[LINK] Low-code and no-code development .. but .. security?
Tom Worthington
tom.worthington at tomw.net.au
Wed Nov 25 08:54:42 AEDT 2020
On 23/11/20 6:43 pm, David Lochrin wrote:
> On 2020-11-21 08:47, Tom Worthington wrote:
>
>> Agile seem to work okay for the teams of ANU computer students ...
>
> ... UTS students ... the second year of their degree. ...
The ANU TechLauncher teams are in the third year or later, including
masters.
> ... did the "customer" write a detailed System Requirements document ...
The projects range from helping collect the requirements and build a
prototype including selecting the tools and methods, to working on
already developed requirements. The customer can be an individual who
knows nothing about computers, up to a major software company with
strict procedures. One team I tutored were building a biometric feedback
system for a psychologist treating people with a fear of flying. Another
was a engineering company needing to simulate a new processor for
military radar.
The students have already done years on tools and techniques, so the
emphasis here is on teamwork and communication skills: can they produce
something useful, soundly designed, which the customer is happy with?
There is an overview at:
https://cs.anu.edu.au/TechLauncher/current_students/course_outline/#techlauncher-overview
Shayne Flint and others who developed the program, wrote a paper about
it: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7942964
Here is a later paper on my bit out it:
https://doi.org/10.1109/TALE48000.2019.9225921
--
Tom Worthington, MEd FHEA FACS CP IP3P http://www.tomw.net.au
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