April 10th, 2008
The Volere Requirements Process is a full lifecycle method for gathering project requirements.Requirements Types
- Functional requirements are the fundamental or essential subject matter of the product.
- Nonfunctional requirements are the properties that the functions must have, such as performance and usability.
- Project constraints are restrictions on the product due to the budget or the time available to build the product.
- Design constraints impose restrictions on how the product must be designed.
Managing RFC’s(Request for Change). If you can’t lock in your stakeholders to some basic delivery guidelines you could be headed for a requirements gathering nightmare.
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Tags: project management, requirements, tasks
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March 23rd, 2008
After spending too much time looking and searching for various ssh commands as I needed them, I finally realized that having the entire list of commands to look at was much easier than searching Google for them. So just in case someone else needs it here is a PDF file with “all” the commands.
FreeBSD SSH Commands
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March 20th, 2008
A website manager is an online content producer and editor. Despite the fact that content is everywhere, the job is not an easy one because so many different areas of an organization have a different vision of what role content should play on the company’s website.
You have senior management who often does not understand web strategy or how social the web has become. Then there is the IT department that may push website features that are unnecessary. The marketing department can expect graphic heavy content and may not understand usability issues.
The Web Manager has a lot of responsibility but may end up feeling like a glorified secretary when he or she is pulled in five different directions by different departments within the organization.
For this reason it is important to hire an adaptable individual as your organization’s Website Manager. You want someone that plays well with others, can accept direction, but can also take the self-initiative to prioritize requests.
A Website Manager must also be able to wear several hats. He or she must be a fluent communicator, and have an excellent grasp of the English language.
Since most websites maintain blogs and community forums, the Web Manager must also have the ability to moderate incoming messages from the user community. This can translate into customer service and relationship management. The Web Manager must also be able to discern when it is appropriate to delete user generated posts, and when it is appropriate to respond.
The Web Manager must also keep abreast in website usability issues and keep up with what is going on in the web industry (such as social networking).
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