Friday, 26 June 2009

The TMF Certification Program – It Does What, Exactly?


The TeleManagement Forum recently announced its Compliance Certification Program, and announced that Tribold was the first company to have a product certified. The TM Forum says that the program “enables industry suppliers to test and certify their adherence to individual TM Forum frameworks and standards. Through a combination of prescribed self-testing and external verification, compliance is assessed on a graduated scale to show the level of adoption of the elements of each framework. Products which meet the rigorous standards set by the compliance tests are awarded the TM Forum Compliance Mark for each framework they successfully adopt.”

Now I understand why that’s a good thing for the TMF – revenue for the organization, more “oomph” behind their very good work on projects like MTOSI, OSS/J, their NGOSS framework, and the SID, just to name a few. These quasi-standards have been more successful (although not nearly as successful as they should be – but more on that in another BLOG later) than any other set of telecommunications industry-created standards I have seen in my 30 years in the industry. But what, exactly, will the certification mean for the buyers and users of the systems that will be conforming? Ensuring interoperability with other that meet the standard? Certainly not without rigorous testing and integration work - there’s no such thing as blind plug-and-play in interfaces as complex as they are. For the ISVs, another hurdle to get over, and another cost (and become the 21st Century equivalent of Telcordia’s old hated OSMINE program? Hmmm.).

Let’s remember that the most successful standards have been set as de facto standards in the competitive marketplace, and then “standardized” later. And, somehow, the IETF doesn’t have a certification program and seems to be getting along just fine.

Friday, 19 June 2009

Machine to Machine Mobile Interfaces - Coming faster than you think

Information Week had a good article on the new Coke Freestyle Dispenser ( see www.informationweek.com/?articleID=172301630 ). It is the best example I have seen so far of a Machine-to-Machine interface over, in this case, the Verizon Wireless network.
(Short version - dispenser with water and flavor, mixes the requested drink in real time, giving over 100 possibilities. RFID-tagged flavor cartridges. Software built on Microsoft CE, communicates daily via Verizon Wireless network with dedicated IP range to a Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager for Mobile Devices. Info on sales and re-order of supplies directly to Coke's SAP CRM system.)

Of course, as most of us believe, M2M interfaces over mobile networks are going to be a big thing in the future, representing, I believe, a great growth opportunity for the mobile operators (or maybe new, specialized operators?) over the next decade.