Posts Tagged ‘Nearsourcing’
New iPhone App - Tastebud for Open Source Food
So we’ve released another iPhone application called Tastebud for Open Source Food. Like the vanilla version of Tastebud, the app allows you to select ingredients from your fridge/pantry, add them to your virtual basket, and recipes that you can make with the selected ingredients are shown in a list. So what’s new with this version?
We’ve partnered with Open Source Food so you can now find all of their tasty recipes on your iPhone. In addition, you can link directly from a recipe on your iPhone to see always-current reviews that are hosted on the OSF site. Also, we’ve added a way to be more specific about your ingredient selection - you can “drill down” from a general category to a specific ingredient (say from “Fruits” –> “Citrus” –> “Limes”) or you can just add the entire category. We’ve also redesigned the UI to make it easier to navigate and, well, a lot prettier. Check it out. It’s only 99 cents!
NYTimes: Mexico poised to outstrip US in economic growth
Posted by: andy in Nearsourcing on July 1st, 2010
Now this is something you don’t see every day. Latin America’s economy is on a tear and, surprise, it’s not all fueled by drugs and bootleg DVDs! I’m sure that much of the success was due to the region’s luck in dodging the pyramid scheme that was the mortgage market in the US (not due to any wisdom or foreword thinking - mortgages of any stripe - much less sub-prime ones - are just not common here). In any event, let’s celebrate before wheels fall off (again)!
After a sharp contraction last year, Mexico’s economy grew 4.3 percent in the first quarter and may reach 5 percent this year, the Mexican government has said, possibly outpacing the economy in the United States.
An App Is Born
Posted by: andy in About Us, Agile and SCRUM, Mobile, Nearsourcing on June 25th, 2010

Is that thing on vibrate?
We’re in a celebratory mood over here at Agave Lab this morning. . .
Last night, after working a scant 10 days and (mostly sleepless) nights, we delivered a very cool iPhone application into the gaping maw of the iTunes App Store Approval Process. We were working with one of the most highly-regarded design firms in the world (they’ve won countless awards and are consistently on the list of “Top 50 Design Firms”). The end client was a major luxury, auto manufacture. Unfortunately, we can’t disclose the identity of either but, the grace-under-pressure that was required and the compressed time frame made this a learning, as well as marginally traumatic, experience - kind if like giving birth but with fewer fluids involved. Here’s what we learned:
-Pick your partners carefully. The design firm is based in NY and in Stockholm. They were our primary point of contact - and they were fantastic. There were plenty of tense moments but even as tensions rose, they had our back. They were more than willing to offer advice, forgo sleep (the project manager in NY stayed up late with us for every session - fantastic guy), and keep a great sense of humor.
-Don’t bog down on a single issue. This project made extensive use of the multi-tasking capabilities of the new iPhone 4.0 OS. The problem was that it wasn’t released until the project was nearly due. No one had any idea of how it was going to work and we wasted a few precious days in the process trying to map out how it might work. In the end, we just shelved it and, as most things do, the solution popped up in due time and was easily implemented. Key message: if you get stuck, step back, do something else, and come back to it later.
-Be proactive about stuff that doesn’t look right. As a developer, working for a client, there is a temptation to do just what you’re told and nothing else. Often times we’d see something in the wireframes or the art that just didn’t look right. By pointing out the things that seemed odd or that we didn’t understand, we avoided building in functionality that, while technically in the spec, would have to be changed later.
-Balance architecture and UI. This one is always a bitch. We focused for the first few days on getting the architecture right - we’re a bit maniacal about code hygiene. That made the rest of the project go more smoothly but, 5 days into it, the client lead at the design firm (not an engineer) began to freak a bit. For him the product IS the UI. On the other hand, it’s easy to pound out the UI components first and then back into the architecture. But with this approach, the the same client lead is going to wonder what the hell you’ve been up to - “The app looked complete at day 3 and we’re now at day 7″! The solution to this seems to be to develop slices of the application from UI to architecture so that you’ve got steady progress on both fronts. Easy to say, tough to do but we’re going to work on it for the next project.
-Hire people that you like. We have a killer team. This project involved a lot of late nights, crappy food, and tension. Our team was stress-tested and passed with flying colors. I used to work for a Kleiner Perkins company and Ray Lane was on the board. I once asked him how he hired people and his response at first surprised me but throughout my career has become increasingly right on. He said, “The most important thing for me is that I like the person right away”. Simple, no? And it works. It’s really rare that someone works out that I generally didn’t get a good feel about in the first 30 seconds. I’ve been trying to work out why this is true. Maybe it’s this: I consider myself hard-working, smart, honest, etc. so I tend to like people who share those traits. There are a million subtle factors that, I suspect, get boiled down to an instant “vibe” - you either like someone, or you don’t - but that vibe signifies a lot more than a hunch. Pay attention to your hunches, they’re smarter than you are.
Intel Invests in Guadalajara
Posted by: andy in Nearsourcing on April 28th, 2010
A tech museum for kids?! A center for environmental design?! How cool!!
Intel, the manufacturer of microprocessors, will invest 2.3 billion pesos over the next three years in Guadalajara, Jalisco, announced world chairman Paul Otellini. The firm plans to expand its installations in this city with a design center, a technological museum for kids and a laboratory with links to small and medium-sized businesses. Otellini said that the new building would be one of the company’s first to be certified as a leader in environmental design and energy consumption.
Read more: http://www.poder360.com/dailynews_detail.php?blurbid=7045#ixzz0mPNmm0b0
India Outsources To Mexico
Posted by: andy in Nearsourcing on April 21st, 2010
Interesting video on BPO outsourcing. I suppose that it make financial sense for them but is still seems a bit bizarre. Company in San Fran sends it’s work to India (with all of the inherent time zone, structural, cultural, and travel challenges) and they turn around and send it to Mexico (just 2 time zones ahead and 3.5 hours by plane). It seems like the extra step just compounds the problem, no?
Indian outsourcing losing ground to nearshore vendors
Posted by: andy in Nearsourcing on January 5th, 2010
Just caught this article from SiliconIndia. Looks like major Indian IT outsourcers are losing contracts to emerging rivals. They make special mention of Mexico’s Softek. This bodes well for us!

