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Chapter 1, SE (Pressman) and Chapter 1, IT Project Management (Schwalbe) Software/ software engineering IT project failure / investment Project / program.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 1, SE (Pressman) and Chapter 1, IT Project Management (Schwalbe) Software/ software engineering IT project failure / investment Project / program."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Chapter 1, SE (Pressman) and Chapter 1, IT Project Management (Schwalbe) Software/ software engineering IT project failure / investment Project / program Project and portfolio management Project management framework Project success factors Successful organizations and managers Suggested skills for project managers 2

3 Chapter 2, IT Project Management (Schwalbe) Systems Philosophy – Business, organization, technology Organization frames – Structure, HR, political, symbolic Project life cycle – Concept, development, implementation, close-out 3

4 Chapter 4, IT Project Management (Schwalbe) Recent trends in IT projects – Globalization, outsourcing, and virtual teams Project management process groups – Initiating, planning, executing, monitoring and control, and closing processes Project integration management – Key processes and the relevant discussion 4

5 Chapter 5, IT Project Management (Schwalbe) Collecting requirements – Different methods Defining scope – Estimates for all resources Creating the WBS – Different approaches Verifying scope – Formal acceptance Controlling scope – Change control 5

6 Chapter 6, IT Project Management (Schwalbe) Defining activities – Activity list containing activity name, identifier, attributes, and brief description Sequencing activities – determining the dependencies – Mandatory, discretionary, external – evaluating the reasons for dependencies Estimating activity resources – list of activity resource requirements, resource breakdown structure, project document updates Estimating activity durations – Duration VS effort, activity duration estimates – Three point estimates Developing the schedule – Project schedule, Gantt charts 6

7 Developing the schedule – Tracking Gantt charts Critical path method – Longest path, earliest time Schedule trade-offs using CPM – Free slack, total slack Shortening the schedule – Crashing, fast tracking Critical chain scheduling – Availability of critical resources, project and feeding buffer Controlling the schedule 7

8 Chapter 7, IT Project Management (Schwalbe) Basic Concepts – Cost, profit, profit margin, direct and indirect costs, sunk cost, learning curve theory Estimating costs – Rough Order of Magnitude, budgetary, and definitive cost estimates Cost estimation tools and techniques – Top-down and bottom-up estimates, and parametric modeling – Problems related to IT project costs estimates Determining and controlling budget – Earned Value Management 8

9 Chapter 8 & 10, IT Project Management (Schwalbe) Project quality management – Planning quality – Performing quality assurance – Performing quality control Project communication management – Identifying stakeholders – Planning communications – Distributing information – Managing stakeholder expectations – Reporting performance 9

10 Chapter 11, IT Project Management (Schwalbe) Basic concepts – Risk, positive/negative risk management, Risk utility / tolerance (risk averse, risk seeking, risk neutral) Planning risk management – Risk management plan, contingency and fallback plans Identifying risks – Brainstorming, Delphi technique, interviewing, SWOT analysis, checklists, risk registers Performing qualitative and quantitative risk analysis Planning risk responses – Risk avoidance, risk acceptance, risk transference, risk mitigation, Risk exploitation, Risk sharing Monitoring and controlling risks 10

11 Chapter 8, SE (Pressman) Design, goal of design, design process in SE context, Process of design – Quality guidelines and attributes Evolution of software design process – Procedural, object-oriented, aspect-oriented Design concepts – Abstraction, architecture, pattern, information hiding, separation of concerns, refactoring, design classes 11

12 Chapter 11, SE (Pressman) Importance of user interface design – Useful, useable, used Three golden rules – Place the user in control – Reduce the user’s memory load – Make the interface consistent Analysis and design process – Interface analysis and modeling – Interface design – Interface construction – Interface validation 12

13 Interface analysis – User analysis, task analysis and modeling, analysis of display content and work environment Interface design steps Design issues – System response time, user help facilities, error information handling, menu and command labeling, application accessibility, internationalization Web application design interface guidelines – Anticipation, communication, consistency, controlled autonomy, efficiency, flexibility, focus, Fitt’s law, learnability, readability, metaphors Design Evaluation 13

14 Chapter 12, SE (Pressman) Patterns, effective design patterns Describing patterns Types of patterns – Architecture, data, component, interface design, and webapp patterns – Creational, structural, and behavioral patterns Design tasks User interface design patterns 14

15 Chapter 13, SE (Pressman) WebApp quality – Usability, functionality, reliability, efficiency, maintainability, security, availability, scalability, time-to- market Content quality – Scope, depth, background, authority, currency, stability, Design goals of WebApp – Simplicity, consistency, identity, robustness, navigability, visual appeal, compatibility WebApp design – Interface, aesthetic, navigation, and architecture design 15

