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.

Keeping Data in Its Place

Few things are more dangerous than data that doesnt know its limitations. When data runs around with no idea of how it should (or shouldnt) be used, software stagnates and business models die. n Application developers know the hazards of letting data roam the streets. When any piece of an application can use any of […]

Geekspeak: January 22, 2001

Add one more item to the list of problems that youll never have with a pen-and-paper personal digital assistant. Its unlikely that youll ever open your Day-Timer to find that all of your notes have been mirror-imaged to read from right to left—but thats exactly what one eWeek Corporate Partner advisory board member found his […]

Sierra Offers CDMA Access

Putting CDMA wireless access into a Type 2 PC Card, Sierras Wireless AirCard 510 modem, available this month, gives portable-PC users 14.4K-bps bandwidth (up to 56K bps with compression) via the Sprint PCS Group network. With power consumption of about one-third of a watt, the card has an internally stored, field-replaceable antenna to minimize bulk […]

So Who Says Youre Right?

The other day, i pulled up at the drive-through window of my bank to see them flipping the sign to “Closed.” I checked my watch. It was still 2 minutes before the posted close of business. And when I say its 4:58, I mean plus or minus 10 seconds according to www.time.gov. I mentioned this […]

Beware of chinks in wireless links

Any decision to use a wireless link is a decision to radiate information-bearing energy in a form that can be detected at a distance. Regardless of any promise to ensure security, privacy or reliability, all wireless links take the risks that come with that choice. Users may intend only to link devices that are under […]

Wired for sound, video

Making Apples imac look obese, the $2,500 Panasonic CF-E1 Audio Video Personal Computer that we saw last week at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas starts with a 15-inch flat-screen display instead of a bulky, heavy, space-heating CRT. The AVPCs software suite anticipates the desire to capture, compress and e-mail video clips, while its […]

Geekspeak: January 15, 2001

The antonym of choice for “dot-com” is often “brick and mortar,” but the essence of industry is more often “pipes and pumps.” This is especially true in the process plants that feed our economy electric power, fuels and other chemicals vital to its well-being. Maintaining and upgrading process plants is a high-stakes race against the […]

Getting Down to the Truth

As we enter 2001, an obvious gap between past fantasy and present reality is our lack of computers that care about telling the truth. The HAL 9000 computer in “2001: A Space Odyssey” became psychotic when it was ordered to conceal facts from users. The robots in Isaac Asimovs stories are incapable of disobedience; one […]

Geekspeak: January 1, 2001

No one can afford to scale up user support. we often hear the word “scalability” reverently invoked—as if it were the necessary and sufficient trait of any enterprise IT solution—but there are just too many users, in too many places, doing too many complex things to make scalable user support a cure for anything. Whats […]

E-Tail Raises Expectations

When Bill Cosby did TV commercials for the financial services firm E.F. Hutton, the tag line was simple but telling: “Because … its my money.” Not just a low price, but also customers confidence that they wont regret the “bargain,” are what it takes to turn e-tail shoppers into buyers. With my recent consumer electronics […]