Together with Steve Wheeler and Martin Ebner I could place another paper on Twitter at the WCC 2010 conference. Its title “All I need to know about Twitter in Education I learnedin Kindergarten” as well as the basic rules derive from Robert Fulghum’s 1988 book “All I Really Need To Know I Learned in Kindergarten“. During my diploma studies I wrote an article about the basic principles of pair programming that was adapted from the Fulghum book and thought: “one day you’ll borough these rules as well…” I’m pretty excited about the result:
Abstract:
Share everything.
Play fair.
Don’t hit people.
Put things back where you found them.
Clean up your own mess.
Don’t take things that aren’t yours.
Say you’re sorry when you hurt somebody.
Wash your hands before you eat.
Flush.
Warm cookies and cold milk are good for you.
Live a balanced life – learn some and think some and draw and paint and sing and dance and play and work every day some.
Take a nap every afternoon.
When you go out into the world, watch out for traffic, hold hands and stick together.
Be aware of wonder.
Classical tools for supporting software engineering teams (collaborative development environment, CDE) are designed to support one team during the development of a product. Often the required data sources or experts reside outside of the internal project team and thus not provided by these CDEs. This paper describes an approach for a community-embedded CDE (CCDE), which is capable of handling multiple projects of several organizations, providing inter-project knowledge sharing and developer awareness. The presented approach uses the mashup pattern to integrate multiple data sources in order to provide software teams with an exactingly development environment.
Reference: W. Reinhardt and S.Rinne: An Architecture to Support Learning, Awareness, and Transparency in Social Software Engineering. In: International Conference on Interactive Computer Aided Learning (ICL 2009).
These are my slides for the presentation at MASHL09 Special Track at ICL 2009 Conference later today. Let’s see what the Mashup experts tell me about the idea of connecting several tools in the context of software engineering…
I’ve uploaded my slides for todays presentation on my upcoming project group PLME at the University Paderborn. The project group will deal with learning and working in social software engineering and a platform to support communication, coordination and collaboration in multiple projects.
Recent Comments