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the philosophical architect

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  • the philosophical architect

    Windows 7 and Cancer Research: A Very Cool Combination!

    Posted Wed, Jun 30 2010
    by CurtD
    • 0 Comments
    At a recent Microsoft event, a solution for the computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) of colon cancer was demonstrated on Windows 7, using a hi-resolution multi-touch display. This demonstration makes it possible to navigate 3D, electronically cleansed images...
  • the philosophical architect

    S+S and Connected Health

    Posted Sun, Mar 28 2010
    by CurtD
    • 0 Comments
    Maybe no one will be astonished if I claim that computer hardware and software are becoming first class citizens in the arsenal of medical research, disease control or patient care. This proposition becomes a little more interesting if I point out that...
  • the philosophical architect

    Some thoughts about art, architecture and those stinkin’ architects

    Posted Sat, Mar 6 2010
    by CurtD
    • 0 Comments
    Michael Stiefel has done a brilliant, thoughtful and thought-provoking piece of work in his talk about art and architecture which I enjoyed very much for a number of reasons. I highly recommend it. At one point, for example, Michael highlights the false...
  • the philosophical architect

    An Evening with Identity in the Clouds and the Boston Azure User Group

    Posted Tue, Feb 23 2010
    by CurtD
    • 0 Comments
    Don Box once said that developers hate security because nobody wants to stay up all night trying to get things NOT to work. That’s why, when I’m talking to developers, I prefer to talk about identity instead of security. But either way, if you are interested...
  • the philosophical architect

    Job Hunting? Monster.com and Microsoft Office Online Make It Easier.

    Posted Fri, Feb 12 2010
    by CurtD
    • 0 Comments
    Sure I’m employed at the moment but I’ve been around long enough to know what it feels like to be out of work in a down economy—and it’s no fun—I remember that very well. When you haven’t put together a resume in awhile it can be tough sledding. Even...
  • the philosophical architect

    Something about Federated Search on Windows 7

    Posted Wed, Feb 10 2010
    by CurtD
    • 0 Comments
    W7 gets raves for a great user experience features and improvements. Many of the consumers I’ve spoken to love the W7 Task Bar and some of the new desktop arrangement features like Snap and Shake, but some of the really important enterprise capabilities...
  • the philosophical architect

    Windows 7 + Surface + Interknowlogy == Healthcare Innovation

    Posted Tue, Nov 3 2009
    by CurtD
    • 0 Comments
    Here’s a Zen question: When does data become information? Is it when data is collected in some normalized form? Is it when some data can be related or correlated to other data in a well defined way? Or, is it only when it finally gets consumed by an application...
  • the philosophical architect

    From S+S Architecture to Azure

    Posted Wed, Oct 28 2009
    by CurtD
    • 0 Comments
    One of the obvious attractions of the Software-plus-Services approach is that it can provide a best-of-both-worlds way to deliver great software value. On the client-side, you can offer a rich user experience, the right balance between ease-of-deployment...
  • the philosophical architect

    CardSpace De-Mystified at OWASP in Hartford

    Posted Tue, Jun 10 2008
    by CurtD
    • 1 Comments
    If you are interested in security, identity management, and web standards; you won't want to miss the next meeting of the local chapter of the Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) in Hartford tomorrow night. The local chapter holds bi-monthly...
  • the philosophical architect

    CardSpace and ADFS2-Industrial Strength Digital Identity Management

    Posted Fri, Mar 14 2008
    by CurtD
    • 1 Comments
    Hey! CardSpace is not just a consumer technology. If you think it is, you're missing the point. It is a bit frustrating to hear even some of my Microsoft colleagues refer to CardSpace as though it belongs on the shelf somewhere between Zune and Halo3...
  • the philosophical architect

    Unum Harnesses SOA for Customer-Oriented Services

    Posted Fri, Jan 25 2008
    by CurtD
    • 1 Comments
    The potential benefits of SOA in the enterprise can be great, including reduced cost, better business efficiency and agility, and perhaps most importantly-a much better customer experience. Unum, one of the companies I have recently become acquainted...
  • the philosophical architect

    Authorization Claims and Stable Data

    Posted Mon, Sep 10 2007
    by CurtD
    • 1 Comments
    I spend quite a bit of time thinking about authorization-especially as it pertains to highly distributed computing environments. Authorization gets tricky fast in this environment. Federated scenarios are an excellent case in point. For example, Mary...
  • the philosophical architect

    MSIT Eats Microsoft Dog Food and Thrives

    Posted Thu, Aug 2 2007
    by CurtD
    • 1 Comments
    Recently, I had an opportunity to meet several of the enterprise architects from Microsoft IT. After I published my article on Enterprise Authorization Strategy , I got to talking with Aaron Hanks about some of the challenges of enterprise authorization...
  • the philosophical architect

    Got SOC?

    Posted Tue, May 22 2007
    by CurtD
    • 1 Comments
    Good grief! Not another pesky TLA? Well, not really. SOC stands for service-oriented culture—an awkward term I use to describe a phenomenon that is an essential element of developing an SOA and sometimes conspicuously absent in the enterprise. Once I...
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