for client might not necessarily be the best for outsourcing provider. This form of outsourcing is known as a conventional outsourcing or the first stage of outsourcing relationships.

However, limiting outsourcing to short-term cost cutting was then heavily criticized by many experts, who at that time already proposed the idea of strategic outsourcing. The main idea behind the concept was that the companies should concentrate their scarce resources on the company's core competentcies and strategically outsource activities which are of no critical strategic need. It was argued that companies too often just see short-term benefits of outsourcing, instead of decreasing long-term capital investments through strategic outsourcing. Strategic outsourcing gained momentum after benchmarking Japanese with Western production and supply systems, the so-called "westerniztion of kieretsu model".

With further development of information and telecommunication technologies their role became more critical for businesses and IT penetrating into core business functions and activities. As a result the number and scope of IT outsourcing projects dramatically increased and service providers begun to take a management responsibility and risks, eventually joining clients as a stakeholders in the process. Emphasis has shifted towards closer interaction and mutual trust between clients and providers, rather than pursuit of self-interest organizations have recognized that the mutual-exchange relationship in a long-term is a win-win strategy. The focus of strategic form of outsourcing lies on long-term strategic partnerships where risks and rewards are shared and where vendors can expect long-term revenues and thus are willing to invest in innovation, which will in the end be benefit the client.

This increasingly strategic importance that IT has gained for many organizations has given IT outsourcing a new direction. The focus has shifted from outsourcing IT in order to reduce costs, to forms where strategically outsourcing creates competitive advantage and fully exploits benefits of IT. Emphasis has moved from contracting out IT hardware and IT facilities towards intellectual based forms of outsourcing, to get access to expertise and knowledge of best providers complementing missing internal capabilities and skills. Instead of achieving more effeciency of just one single function at a time, outsourcing is employed to redesign complete business processes and increase value across the whole value-chain. The so-called business process outsourcing (BPO) has appeared as the main business trend and the largest IT growth sector in a last years. Along with it we can see a further development of the strategic outsourcing idea has appeared in literature - transformational outsourcing. An emerging practice transformational outsourcing aims to facilitate major and rapid organizational change, to enable the lunch of new strategies and to reshape organizational boundaries.

As a result we can see that IT Outsourcing arrangements have changed dramatically over the last couple of years. While some organizations still follow the traditional path of conventional outsourcing, many have begun to use IT outsourcing as a strategic tool to complement missing capabilities and skills, to exploit the full business potential of IT achieving business transformation.


Multi-sourcing era


As Outsourcing relationships continued to mature and clients became more sophisticated the quality aspect of outsourcing relationships and their management has been gaining increased attention. The changing structure of the IT outsourcing market and the continuously developing business models have had a significant influence on the type of outsourcing relationships. The growing complexity of IT and IT Outsourcing processes along with increasingly sophisticated customers require a different approach in establishing and managing outsourcing relationships. New types of organizational arrangements and alliances appeared, among them multiply vendor contracts (multisourcing), joint ventures or shared services. Organizations which outsource for strategic benefits are pioneering new types of outsourcing relationships with emphasis on closer interaction between client and supplier as organizations engage in network partnerships with multiple suppliers, each of which is best-in-class for the respective outsourced function. One of the key feature of outsourcing industry over the past few years is the trend away from the large end-to-end outsourcing deals. As a result we can see a growth of the so-called multisourcing trend.

Gartner defines multisourcing as a new operational model that obtains business services from multiple sources inside and outside corporate walls to obtain the best business outcomes. The main topic of the conference organized by Gartner earlier this year was " Strategic Multisourcing" or the ability of companies to work with multiple vendors for undertaking the work that is better to source to third party providers while company concentrates on its core activities.

One of the main drivers of the multi-sourcing approach is the perception that it better leverages competitive pressures. Critics of the single sourcing approach argue that sourcing out IT to a single supplier leads to the provider becoming "indispensible" making it difficult to award new project to other suppliers. Multi-sourcing contracting structure allows customer to reduce its reliance on a single provider enabling client to source various components to "best-in-class" suppliers. Experts argue that the essential value of multi-sourcing is its flexibility.

Emerging country competition is another favorable factor for development of multi-sourcing trend as competition among destinations and providers has increased and suppliers have been forced to specialize to gain market share and competitive advantage.

Although, the multi-sourcing model is still new development for many companies which requires the philosophical change on the buyer's side for many of the world's leading companies, this is not a new theme, some of them have developed and sustained outsourcing relationships with providers for over a decade now.

