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Tuesday, August 24, 2004

GOOD IT SCIENCE WHERE YOU LEAST EXPECT IT

By Tom Yager

Posted August 20, 2004 3:00 PM Pacific Time

Practical IT science tends to evolve most rapidly from projects that
have business objectives in mind rather than scientific ones.

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When I talk about letting out your inner mad scientist or inventor, I'm
not talking about strapping jet engines to your Volkswagen or
programming in Lisp.

The litmus test for good IT science is simple: It's good if the results
of what you create are simpler than those produced by existing
solutions.

I'll set the stage with an example. I remember being blown away by
SonicXQ, the Web services orchestration architecture that became Sonic
ESB (enterprise service bus). I saw the surface of it -- an engine that
pushes smart objects around a choo-choo track using Web services -- but
I had no idea how beautifully easy it was, easier than using Web
services without an ESB. It would take me longer to diagram how Sonic
did it than to build you a sample solution that uses it. Good science.

More recently, I came across Savvysoft, one of those under-the-radar
software companies producing products that play vital roles in their
niches -- in this case, finance -- but are invisible elsewhere. As with
Sonic ESB, it's harder to explain what Savvysoft does than it is to use
it.

Savvysoft turns an Excel spreadsheet into C and compiles it. If you have
a gigantic, complex spreadsheet, Savvysoft will reduce recalculation
times from minutes to seconds. That's really good if you're an Excel
weenie, but an Excel accelerator just doesn't grab me.

Stay with me, because yawn is about to turn to yippee. You drag-select a
block of cells to tell Savvysoft what to pump out as C. You don't have
to dumb down the cells' content to compensate for what you think C can't
do. Those cells can contain formulas of limitless complexity, and they
can include any of Excel's built-in functions, of which there are an
obscene number. When you click Savvysoft's Excel toolbar button, what
really pops out is a DLL. You can take that DLL and use it as you please
in any Windows application. It is, in effect, Excel's computational guts
-- functions and all -- made portable. And it turns Excel into a
software development tool.

For those who don't like C, Savvysoft is one step ahead of you. You
never see the C. The nice thing about Windows DLLs is that you don't
have to care how they were made, and you can call them from anywhere.
After that magical Savvysoft click, you can use the DLL as a fast
function that dumps data into cells or as one that delivers data to
programs  written in Visual Basic, .Net languages, Perl, or whatever.
Wire it into a Web service or a Web site if you want.

Savvysoft takes care of all the icky stuff, such as marshaling data
types and exposing Excel functions for use elsewhere.

I recall having an animated discussion with fellow InfoWorld columnist
Jon Udell after my review of Sonic ESB, talking about all of the things
I imagined doing with it.

My briefing with Savvysoft went about the same way, and just before we
ended the call, I told them, "Good science."

There's a bunch of it out there, and it's energizing stuff. Like other
pleasant surprises in life, you can find interesting science in the
least interesting places.

Tom Yager is technical director of the InfoWorld Test Center.


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