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April 2011 Newsletter

 

Quotable Quotes                                                                                         1

Software Development Process                                                     2

Software Testing & Quality                                                              14

Tutorials/References                                                                           15

Career Development/Miscellaneous                                          19

Telecommunications/Networking Industry                           31

Useful Utilities                                                                                          31

Productivity Tips                                                                                      41

Just For Fun                                                                                                  43

 

 

 

Quotable Quotes

 

The really unhappy person is the one who leaves undone what they can do, and starts doing what they don't understand; no wonder they come to grief.  –Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

 

Leaders are made, they are not born. They are made by hard effort, which is the price which all of us must pay to achieve any goal that is worthwhile.  –Vince Lombardi

 

I wish to do something great and wonderful, but I must start by doing the little things like they were great and wonderful.  –Albert Einstein

 

Success seems to be connected with action. Successful people keep moving. They make mistakes, but they don't quit.  –Conrad Hilton

 

For a system to remain alive, for the universe to move onward, information must be continually generated. If there is nothing new, or if the information that exists merely confirms what is, then the result will be death. Isolated systems wind down and decay, victims of the law of entropy. The fuel of life is new information--novelty--ordered into new structures. We need to have information coursing through our systems, disturbing the peace, imbuing everything it touches with new life.  Margaret J. Wheatley, Leadership and the New Science

 

Being realistic is the most commonly-travelled road to mediocrity.  –Will Smith

 

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Software Development Process and Methodology

Article:  Passing The Holy Milestone: How To Meet Deadlines

Most of us are well aware of how software development projects frequently (typically?) miss deadlines.  This article gives some good tips for doing a better job at making your schedule.

http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2010/07/28/passing-the-holy-milestone-how-to-meet-deadlines/

 

Article:  Breaking Down User Stories

This author recommends that, when decomposing user stories to fit within a particular iteration, the best approach is to break them down according to business value, rather than along technical lines.

http://www.accurev.com/blog/2010/06/28/breaking-down-user-stories/

 

Article:  Is Agile in the Trough of Disillusionment?

Everything seems to go through cycles.  This author wonders whether agile has become so mainstream in its use/implementation that, just 10 years after the adoption of the Agile Manifesto, has it lived up to expectations or perhaps it's in the chasm between early adopters and general use.

http://www.infoq.com/news/2011/03/agile-trough-of-disillusionment

 

Article:  Humans can't estimate tasks

Schedule and effort estimation is the bane of project managers and developers everywhere.  This article gives a great overview of research into why estimation is simply nearly impossible for anyone, regardless of experience.

http://allankelly.blogspot.com/2011/03/humans-can-estimate-tasks.html

 

Article:  Surely You're Joking, Mr. Krugman!

Economist Paul Krugman's recent column indicating that technology is ruining the knowledge economy has raised eyebrows from many quarters.  This author says that Krugman is missing the point that as technology advances, the labor market adapts and creates new jobs.

http://informationweek.com/news/software/bi/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=229300891

 

Article:  A story about User Stories: Where do you start and what about the planning?

When starting out with agile, one of the more difficult aspects is how to size user stories and how use them for planning.  This author gives some solid, practical advice on how to do this and also provides some nice classifications (that he calls "storyotypes") of the types of user stories that you are likely to encounter.

http://www.dennisdoomen.net/2011/02/story-about-user-stories-where-do-you.html

 

Article:  No One Nos: Learning to Say No to Bad Ideas

One of the hardest tasks you'll face as a project manager or leader is telling others that their idea isn't going to be included.  This article provides some ideas for how to say 'no' and make it stick without disrupting the project.

http://www.alistapart.com/articles/no-one-nos-learning-to-say-no-to-bad-ideas/

 

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Software Testing & Quality

Article:  Unconscious Limitations to Your Testing

Sometimes, our own experiences cause unintended biases that prevent us from thoroughly testing an application.  Here's a great list of some of these pitfalls to watch out for.

http://www.softwaretestpro.com/Item/4721/Unconscious-Limitations-to-Your-Testing/

 

Ebook:  Test Strategies in Agile Projects

As agile development methodologies continue to grow in use, software testers also need to change their approach to match the more frequent delivery concepts.  This excellent, comprehensive ebook describes both strategies and tactics for successful testing in this environment.  In particular, the book provides a detailed example of how to plan testing.

http://www.eurostarconferences.com/media/67979/anders%20ebook.pdf

 

Article:  Software Testing: An Art or Science

In this article, the author emphasizes that just as most people have recognized that programming is very much a creative activity (think "craft"), so too is software testing.  He also notes that this is becoming more and more the case as automated testing increases.

http://sitessoftware.com/software-testing-an-art-or-science

 

Article:  Ensuring Product Quality at Google

Google software testing expert, James Whittaker, gives an overview of the process and organizational structure for testing and QA at Google.  One of the interesting insights is that "testers" at Google don't actually test, but instead support development by building the necessary test infrastructure.

http://www.infoq.com/news/2011/03/Ensuring-Product-Quality-Google

 

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Tutorials/References

Tutorial:  Java Bytecode Fundamentals

Fortunately, most of us will never need to concern ourselves with how Java (and any other language that runs on the JVM) gets compiled into bytecode for interpretation by JVM.  But if you do, this article gives an excellent, detailed explanation using simple examples.

http://arhipov.blogspot.com/2011/01/java-bytecode-fundamentals.html

 

Reference:  Visual Studio 2010 Keyboard Shortcuts

Keeping your hands on the keyboard while developing helps improve productivity and concentration.  Here's a nice cheat sheet for keyboard shortcuts for VS 2010 for all of you .NET folks.

http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2010/07/29/visual-studio-2010-keyboard-shortcuts.aspx

