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Machines and Humans: Finding the Balance in Software Development The rise of AI in software development brings efficiency and innovation, but raises concerns about maintaining a human-centered approach. The key is to find a balance where AI tackles repetitive tasks, freeing up human developers to focus on creativity, empathy, and user-centric design. |
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Generative AI: Pushing Software Development Forward? Generative AI is fundamentally changing software development by automating tasks and improving code quality, but developers need to be aware of its limitations and biases. |
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User Participation Is Essential to Diagnosis and Problem Solving The role of IT professionals is to help users get the most value from their systems. If IT systems aren’t working efficiently or correctly, it isn’t just an “IT Problem” and the nice folks in IT can’t solve it effectively without user participation. |
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UAT Entrance Criteria: Don’t Negotiate Against Yourself An important component of any User Acceptance Testing (UAT) plan are the entry criteria. No complex data system will ever be perfect, but starting with lax entrance criteria puts the UAT team in a weak position. |
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7 Things to Know In 2021 about the New Privacy Laws Changing the Web In the past few years, we’ve experienced rapid changes in the online privacy landscape. Here are 7 key things everyone should know today regarding privacy on the Web.
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Requirements Discipline: Avoiding “Death by a Thousand Paper Cuts" Absent an effective requirements baseline it is difficult to distinguish clarifications and error correction from enhancements and changes to the original ask. |
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What’s the Problem with User Stories? Agile projects focus on very lightweight, simple requirements embodied in user stories. However, there are some problems with relying solely on user stories. They often don't contain enough accuracy for development, testing, or industry regulations. There's a better way to write detailed requirements that are still agile. |
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How to Make a Fixed-Scope Contract More Agile Establishing a contract that genuinely supports agile methods can be a significant challenge. By its very nature, a contract that specifies detailed, upfront deliverables contravenes the principles of flexibility and adaptation that are at the heart of agile. But it is possible—both parties just need to focus on results. |