Project management in IT, Software development methodologies
| Posted: October 17th, 2008 | admin
Tags: agile development, methodologies, requirements
Software projects start with requirements. But between 40% and 60% of software failures and defects are the result of poor software management and requirements definition. Managing requirements can be a challenge because we have been taught to capture all requirements up front, and achieve customer sign off. One of the most visible differences between agile software development and traditional software development is the way that we approach requirements. Although Agile Development is much more flexible than more traditional development methodologies,
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Project management in IT, Software development methodologies
| Posted: October 17th, 2007 | admin
Tags: design, development process, model, requirements, source code
The waterfall model (one of the approaches to software development or web development project) describes a linear development method that is often considered the classic approach to the systems development life cycle. This model is a sequential model, used to create different kinds of software, where project development is seen as flowing steadily downwards (like a waterfall) through the phases of software development requirements analysis, UI design, software implementation, project verification and software maintenance. The process itself can be divided into different phases, depending on the IT project or other web development requirements.
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