|
Home
>
Archived Issues
>
Application Development
Spotlight On: Application Development
|

Seven Signs

-by Lee Richardson
Headed for trouble? Here are some ways out of the mess. This article will revisit seven of the most common causes for project failure, consider their solutions and provide some techniques you might have missed such as developing an ERD from Day One, and driving the user interface based on the structure of your data.
|
Collaborative Effort -by Sunil Sharma
Collaborative technologies have been looming on the horizon for some time, and now with fresh impetus from Web 2.0 and other developments, they are playing a greater role in the planning and execution of various business initiatives. That's because application development requires many entities to coordinate their activities and collaboration--whether virtual or otherwise--and has become a ubiquitous way of software development.
|
Application Development: Plugging Into the Future (Part 2 of 2) -by Bob Weinstein
Long-term technology trends have already been established, and their products and services are just starting to be rolled out.
|
Finding the Requirements Tree (Part 2) -by Michael R. Wood
The secret to rapidly capturing requirements lays in understanding the business processes that the application is suppose to leverage and support. And it is in the gap between how things work today and how they need to work to achieve core business objectives that the fruit of the requirements tree can be harvested.
|
|
|
|
 |
sponsored announcements and special offers
You can do this!
Earn your master's degree in project management without putting your life on hold at GoUWP.com!
Apply today at GoUWP.com for 100% online courses, 45 PDUs each. No entrance exam. University of Wisconsin- Platteville’s MS in Project Management is globally accredited by PMI. Combine academics and real-world scenarios for a 360-degree education.
If you have a distributed team, what are you trying to achieve with Agile approaches? Isn't Agile more for co-located teams? There are eight key benefits to working in a distributed Agile environment. A new report from ProjectsAtWork looks at each of those benefits – and how you can achieve them.
Most business and IT executives agree that any company able to rapidly deliver software of high and predictable quality with minimum budgets enjoys a significant advantage. However, practical experience shows that the challenges associated with software quality remain largely unsolved. Download the white paper Uplift Quality with Requirements Driven Testing to learn fundamental principles of Requirements Driven Testing.
| I've never heard of a relationship being affected by punctuation. |
| - Jerry Seinfeld |
|
|