Monday, 25 July 2011

Maturity Models Have It Backwards « Developsense Blog

Maturity Models Have It Backwards « Developsense Blog

Happened to stumble on this whilst searching for TPI® NEXT information. I think the key point is most organisations stop once they get to the low to middle stages of models (the 'defined' or 'repeatable' level and miss the point of getting to the higher levels ('optimising') which is where the most benefit is achieved. At that point, the clever analogy that Michael uses starts to come true.

Continuing on the same theme, it's as if the organisation has gone to school, learnt their times tables, but haven't grown up. It's probably a fault of most models and most organisations using them (I know I've been guilty of this) that once the teenage level of maturity (strict process adherence) are reached, then 'mission accomplished'.

There really needs to be greater emphasis on models and consultants to push to get to the truly high levels of maturity; where the organisation 'thinks' on how to approach different projects and processes are adaptable and chosen according to the conditions and goals. Scott Duncan's comment alsostruck a chord.

Thursday, 21 July 2011

RDoc cheatsheet

Lovely handy RDoc cheatsheet. Should make sure I actually bother writing handover documentation for the keyword driven framework I'm building.

Monday, 17 January 2011

Test Driving Your Code with OCUnit

I'm liking development in XCode. Tools are so intuitive. OCUnit is built into XCode, with near identical syntax to other XUnit frameworks. HW simulation available which while obvious, isn't always done well for many devices. I'm not sure the arguments of a 'closed platform' hold completely against Apple; they have made it very simple to develop apps, and if you want your app available for your enterprise only, you can do that (it seems). Sure, it's filtered.

I'm keen to look at Android. It's obviously easier to get tools out there, so I'm eager to see the maturity of the dev and unit test tools themselves.

Test Driving Your Code with OCUnit

Wednesday, 5 January 2011

Zennaware » Home of Cornerstone Subversion Client for Mac OS X

Finally got sorted installing dev tools on my mac. Looked at Git but for the meantime I'm happy with SVN. Set up an account with Assembla, and have crawled around the interwebs dowloading potentially useful tools. It's not too strange coming back to development on a Nix box but all this pretty GUI stuff is rather nice.

Zennaware » Home of Cornerstone Subversion Client for Mac OS X

Great comparison on hosted SCM services here

http://www.svnhostingcomparison.com/