Monday April 18, 2005 | The I18n G.A.L. All things international, only some of them software... |
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Myth #10 - For Senior VPs, the power of 10 What I wouldn't give for VPs to read this blog! Actually, it'd be great if they read all the myths, but you can't have everything (where would you put it?)
I find it almost unfathomable that any exec would believe this, and yet I have heard it from more than one. Saying this is like saying "We wrote the code in the last release, so we're done." I hope that there isn't a software VP out there who would say that. Internationalization is inherent in the architecture, design, and implementation of a product. In reality it is part of the entire process of creating, distributing, and selling a product, but I'll just stick to the software development portion. When designing a product, international requirements must be considered in the design and architecture, otherwise you may have to redesign and rewrite the product to enable support of other language and locale data. I have seen it happen, and most recently, a product was scrapped because it wasn't worth rewriting it. What sort of things can trip you on design? Take a look at my article on this very topic:
Internationalization in Software Design, Architecture and Implementation
( Apr 18 2005, 09:15:03 AM PDT ) Permalink Comments [1] Post a Comment: Comments are closed for this entry. |
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I sympathise. I really do. Just replace "internationalization" in the above with "security" and it could easily be one of my rants.
It's nice to know we of the soft horizontal qualities - usability, security, etc - are not alone.
Posted by alecm on April 18, 2005 at 01:42 PM PDT #