This is a book for anyone who participates in the acquisition, development, administration, or support of software. It is most particularly for executives and managers experiencing late projects, out-of-control costs, insufficient software functionality, never-ending software defects, poor system performance, continuing surprises in the process and its results, and terminally overworked employees. The book was written out of frustration. We are often referred into a client to help unscrew a screwed-up project. After a brief evaluation, we’ve told some of them to throw away tens of millions of dollars in wasted software development effort. What they’ve built cannot be fixed. While technology is driven by the continuing exponential price/performance curve of Moore’s Law, human understanding of how to use it is stuck on a linear track. Universities don’t help, producing excellent individual contributors but poor managers and team players. Managers new to software projects, in their own defense, need to know the questions to ask, and what constitutes good answers. They need just enough understanding of the software development process to understand when they’re getting the truth and when they’re getting the run-around. The book is prescriptive in nature, and generally refers to large projects. Small, new projects can get away with less discipline. Much less. If you are creating a new application with a new architecture, in a market you know backwards and forwards, and time to market is your first concern, then you don’t need all the formality to do a really great job. If you have only five people working on a project in a garage, go for it, with just enough formality to desribe the requirements, architecture and design to newcomers. Finally, the book describes development practices at the end of a long evolutionary path followed by companies with a history of repeated software success. And even they are not immune to a new, faddish development methodology that leads them astray. Do not try to implement these practices all at once if your company falls short. Implement them incrementally. Take a little. Let it settle. Take a little more. Start with requirements and metrics. Work both ends towards the middle. Make them your own. Use the best for your company in this place, time, and project context. The point of this book is primarily to provide you with an effective crap detector: to identify the pitfalls, ask the right questions, analyze the answers, and forecast (and improve) outcomes. Without surprises. Open this book anywhere and take away one good idea. Use what you can. Don’t force it. Do well.
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Malcolm (Mike) Macfarlane has worked in large-scale commercial software development since 1966, with experience at Xerox, Gartner Group, Cadence, and Sybase -- as well as several start-ups -- in senior engineering, field support and quality management positions. At Xerox, as Principal Member of the Technical Staff, Mike helped develop industry-leading operating systems. Later, as Gartner Group’s first employee, he built their first "hard dollar" subscription product and established their initial consulting business. At ECAD and Cadence, Mike was first VP of Marketing, then Senior Director of Central Engineering, and managed the establishment of a state-of-the-art software factory for Cadence product development. Mike developed predictive metrics and management techniques and governance processes in advance of what have now become industry best practices. As Vice President of Quality at Sybase, he facilitated 2,000 Software Engineers through ISO 2001-TickIT certification, which remains in place today. A Principal Consultant at Savant Solutions since 1998, Mike has worked with many companies, large and small, on their software engineering practices and business processes. Clients have included Caremark/CVS, Kraft Foods, McAfee, and a host of others. He is the author of the book "Successful Process Improvement" published in 2006. He has also written a number of papers and taught seminars on a variety of related topics. He lives in Murphys, California and on various airlines.
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Librería: BooksRun, Philadelphia, PA, Estados Unidos de America
Paperback. Condición: Very Good. It's a well-cared-for item that has seen limited use. The item may show minor signs of wear. All the text is legible, with all pages included. It may have slight markings and/or highlighting. Nº de ref. del artículo: 1468172263-8-1
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Librería: Idaho Youth Ranch Books, Boise, ID, Estados Unidos de America
Condición: Very Good. A copy that has been read, but remains in excellent condition. Pages are intact and are not marred by notes or highlighting. The spine remains undamaged. There are no stickers on book or rips in dust cover. Nº de ref. del artículo: B-04-02-07-0646
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