 

Reference:  Get Ready for Java 7 with the Free JDK 7 Reference Card

Java 7 is coming to a desktop near you soon.  This downloadable reference card gives you the skinny on the new features (and even some that didn't make it) of the new version.

http://www.developer.com/java/get-ready-for-java-7-with-the-free-jdk-7-reference-card.html

 

Tutorial:  Learn Mongo

Interested in learning about MongoDB or key-value store databases generally?  This excellent online interactive tutorial leads you step-by-step and gives you the hands-on feel for what it's all about.

http://mongly.com/

 

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Career Development/Miscellaneous

Article:  Google’s Quest to Build a Better Boss

Two years ago, Google started work on using data mining techniques to determine the key behaviors that make great supervisors.  Check out the process they used and the 8 points that they came up with.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/13/business/13hire.html?pagewanted=all

http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2011/03/11/business/20110313_sbn_GOOGLE-HIRES-graphic.html?ref=business

 

Article:  Sleep is More Important than Food

Only about 1 in 40 people can function well on less than 8 hours of sleep per night, yet most people get less than 7 hours each day.  This article has some tips on how to get the rest you need.

http://blogs.hbr.org/schwartz/2011/03/sleep-is-more-important-than-f.html

 

Article:  Five Pervasive Myths About Older Software Developers

Older (which I think generally means middle-aged/40+ in our industry) developers are often viewed as having low productivity and being unwilling to change or adapt to new technologies.  Here is some evidence to counteract these stereotypes.

http://www.lessonsoffailure.com/developers/pervasive-myths-older-software-developers/

 

Article:  About Good Leaders, Agile Managers and Value Streams

Different methodologies and processes often call for different tactics in leadership and management.  (Remember that "leadership" and "management" are different things!)  This author says that the best leaders for agile/lean development are those who are focused on the value stream (i.e., improving flow by eliminating waste) of the effort.

http://alaverdyan.com/readme/2011/02/about-good-leaders-agile-managers-and-value-streams/

 

Article:  Career Focus: Software Engineering

This is an article from the IEEE magazine for students.  Each month they give any overview of a career from across the technology spectrum. 

http://www.todaysengineer.org/2011/Mar/career-focus.asp

 

Article:  The Best Productivity Tool You’re Not Using

What did you guess this article is about?  Some new online time-tracking tool or fresh spin on Pomodoro technique?  Well, not quite.  This author makes the case that to truly be productive, you need to set aside (i.e., plan!) "strategic thinking time", without distractions and interruptions, to ponder those big questions that will really make the difference between success and failure.

http://www.bnet.com/blog/time-management/the-best-productivity-tool-you-8217re-not-using/309

 

Article:  Dirty little secrets of HR

We've all heard the stories about how HR doesn't do a very good job of screening resumes.  But what about some of the other stereotypical ideas about HR?  According to a new article in Reader's Digest, many of them are true (at least to some degree).

http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/career/dirty-little-secrets-of-hr/2905

 

Article:  When Smart People are Bad Employees

IT certainly has its fair share (or maybe more!) of quirky (that's the nice word!) people.  So you're likely to run across a few of these folks, whom John McKee refers to as Typhoid Marys.  How do you handle ones who are great at the work itself, but not so easy to work with?

http://bhorowitz.com/2011/01/04/when-smart-people-are-bad-employees/

 

Article:  787 Dreamliner teaches Boeing costly lesson on outsourcing

In general, I think I give fair treatment to the various sides of topics in this newsletter, including outsourcing.  This article is a cautionary tale about how outsourcing your core business functions can prove catastrophic to your organization.

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-hiltzik-20110215,0,442445.column

 

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Useful Utilities

The Final Countdown (Free – Windows 2000/XP/2003/Vista/2008/7 – 308kB)

There are plenty of timed system shutdown/restart utilities out there, but The Final Countdown has some really nice features, including allowing you to schedule the action for any time in the future, including many days or hours, "anti-guest" feature that locks the system until the action, and more.  Of course, it supports scheduled actions of shutdown, restart, hibernate, lock, and sleep.

http://sourceforge.net/projects/finalcountdown/

 

Columns 4 Eclipse (Free – Cross-platform/Eclipse – 2.8MB)

This is a very useful Eclipse plug-in that allows you to perform normal text editing functions on columns of data that extend across multiple lines.  Supported functions include copy, paste, search, replace, change case, and more.

http://columns4eclipse.sourceforge.net/

 

Word Password Recovery (Free – Windows 2000/XP/2003/Vista/2008/7 – 1.56MB)

Ever found an old Microsoft Word document that was password protected and you couldn't remember the password for the life of you?  I'm sure you also remember the sinking feeling that went along with it.  Word Password Recovery uses a brute-force method to recover the document password.  You can seed the recovery process with valid password characters to help speed the process if you like.

http://www.appnimi.com/softwares/1-password-tools/9-word-password-recovery

 

FireSSH (Free – Cross-platform/Firefox – 200kB)

If you already use the Firefox web browser, why bother using a separate SSH client?  FireSSH is an basic-featured SSH client extension for Firefox written in Javascript.

http://firessh.mozdev.org/

 

Just For Fun

ClassNamer

Last month, we featured the startup name generator.  Now that you've gotten your startup running, you'll have to actually create an application and you might get "developer's block" and be unable to think of good class names.  Well, ClassNamer comes to the rescue.

http://www.classnamer.com/

 

What would Feynman do?

Some companies, like Microsoft and Google, are famous (or infamous!) for asking those "lateral-thinking" puzzle interview questions.  Here's one developer's take on what would happen if Richard Feynman came in for an interview.

http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ericlippert/archive/2011/02/14/what-would-feynman-do.aspx

 

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