The Leprechauns of Software Engineering
The software profession has a problem, widely recognized but which nobody seems willing to do anything about. You can think of this problem as a variant of the well known "telephone game", where some trivial rumor is repeated from one person to the next until it has become distorted beyond recognition and blown up out of all proportion.
Unfortunately, the objects of this telephone game are generally considered cornerstone truths of the discipline, to the point that their acceptance now seems to hinder further progress.
In this talk, we will take a look at some of those "ground truths": the claimed 10x variation in productivity between developers; the "software crisis"; the cost-of-change curve; the "cone of uncertainty"; and more. We'll hone our scholarship skills by looking up the original source for these ideas and taking a deep dive in the history of their development. We'll assess the real weight of the evidence behind these ideas.
And we'll confront the scary prospect of moving the state of the art forward in a discipline that has had the ground kicked from under it.
Prerequisite attendee experience level: Beginner
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CERN, from an IT PerspectiveJan JankeThursday Nov 1 @ 16:10
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Pop Songs and Programming for Fun and ProfitPJ HagertyThursday Nov 1 @ 12:00
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The Leprechauns of Software EngineeringLaurent BossavitFriday Nov 2 @ 15:00
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An Introduction to Bluetooth mesh for DevelopersMartin WoolleyWednesday Oct 31 @ 16:10