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Winner! Meet ComputerWorld Canada's Blogging Idol

Winner! Meet ComputerWorld Canada's Blogging Idol

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 18 Jun 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Don Sheppard got his degree in electrical engineering before any of our editors were born, and helped develop the seven layers of the OSI reference model. Some insights from the first-timer who won first prize

What was on his radar screen in 1978 was the Open Systems Interconnect (OSI) reference model, eventually adopted by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and which led to concepts like switching and routing at Layers 1 through 7.

“Everyone still talks about the seven-layer model and can quote the word application layer and stuff,” he said. “It’s typically a high level view but there’s a lot of networking complexity that’s still a mystery to most people. And life is not getting easier with the addition of new technologies, wireless and the kinds of applications that we talked about in Blogging Idol.”

In 1978, the Standards Council of Canada appointed Sheppard as chairman of the committee representing Canada for developing the OSI model at ISO, a position he held until 1992. At the time, his full-time job was with GeoTrain (now known as Global Knowledge), a training and consulting firm.

“That was in the early 90s, when even the World Wide Web was brand new,” he said. “I think things are a lot different now. Universities actually have programs to teach things like Cisco routers. That’s a long way from when routers and routing and the Internet first came a long.” He said some of the new Web 2.0 technologies, including social networking, aren’t always taught in school.

“It’s coming from the little entrepreneurs and the guys that started up the new businesses,” he said. “There certainly is a thrust at the architecture level to move to some Web 2.0 service oriented architecture -- things like internal blogs (and) use of Second Life. I think that’s a very gradual development. People are afraid of that kind of thing. They don’t know how to control it in terms of misuse within business.”

Sheppard said his participation in Blogging Idol raised gave him some insight into social networking and into some of the issues presented by cloud computing.

“I will be careful to watch who are becoming the gorillas in the cloud computing industry,” he said. “Whether Google becomes the king of that castle – certainly something that is worth watching.”

A technology that lets users store data at locations outside their country raises lots of questions, Sheppard added.

“I remember from 70s the whole issue about transborder data flow – having your data stored outside the country – and I believe that will come back again,” he said. “It’s the concept of, do you know where your data is and do you know it’s going to be secure, if it’s not stored within your own systems?”










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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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