Saturday 16 August 2008

Software Scotland – Z is for ZX Spectrum

Aaaah the ZX spectrum the seed that created countless Software Developers in Scotland. Now that was an operating system.

Friday 15 August 2008

Software Scotland – Y is for Y2K

Who can forget those anxiety ridden days as countless software developers in Scotland counted up to 2000 for inflated salaries.

Thursday 14 August 2008

Software Scotland – X is for XML

Extensible Mark Up language has provided the structure to the HTML internet world that was badly needed. Back in 2000 we used XML to create an n-tier internet system to provide e-commerce on NCR ATMs (using Java on os/2) as software programmers in Scotland we were leading edge.

Wednesday 13 August 2008

Software Scotland – W is for Wolfson Microelectronics

Darlings of the Scottish Investment community Wolfson house a number of highly talented software developers in Scotland. Creating the embedded software required by their integrated circuits.

Tuesday 12 August 2008

Software Scotland – V is for VB

Visual Basic was a revelation it allowed software developers in Scotland to create intuitive software systems quickly and easily. Now VB is a staple of the .Net world.

Monday 11 August 2008

Software Scotland – U is for Use Case

Use Case is all about specifying software systems. For software developers in Scotland in the past it was a rare treat to be able to use “Use Case” on a green field site. Often it was the reverse engineering talents that were more important.

Sunday 10 August 2008

Software Scotland – T is for Tape Back Up

For software developers in Scotland its just a matter of time before Software backups using Tape becomes a thing of the past. Remote backup for Software if secure is much more sensible and reliable – Tape Backup will soon be a thing of the past.

Saturday 9 August 2008

Software Scotland – S is for Silicon Glen

Silicon Glen was the marketing folks attempt at promoting Scotland as Silicon Valley.

For software developers in Scotland it did not last long as Silicon Valley was typically populated by overseas assembly plants that shipped out when the economic situation changed.

Friday 8 August 2008

Software Scotland – R is for RMX

RMX simple but rock solid. Used on Intel platforms by many software developers in Scotland RMX was predictable and as I recall completely defect free.

Thursday 7 August 2008

Software Scotland – Q is for QOS

With all this Voice Over IP telephony stuff we need to remember that Quality counts. Quality of Service measures the quality of the traffice (voice or otherwise that you get down your internet line).

Software developers in Scotland don’t always have access to the same speed of access as our counterparts in the USA which can be frustrating. So as we roll out more and more VoIP systems expect QoS to drop.

Wednesday 6 August 2008

Software Scotland – P is for PLM

PLM a realtime language used in industry and by Software developers in Scotland for many years. Similar in structure to PASCAL it was simple to understand if perhaps limited in syntax.

Tuesday 5 August 2008

Software Scotland – O is for Operating System

A good operating system makes all the difference but sometimes the best ones don’t win through. For many years programmers in Scotland used os/2 – complex but rock solid. With Windows coming along os/2 faded, but it took many years for Windows to catch up with the capability of os/2.

Monday 4 August 2008

Software Scotland – N is for NCR

A software company of renown in Scotland NCR produced countless talented software engineers in Scotland with real-time, Os/2 and windows expertise. A shadow of their former self now in Scotland they still dominated the ATM market in the UK and overseas.

Sunday 3 August 2008

Software Scotland – M is for Microsoft

Where would we be without Microsoft…. Software developers in Scotland rely on the systems day in day out. Without Microsoft we’d probably all be using Apple Macs and our offices would be prettier.

Saturday 2 August 2008

Software Scotland – L is for Laptop

Laptops have become the essential tool for all of us – not just software developers in Scotland. Not so long ago (20 years ago) 1 PC per desk was only starting to become a reality – now it’s a PC with huge power that gets lugged around on the shoulder. Not bad.

Friday 1 August 2008

Software Scotland – K is for KiloByte

Do you remember when hard disk space was measured in KiloBytes – hard to believe now. Programmers now expect endless disk space and memory availability making us all (even software developers in Scotland) a lot more lazy than we should be.