I keep returning to this topic. Latest stimulus is Peter Cochrane’s blog at Silicon.com where he provides his Guide to finding wi-fi. (By coincidence, this post was written at lunchtime in a hotel lobby in Dublin using a low(ish) cost wi-fi connection (five Euros for an hour) provided by Jury’s Inn; it was later updated using a free wi-fi service at the Tulip Inn, near Dublin Airport.)
Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2006/05/wifi_access_aga/
May 09 2006
ITCF 2006 conference
As members of the event’s headline sponsor, the NCCTP, BIW Technologies (along with 4Projects, Asite, Business Collaborator and Sarcophagus) will be exhibiting at the IT Construction Forum’s 2006 annual conference at the Oval in London on 24 May. Representatives of the same NCCTP members will also be participating in an afternoon stream session focused on construction collaboration – a theme addressed during the morning by Simon Rawlinson of Davis Langdon and Avanti. According to the event programme, Simon will discuss
- Multidisciplinary collaboration within your organisation
- Working more effectively with your suppliers
- Motivating staff to work more collaboratively
- Setting up collaborative structures within your business
I hope he will also give us some clues as to the future direction of the Avanti programme (see my post, BE Avanti, on 2 May).
Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2006/05/itcf_2006_confe-2/
May 08 2006
WSP “driven by what our clients want”
The latest "Contract Journal" company profile (see Cyril Sweett on BIW in late March and Rok set on in-house capability in January) features consultancy business WSP. On the project collaboration tools question, Andy Scott, global IT director says:
"… Internally, we have IBM TeamWorkplace and Microsoft Sharepoint. Externally, we’re driven by what our clients want and this can be any of the major applications, such as Infochannel, Hummingbird or Buzzsaw."
I think InfoChannel refers to BIW Information Channel, while Hummingbird probably refers to the construction management tool developed for use on Bovis’s UK projects, not the EDMS tool developed by the Canadian software firm of the same name.
Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2006/05/wsp_driven_by_w/
May 08 2006
Ajax and CAD
A few months ago, I posted about Ajax (Extranets to embrace Ajax?, 2 December 2005 – Ajax stands for ‘Asynchronous JavaScript and XML’, by the way), wondering if it might form part of the interfaces of construction collaboration solutions. Last week, courtesy of AECnews.com, I read an article, Ajax comes to CAD, which describes an Ajax-based CAD application from a Canadian-based develop, AfterCAD, “that lets anyone zoom, pan, change layers and markup a CAD document with nothing more than a web browser”.
We already have various web-based viewer products (typically ActiveX or Java applications). This tool potentially could mean the end of such viewers, but – as Randall Newton points out – at "the extra expense of adding a server-based application on the creator’s end." However, for sizeable organisations looking to encourage collaboration in their supply chain (or, better still, for ASPs delivering collaboration solutions on their behalf), this route may be a persuasive alternative.
Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2006/05/ajax_and_cad/
May 04 2006
CRM: Hosted vs packaged
A Silicon.com article weighs up the pros and cons of hosted applications by reference to the CRM market. I am encouraged by its talk of "greater acceptance of applications hosting as companies warm to outsourcing" – if this is happening in the CRM arena, particularly among small or medium-sized businesses, then companies may also warm to outsourcing other activities such as construction collaboration or ‘extranets’ – especially as the architecture, engineering and construction sector is heavily dominated by SMEs.
Other barriers are also falling away, it seems:
- "Organisations are becoming fed up of managing the complexity of on-premise software"
- "…in the past companies were not always able to integrate hosted CRM applications with the rest of their infrastructure but the wider use of web standards such as XML makes it much easier".
- "The ubiquity of cheap broadband connections for business overcomes many of the service quality issues that affected the early ASPs."
- With hosted solutions "companies can be up and running immediately."
Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2006/05/crm_hosted_vs_p/
May 04 2006
Bloggers trusted least
According to a GlobeScan survey for the BBC-Reuters-Media Center “We Media” Forum, reported by Red Herring, "Bloggers rank lowest on the scale of trusted news sources".
Given that most blogs are essentially personal journals, this is no surprise. There is absolutely no reason why they should be trusted in the same way as conventional media, populated by professional journalists.
