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Comment Re:Scope creep? (Score 5, Interesting) 187

I worked as an independent consultant at GM (run by EDS) and at Sky, cleaning up the mess they left behind.

Firstly, on behalf of all the independent consultants and contractors at both sites let me say thank you to EDS. Thank you for our fees. Without your stunning incompetence all down the line none of this would have been possible.

The reality at Sky:

  I joined a couple of years after EDS was slung out. Sky had a creaking legacy (green screen) customer installs system. They needed a comprehensive, fully architected CRM system capable of handling their millions of customers. EDS came in, did a brilliant sales demo, then sent in the drones. This is their standard operating procedure. They have smart people to call on - for sales calls. When it looked like they were about to get slung out of GM suddenly the kind of guys who wrote RFCs were all over the place. Once the attention was off they disappeared back to sales calls. This is how all outsourcing operations run.

Sky discovered pretty quick that they were being handed a pos that could never scale to a multi-million customer operation. Pretty quick being after a couple of years of pointless development. After they ditched EDS things didn't really improve: every department (customer services, billing, actuarial, etc etc) chose a "best of breed" app (more like "best of sales demos" app) then spent years customising it to fit. Then a bunch of said indy contractors tried to integrate it all together. We did the best we could.

Counting the bodies in the development halls, and allowing for what Sky had to pay to get people to work in Livingston (Detroit was comparable, if rather bigger) I'd estimate their costs at £50+ Million a year over rather more than five years. This settlement would put a big dent in that, but it certainly won't cover the cost of EDS's truly monumental incompetence.

Coda:

Between the GM and Sky gigs I had a drink with Compaq's top salesman in Toronto. I related the disasters at GM for amusement value, only for him to express his undying affection and admiration for EDS. What goes, I asked, for there was a twinkle in his eye. He explained thusly.

EDS would come to him for a quote for 10,000 PCs in their upgrade cycle for a major client. Said salesman would provide a quote for top of the line PCs at below cost price. A massive loss for Compaq. He would put this deal on paper, fully specced, and pass it across the desk for signatures.

*Three years later* EDS would come back with the sign-off and a purchase order. Compaq would give them 10,000 of the dregs of the warehouse. They would all surpass the three-year-old spec in the contract. Massive profit for Compaq.

I imagine the salesman made a pretty decent bonus too.

Businesses

EA Shuts Down Pandemic Studios, Cuts 200 Jobs 161

lbalbalba writes "Electronic Arts is shutting down its Westwood-based game developer Pandemic Studios just two years after acquiring it, putting nearly 200 people out of work. 'The struggling video game publisher informed employees Tuesday morning that it was closing the studio as part of a recently announced plan to eliminate 1,500 jobs, or 16% of its global workforce. Pandemic has about 220 employees, but an EA spokesman said that a core team, estimated by two people close to the studio to be about 25, will be integrated into the publisher's other Los Angeles studio, in Playa Vista.' An ex-developer for Pandemic attributed the studio's struggles to poor decisions from the management."

Comment We are *already* Geo-engineering the planet (Score 1) 551

I think a lot of people have missed the point.

We have already Geo-engineered the planet - we have injected massive quantities of CO2 into the atmosphere, and continue to do so. Attempts to alter the behaviour of human beings to reduce these effects have run into the quicksand of global politics and vested interests. We should keep trying to find ways to reduce the input, but so far we've failed even to agree to reduce the rate of growth of the CO2 injection.

We'll continue to fail to get agreement on reducing emissions until such time that all countries are losing thousands of people and billions of dollars annually to weather disasters (when do we stop calling them 'natural' disasters). By this point the feedback loops of massive forest fires and melting permafrost will render the agreements moot. We'll be at the stage where we need to do *something*, even if it's half-assed, and poorly understood in its effects.

Right now we are doing geo-engineering - blindly and stupidly we're increasing the temperature, "anti-terraforming" if you will, and we'll need to find a way to reverse this once it starts causing mega-deaths. Let's hope we work out a way to reverse the process that doesn't do the same.

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