Similar to someone who told me to prefer a RSA4096 key to a ECDSA (512?) key for a 1 year certificate because quantic computer are at our doors and would break ECDSA faster than RSA...
I just hope they will support retrocompatibility this time
My PC games are following me since a long time on Steam. I've kept a few PS2 game for my PS3 and my son DS has... a lot of older NES/SNES/GBA/Genesis retrocompatibility hehe
Anyone here have experience with Agile in IT? Not software development
I was in a Lean/Agile large corporation and while Agile was implemeted very well in software development, a few years after they've tried apply this in IT. While some element worked well, some other couldn't.
I've left this org a few years ago and now I'm living kinda the same thing somewhere else and again, I'm not sure Agile apply that well in IT. For example, deliver something quick instead of the final product. While this make sense to fail fast or deliver in smaller blocks, it often result in supporting 2 services doing very similar thing (file server, print server, proxy, etc.) instead of one, both being incomplete and finishing the new one is often pushed back while starting another quick delivery on another service.
Similar to someone who told me to prefer a RSA4096 key to a ECDSA (512?) key for a 1 year certificate because quantic computer are at our doors and would break ECDSA faster than RSA...
I just hope they will support retrocompatibility this time My PC games are following me since a long time on Steam. I've kept a few PS2 game for my PS3 and my son DS has... a lot of older NES/SNES/GBA/Genesis retrocompatibility hehe
Anyone here have experience with Agile in IT? Not software development I was in a Lean/Agile large corporation and while Agile was implemeted very well in software development, a few years after they've tried apply this in IT. While some element worked well, some other couldn't. I've left this org a few years ago and now I'm living kinda the same thing somewhere else and again, I'm not sure Agile apply that well in IT. For example, deliver something quick instead of the final product. While this make sense to fail fast or deliver in smaller blocks, it often result in supporting 2 services doing very similar thing (file server, print server, proxy, etc.) instead of one, both being incomplete and finishing the new one is often pushed back while starting another quick delivery on another service.
I though that he was working for IBM like less than two years ago. Anyone know what are his achievements with the Big Blue?