Morning Coffee 57
- Scott Hanselman’s post on Mindful
Coding
reminded me of the practice of
rubberducking. The basic
idea is that when you’re stuck on a problem, you explain it out loud
to an inanimate object – aka the rubber duck. (though when I
originally heard about this practice, it was a teddy bear.) Maybe
instgead of Coding Mindfully, we should be Coding Out Loud?
- Quick side note to the previous bullet: I have often worked thru a
problem by explaining it to my
wife who, like Scott’s wife,
nods in all the right places, but cares not about such things. But
calling your wife a rubber duck is bad for your health, so I’d
rather call it Coding Out Loud.
- I’m a couple weeks behind on this, but Microsoft along with BEA,
BMC, Cisco, Dell, EMC, HP, IBM, Intel, and Sun
submitted the Service
Modeling
Language to
the W3C. For those not plauing along at home, SML is the new name
for the System Definition
Model and is a
core deliverable of the Dynamic System
Initiative. Good to see
it’s gotten such broad support for this.
- Jezz Santos and Edward Baker wrote a series of posts entitled
“Factories
201“.
The entire series is good, but I particularly liked Jezz’ post How
Long Will It
Take? His
rough estimate is that it takes at least five products built with a
software factory before you recoup your investment in building the
factory itself. Sounds like a fair assumption.
Posted by devhawk.net on April 4, 2007. Filed under Morning Coffee. Tagged Modelling, Operations & Software Factories.
← Back to blog