Bloggers usually offer openly subjective perspectives on the topics they cover. As long as readers are aware that blogs essentially offer personal opinions, they can attach as much, or as little, trust to the blogger’s views as they would to any individual’s views. I liken some bloggers to columnists in magazines or newspapers – they are essentially online writers who offer an opinion, but not necessarily the more balanced perspective demanded of professional journalists. Some views I will respect, others I will reject. But I certainly don’t regard them in the same way as major media organisations such as the BBC, the Guardian newspaper, trade magazines, etc.
Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2006/05/bloggers_truste/
May 02 2006
BE Avanti
Last Friday I attended the spring meeting of members of Constructing Excellence‘s Building and Estates Forum (BE), chaired by the excellent Vaughan Burnand. During the day BE chief executive Don Ward announced that BE was looking to take over the running of the Avanti programme. Avanti’s funding by the DTI has just about run out, but BE has stepped in offering to help the programme continue in a modified form. I await developments with interest.
Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2006/05/be_avanti/
May 02 2006
Constructware and Autodesk
At AECCadalyst.com, an article, "Digitizing the Paper Trail", helps explain some benefits of using an online collaboration solution – in this case, Constructware. The final section mentions the recent acquisition of Constructware by Autodesk (see previous post) and gives a Constructware customer’s perspective (Debra Kunce, program director at design agency Schmidt Associates):
Reflecting on the postacquisition experience, Kunce says, “The possibilities appear to be exciting, depending on where [Autodesk] plans to take Constructware. As far as day-to-day operations, we don’t see [any remarkable changes] in how Constructware works. And frankly, we thank Autodesk for that, because if we suddenly see a bunch of changes, I’d be very nervous.”
The message to Autodesk appears to be, in effect: Don’t mess about with Constructware.
Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2006/05/constructware_a/
Apr 27 2006
Meridian Prolog and Adenium DFS
I was initially a bit puzzled by Meridian Systems’ latest news release. It has announced that its technology partner, Adenium Systems, has developed a document management and fulfillment product that integrates with Meridian’s Prolog software:
"Adenium’s Document Fulfillment System (DFS) enables scanning and indexing of a high volume of drawings, plans and other project documents, such as photos and spreadsheets. When integrated with Prolog, DFS allows project teams to view, modify and share these documents, creating a single, dynamic project and document management system that automates the entire project lifecycle."
The release goes on about how DFS will help Prolog users "add document storage and distribution capability to their existing processes", get "full version control of all documents" and "access the most current document available", and gain "a complete history of all related documentation". DFS also features an automated Notification System that allows contractors to contact their bidders when new documents are available.
“Prolog customers want to gain more visibility and efficiency across all their projects, so having a central repository for all project documents provides a significant benefit,” said Bruno Berti, senior director of product management at Meridian. “We’re excited about the value that our customers will gain from the joint integration with Adenium products.”
Why does this puzzle me? Well, I was under the impression that Meridian Prolog was a major solution in the US project extranet market-place, and I would therefore have expected it to have all of this functionality already (I clearly didn’t – and don’t – know enough about Meridian Prolog). Perhaps part of my confusion arose because I skimmed past the "scanning" aspect of DFS’s services – presumably Prolog is perfectly adequate for managing information already stored electronically, but the DFS solution now enables paper-based data to be captured and managed by Prolog users?
Looking at Adenium’s website, I see it believes "that information is most useful to people when printed on paper". With that in mind, it created DFS to "provide the easiest way to store information and provide that information on the Internet for viewing, printing, and distribution" (the latter being enabled through links with ReproMAX – "the largest international network of independent reprographic companies" – and Hewlett Packard’s “HP Instant Print” functionality).
In this latter respect, the DFS solution appears to have some similarities with the services offered by Océ Repro Desk Professional (see my 24 April post).
Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2006/04/meridian_prolog/
Apr 26 2006
Autodesk applies to trademark DWG
I’d never considered a file format suffix as something worthy of a trademark, but it seems Autodesk is claiming DWG as a trademark, according to Evan Yares. What next: PDF™, DOC™, XLS™?
Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2006/04/autodesk_applie/





