Peter Coffee

About

Peter Coffee is Director of Platform Research at salesforce.com, where he serves as a liaison with the developer community to define the opportunity and clarify developers' technical requirements on the company's evolving Apex Platform. Peter previously spent 18 years with eWEEK (formerly PC Week), the national news magazine of enterprise technology practice, where he reviewed software development tools and methods and wrote regular columns on emerging technologies and professional community issues.Before he began writing full-time in 1989, Peter spent eleven years in technical and management positions at Exxon and The Aerospace Corporation, including management of the latter company's first desktop computing planning team and applied research in applications of artificial intelligence techniques. He holds an engineering degree from MIT and an MBA from Pepperdine University, he has held teaching appointments in computer science, business analytics and information systems management at Pepperdine, UCLA, and Chapman College.

Pushing Productivity With a Dot-com That Delivers

What about cutting project design time by 30 percent, cutting project documentation costs in half, and paying for the system that achieves these results in less than two years? All while completing 140 facility renovations with a team that used to do 20 projects in the same length of time? Do I have your attention? […]

Wireless Enterprise IT Is Here Today

Companies are deluding themselves if they think they can postpone wireless deployments until the technology is stable and secure. As happened in the 1980s with desktop PCs, employees are driving the process forward, and eWeek Labs has been looking at products that help IT staff support the resulting diversity of wireless wares on company networks […]

Microsoft Case Ends in a Different World

Its ironic that Microsofts antitrust victory, as this month began, was not first disclosed by a well-timed, after-hours announcement; it became public knowledge through Internet newsgroups reporting that the documents were online. Attorneys in the case were supposed to receive the decisions at 4 p.m., with Web publication at 4:30 EST. A dutiful technician had […]

Microsoft Research Brings Breakthroughs to Bottom Line

Im still assimilating pages of notes, and hours of recordings, from two full days at Microsoft last week. Youll see some of what we learned there, including comments from almost an hour of Q&A with Steve Ballmer, in eWEEK on Nov. 18–but right now, Id like to share some things that probably wont be featured […]

Microsoft Office 11: Ready, Aim … Fizzle?

When I first saw Microsoft Word 2.0, with breakthrough scripting facilities for an end-user application, I told readers that Microsoft wanted its Office suite to become the framework of enterprise task automation. With last months emergence of beta copies of Office 11, the company continues to track that moving target, and the question is not […]

Microsoft Gets Away With One

I wasnt impressed when the settlement terms in the Microsoft antitrust case were merely “proposed,” a little less than one year ago, so it shouldnt be hard to predict my reaction to the pair of rulings that finally came down this past Friday evening. In short words, the company broke the law–and got away with […]

Voicing Options for Application Access

Last week, I mentioned the Section 508 mandates for information accessibility in federal IT and noted the growing influence of these rules on software design. Coincidentally, I find these requirements being cited on the hardware side as well, in a technical paper that I saw this past week from Adomo Inc.–whose AdomoMCS appliance adds voice […]

Web Access Disabled by 90s Design

With its dubious victory this month in a U.S. District Court, Southwest Airlines won the right to continue its practice of 20th-century Web site design that wont meet future needs for feeding content to diverse devices–as well as to diverse users. The company would be wiser to behave as if it had lost. The court […]

The Serious Side of a Silly Prediction

Of all the predictions Ive heard as people look for ITs role in economic recovery, the silliest may be No. 1 on the list of 10 released earlier this month by Gartner: “Bandwidth becomes more cost-effective than computing.” The timing of that statement is ironic since I just returned from the Microprocessor Forum, in San […]

Data Bandwidth: Memory Should Take Pride of Place

What looks like an insurmountable problem may just be a well-disguised assumption. The problem of data bandwidth across the border of a microprocessor chip may just be a symptom of the assumption—that the so-called central processor has to be at the center of the machine, with memory as a peripheral. What would happen if memory […]