When the Ground Moves: Why Institutions Misread Their Own Sensor Metrics
Sometimes the measurement is correct.
The problem is that the world it was calibrated against no longer exists.
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Sometimes the measurement is correct.
The problem is that the world it was calibrated against no longer exists.
There is a distinction that does not get made often enough in conversations about data architecture.
Data is useful. Data is not always golden. And that is okay.
Every messy mission system has one reliable pattern:The interfaces break first. They break: You see it clearly any time you try to connect worlds that were never designed for each other. When Systems Touch Without Consent At DHS I saw this in several places: In each case, someone tried to treat the boundary as if…
High tempo systems live or die on one simple question: “Which data do we treat as the truth when opinions differ?” If everyone has their own private truth, you do not have a system. You have a debate club with better screens. In my world, that has shown up as: In an air picture context,…
In architecture circles, “decouple data from the application” often gets repeated like a spell. Say it enough times and you start to believe that separating data from applications is always good and never painful. In real systems, it is more complicated. Separation can unlock federation, resilience and swappability. It can also introduce new failure modes…
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Anthony Veltri · Enterprise Architect (Interoperability + Governance) · Designing decision infrastructure for cross-boundary ecosystems. · Introductions