16 Chapter 14, SE (Pressman) Multi-aspects concept – Transcendental view, user view, manufacturer’s view, product view, value-based view Software quality – Effective software process, useful product, add value for producer and user of a software product Software quality models – Garvin’s quality dimensions, McCall’s quality factors, ISO 9126 quality model Software quality dilemma Achieving software quality 16

17 Chapter 15, SE (Pressman) Software reviews Cost impact of software defects Defect amplification model Review metrics and their use – Preparation effort (E p ), assessment effort (E p ), Rework effort (E r ), work product size (WPS), minor errors found (Err minor ), major errors found (Err major ) Formal and informal reviews – Review meeting, review reporting and record keeping, review guidelines 17

18 Chapter 16, SE (Pressman) Elements of software quality assurance – Standards, reviews and audits, testing, error collection and analysis, change management, education, vendor management, security management, safety, risk management SQA tasks Goals, attributes, metrics – Requirements quality, design quality, code quality, quality control effectiveness Statistical quality assurance Software reliability 18

19 Chapter 20, SE (Pressman) Quality dimensions – Content, function, structure, usability, navigability, performance, compatibility, interoperability, security Testing strategy Content testing Database testing User interface testing – Testing interface mechanisms, usability tests, compatibility tests 19

20 Component-level testing – Equivalence partitioning, boundary value analysis, path testing Navigation testing – Testing navigation syntax and semantics Configuration testing – Server-side and client-side issues Security testing – Firewall, authentication, encryption, authorization Performance testing – Load and stress testing 20

21 Chapter 22, SE (Pressman) Change management Software configuration management SCM scenario Elements of SCM – Component, process, construction, and human elements SCM repository SCM process – Identification of objects 21

22 Version control – Project repository, version management capability, make facility, issue/bug tracking Change control Configuration audit – compliments technical reviews Status reporting Configuration management for WebApp – Content, people, scalability, politics 22

23 Chapter 23, SE (Pressman) Measurement and quality assessment Framework for product metrics – Measure, measurement, and metrics – Formulation, collection, analysis, interpretation, feedback – Principles for metrics characterization and validation Metrics for requirements model – Function-based metrics – Metrics for specification quality Metric for design model – Architectural design metrics – Metric for object-oriented design 23

24 Class-oriented metrics – Weighted methods per class, depth of the inheritance tree, number of children, coupling, response for class, lack of cohesion Component-level design metrics – Cohesion, coupling, and complexity Operation-oriented metrics – Average operation size, operation complexity average number of parameters per operation Design metrics for WebApps Metrics for source code Metrics for object-oriented testing Metrics for maintenance 24

25 Chapter 30, SE (Pressman) Software process improvement Framework for SPI SPI support groups, maturity and immaturity models Assessment and gap analysis Education and training Selection and justification Installation / migration Evaluation Risk management Critical success factors 25

26 CMMI – Continuous as well as staged model CMMI capability levels – Incomplete, performed, managed, defined, quantitatively managed, optimized Example – process area – Specific goals and practices, general goals and practices Other SPI frameworks – SPICE, Bootstrap, TickIT, PSP, TSP SPI return on investment SPI trends 26

27 Chapter 29, SE (Pressman) Unified theory of software evolution Reengineering – Business process reengineering and software reengineering BPR model – Business definition, process identification, Process evaluation, process specification and design, prototyping, refinement and instantiation Software reengineering process model – Inventory analysis, document restructuring, reverse engineering, code restructuring, data restructuring, forward engineering Reverse engineering 27

28 Restructuring – Code restructuring, data restructuring Forward engineering – Client-server architectures, object-oriented architectures Economics of reengineering – Cost benefit analysis Software reuse – Benefits of reuse 28

29 Chapter 16, SE (Sommerville) Problems with reuse – Increased maintenance costs; lack of tool support; not-invented- here syndrome; creating, maintaining, and using a component library The reuse landscape – Application frameworks, legacy system wrapping, service-oriented systems, software product lines, COTS product reuse Key factors for reuse – Development schedule, expected software lifetime, background, skills, and experience of development team, criticality of software and its non-functional requirements, application domain, system platform Application frameworks Software Product lines 29

30 COTS product reuse Benefits of COTS product reuse Problems with COTS product reuse COTS-solution systems ERP systems – Architecture of ERP systems – Limitations of reuse Configuration of COTS-solution systems COTS-integrated systems – Problems with COTS-integrated systems 30

31 Chapter 17, SE (Sommerville) Component-based software engineering Essentials of CBSE – Independent components, component standards, middleware, development process Characteristics of components – Standardized, independent, composable, deployable, documented Elements of component model – Interfaces, usage, deployment CBSE processes – Development for reuse, development with reuse – Component acquisition, management, and certification 31

32 CBSE for reuse Possible Changes and other factors Software Process Component composition – Sequential, hierarchical, and additive composition Components incompatibility – Parameter and operational incompatibility, operational incompleteness Trade-offs 32


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