Its main advantages are that it allows a customer to seek best-of-breed service offerings from a range of suppliers, gives a customer more direct relationship with suppliers along with flexibility to move work from internal departments to vendors and even across providers whenever the needs arises.

And even though many experts claim that multi-sourcing is the next phase of outsourcing wave there are lots of things to do for both buyers and providers to adopt the practice, including revising management processes, overall governance structure and compensation models so that providers can add value to clients businesses and make a fair return at the same time.

Linkedin Discussion: Australia – IT Outsourcing Provider or IT Outsourcing Buyer

August 12th, 2009
It was my great pleasure recently participate in one very interesting Linkedin discussion aimed to determine whether Australia is more IT Outsourcing supplier or IT outsourcing buyer. The question is very interesting for me and there is an obvious lack of covering of the given subject, so I tried to make my own study of the question both analyzing perspectives of Australia as an IT Outsourcing provider and look at the buying potential of the region.

Considering the destination as an IT Outsourcing provider Australia is ranked by most analytics as one of the best place in the developed world to base software development operations. (The Indian boutique IT vendors have already opened their centers in Sydney city and Melbourne locations along with IBM, Accenture and EDS). According to countless reports, Australia coming right after Canada in terms of setting offshore R&D and delivery centers. The reasons are clearly evident, low-cost and highly skilled multilingual IT resources combined with advanced IT infrastructure and business-friendly regulations and laws promote country as an attractive and low-risk outsourcing destination.

The latter one (low-risk) is especially important in the modern world, where realities of politically, economically and socially unsafe world have influenced on outsourcing decision process, and investor and clients' interests are no longer motivated by only English language skills and high-numbers of unemployed locals. In turn, the ability of outsourcing supplier to ensure that customer's sensitive data and processes remain safe has been included into offshore strategic planning and considered as the main diferentiator.

According to the main trends for outsourcing for next years by Black Box Research there is an increased role of safety and vulnerability measurement which can promote Australia as one of best outsourcing locations for operating with low downstream risk.

With India has been hit hard by 2008 terrorist attacks, accounting scandals that rocked an Indian outsourcing industry and increased attrition and labor cost levels there is a good opportunity for destinations such as Australia, Canada and Mexico to attract US investors and clients. However, growing US unemployment has already driven domestic wages much below where they previously were.


as a buyer....


From other side as it was specified in previous answers the discussions of the growing market in IT outsourcing in Australia has been stimulated by decisions of several biggest corporations and the Australian government to outsource their IT operations. Australia's state governments adopted outsourcing 10 years ago to reduce costs and improve services. This year, the Australian Taxation Office announced it plans to shed thousands of full-time jobs and drastically increase outsourcing as part of a new efficiency drive. The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) have signed long-term outsourcing deal as well.

It also worth to mention that over 40% of information and communication technology purchased in Australia is by government. With this kind of leverage, what the government purchases has the potential to determine the shape of an Australian information and communication technology (ICT) sector.

In general, Australian outsourcing market is still smaller that in leading developed countries, but it is gathering momentum, and its value may increase significantly in next few years. This is due in part to the fact that the market does not shy away from innovations and large-scale contracts. Australian firms now have a better understanding of what could be outsourced and how it should be outsourced.

The fact that world-known ICT industry exhibition CeBIT 2009 has been organized in Australia already shows a positive signs to the development of industry in the region. With the ICT industry worth an estimate of $123 billion a year (ABS 2008), CeBIT Australia connected local and international key players of main business sectors to find out how to achieve long and short term savings through technology-based business solutions.

However, recently I came across one interesting debate called "Stop Outsourcing Australian Jobs" criticizing the Coalition's IT Outsourcing program that effectively excluded participation of Australian IT companies in government projects bidding resulting in the high level of fear about job security among Australians. In response, Labor has announced a set of measures to improve procurement process and pursue enhanced opportunities for domestic suppliers to bid for government business.

Summarizing I would vote for Australia as IT Outsourcing buyer, due to its belonging to developed nations circle therefore with higher cost of IT services than in other emerging outsourcing destinations, however world events in 2008 have irreversibly changed risk/reward calculations and outsourcing decision making process, and Australia has enough potential to ride the second (or third) wave of outsourcing.

Discovering Outsourcing Opportunities in Ukraine

July 31st, 2009