The Agave Lab Method
Posted by: andy in About Us, Agile and SCRUM on October 12th, 2009

A Nice Pair
So lately we’ve been fetching around for a way to take advantage of Pair Programming that would work for us. Some of our projects involve building relatively simple web sites. Often times, we’re building on top of a platform like Joomla, WordPress, Drupal, or Elgg, or we’re using pre-existing patterns and/or classes. In these cases, when we were pair programming, there were long periods where one of the programmers would be staring off into space while the other was installing a plug-in, fidgeting with a CSS file, or some other pedestrian bit of work. On the other hand, when we weren’t pair programming, we’d see programmers get stuck on a particularly thorny bit of code, architect themselves into a box, or miss a critical shortcut.
.
What to do? Pair programming seemed like overkill but without it, we were often spinning our wheels. Enter the “Agave Lab Method”. Here’s how it works:
- Programmers work in pairs.
- Each pair is given two projects.
- Every morning, the pair spends 3 hours together, with 1.5 hours dedicated to each project
- After the 3 hours in the morning, each programmer works on a project solo for the rest of the day
- The next day, the same thing happens EXCEPT, after the three hours working together, the programmers switch projects.
- So, for example, on Monday programmer 1 works on project A while programmer 2 works on project B. On Tuesday programmer 1 works on project B and programmer 2 works on project A. On Wednesday, we switch back.
Okay, I know that this sounds weird and complicated but stay with me here. Every morning, programmer A has to explain to programmer B what he/she did the day before so that he/she can pick up from where things were left off. In addition, each programmer needs to plan out, with the help of his/her partner, what he/she intends to accomplish that day. This forces the right things to happen:
- It forces the code into intelligible form. If you know that someone else is going to pick up where you left off, your code has to be clean, logical, and well-documented
- Two heads are better than one. Solutions are first architected (and later reviewed) with input from two people - this leads to more elegant code.
- A set of fresh eyes can spot potential bugs, and offer suggestions on how to re-factor cumbersome elements
- Knowledge transfer is maximized
- Boredom / burnout is diminished
- Programmers get better at verbally communicating what they’re doing, why, and where they’re having problems
- If there is a particularly thorny bit of code, the pair can co-program during the 1.5 hours of shared time, leaving the more understood programming tasks for solo time in the afternoon.
Of course all of these benefits flow from standard pair programming and, for more complicated projects, we’ll still do full-time pair programming. However, by using this modified approach, we get more throughput (progress on 2 projects rather than 1) and less staring-at-the-wall time for those projects that involve a lot of straight-forward implementation.
AMR Research - Mexico, the Preferred Nearshoring Destination.
Posted by: andy in Nearsourcing on May 18th, 2009
From a recent article:
A quarterly report on supply chain risk from AMR Research found that buyers will increase their nearshoring sourcing and manufacturing activities by a ratio of 5 to 1. “Mexico is the preferred nearshoring destination, with 84% of the respondents choosing it as a place for sourcing or manufacturing
Idiots
Posted by: andy in Things That Interest on May 2nd, 2009

So, do you party?
I’ve held my tongue on this for a while but am I the only one who feels that “pandemic” thing is ridiculous?
Every year, the regular old flu kills 35,0oo people in the US and 500,000 worldwide. So far, the pig/bird/human flu has killed 1 person in the US and some number between 60 and 200 in Mexico (depending on who you want to believe). And for this, all businesses have been shuttered here (crippling an economy that wasn’t doing so well to begin with), the US is doing backflips trash talking Mexico, and, perhaps worst of all, everyone is walking around with those ridiculous surgical masks on. Come on people, pull your head out - are we that starved for drama?
And now that disaster is not panning out, we all seem a bit, well, disappointed. Check this story, “What we thought is that we would have an exponential growth in the number of persons with symptoms. But the information we have is that hasn’t occurred, and we now have a stabilized curve with no important growth” of confirmed cases, Mexico City’s mayor Marcelo Ebrard said declared Saturday.”
UPDATE: Also see this NYTIMES article. “Of 908 suspected cases that were tested, only 397 people turned out to have the virus, officially known as influenza A(H1N1), Mexican health officials reported on Friday. Of those, 17 people have died. ”
Near-sourcing webinar from Grant Thorton
Posted by: andy in Nearsourcing on April 17th, 2009
This might be interesting. I’m going to attend as long as they never use the word “thought leader” again.

International sourcing webinar: What you need to know about recent trends
There is a growing awareness that an effective supply chain requires not just low costs, but also flexibility, responsiveness and adaptability to a changing marketplace. For many companies, near-sourcing — bringing operations closer to home, relocating sourcing to Mexico, Canada and, in some instances, the United States – seems to be the answer. Yet although some companies may benefit from near-sourcing, others may not. Join us on April 30 to learn how to better evaluate your own sourcing decisions.
In this Grant Thornton webinar, our thought leaders will discuss the following factors in deciding whether to move offshore, bring operations home, or maintain the status quo.
-
Benefits and challenges of international sourcing
-
How to examine the financial health of your supply base
-
Identify changing opportunities in the marketplace
-
Other variables to consider
Presenters:
-
Tim Dumond, Corporate advisory and restructuring services principal
-
Wally Gruenes, National managing partner, Consumer and Industrial Products
-
Don Bailey, Advisory services regional practice leader




