Statistics that support the critical need for requirements management improvements…
The polls are open!
We’ve added polls to the site – in the sidebar. Please vote when you see them – they will help us drive content, learn, etc.
Recent comments in the sidebar at Tyner Blain
The 5 most recent comments now show at the bottom top of the sidebar on our blog. Check these out – they make it easy to stay on top of the current discussions. Note: linkbacks also show up as comments and therefore on the list
Bookmarking at del.icio.us now available on Tyner Blain
We can now add del.icio.us bookmarks for any post at Tyner Blain! Click the link at the bottom of the post (just left of the permalink). For anyone who hasn’t used it, del.icio.us is a social bookmarking site that allows people to search the web for contextual information (like a […]
Foundation Series: Structured Requirements
Karl Wiegers wrote the book on structured requirements – Software Requirements, 2nd Edition, Karl E. Wiegers. If you are involved in managing requirements, you should own this book. Even if you don’t follow his approach to managing requirements, or don’t like how he deals with use cases, you should still […]
Technorati rank – two steps forward, three steps back
Well, we had climbed from our lowly beginnings of 983,109 to a high point of 415,722 at the old domain yesterday. We start over today at 1,054,428. Other stats to live up to: total page views at the old site – 3727 in 41 days = 91 views per day […]
We’ve moved!
Welcome to our new home tynerblain.com/blog! If you use feedburner, nothing should have changed (except all the permalinks are now in this domain) – you will still subscribe to the RSS for our blog via feeds.feedburner.com/TynerBlain. It should be completely seemless for you. I, however, have been unpacking boxes all […]
IEEE Austin Event: Seilevel presents on requirements
Jerry Aubin and Joe Shideler of Seilevel will be giving their presentation, Beyond the System Shall – A Journey from Good to Great Requirements. Although this meeting is sponsored by the Austin chapter of IEEE, it is open to the public. [Update: The meeting is from 6:30-9:00pm on Wednesday 15 […]
Foundation Series: Software Process (Waterfall Process versus Incremental Process)
A software process is the set of activities required to create software. This process can be defined with very precise steps, roles and responsibilities. The process can also be defined with a more fluid set activities in pursuit of concrete, high level objectives. Or software can be created without explicitly […]