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HM Government best management practice
The HM Government best management practice website has a bunch of interesting pod- and vodcasts on programme and project management for beginners.
Information junkie and ideas enthusiast. New father and new to London after a lifetime in Germany, Vice president at NTT DATA UK: I am an occasional blogger and more frequent tweeter (twinstan). All the views here are my own.
Saturday, 24 September 2011
Twinstan's interesting links roundup on Diigo (weekly)
Saturday, 17 September 2011
Twinstan's interesting links roundup on Diigo (weekly)
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OK, the number of manifestos is getting a little silly, but there is one statement here I really like; "Accept everything is a draft").
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I stumbled across Peter Morvilles' user experience treasure map in a disappointing presentation on cross-channel design. This is an excellent summary of the user experience lifecycle deliverables and his take on how they fit together (into a treasure map).
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30+ iPad Apps For Designers, Developers And Creative Types | SpyreStudios
I still love my iPad. This is a great selection of sketch and design apps.
Saturday, 10 September 2011
Twinstan's interesting links roundup on Diigo (weekly)
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Slowest Load Times of Microsoft Sharepoint | Visual.ly
I love the sharepoint features, but hate the loading times...
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(Agile 2011) Lean UX: Getting Out of the Deliverables Business
Lots of pretty pictures and a good basic message about the need for UX-guys to focus on the experience and not the beautiful deliverables in a lean project. Would have liked to see more about approaches.
Saturday, 3 September 2011
Twinstan's interesting links roundup on Diigo (weekly)
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Stupid, Stupid Client | UX Magazine
I don't like the title, but the commentary on approaches to help your client understand the user experience design process are solid.
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Subtle priming of meetings and decisions seems to have a big effect - no surprises from my side here - context is everything! I fear I am becoming known as being a little obsessive about this stuff though...("thought-police" has come up a couple of times in recent feedback sessions ;-)).
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My thoughtful colleague (see previous postings) is once again busy reading up on interesting things (and in particular software engineering capability building. In this context he has revisited CMMI, thus causing me to revisit CMMI, having dismissed it as a truly helpful tool several years back (the last time I even surfed the SEI website was about 5 years ago). Shame on me! There has been a good deal of thoroughly interesting improvements and the SEI lot have build an impressive portfolio of useful materials. This link is an appraisal of how to combine agile and CMMI elements - a little dry, but quite thorough.