Sep. 15 Smartsourcing | |
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| Speaker: | Robb has over 30 years of practical business and technical experience as a strategic business/IT consultant, systems and data base designer and programme/project manager. He has many years experience in designing, developing and implementing products for the large international consultancies such as PA Group and IBM Global Services being the co-author of Tetrarch, an IT strategic planning product, now owned by PA. He has been the Technical Vice President for a US based software service supplier providing outsourced Business Intelligence capability to a number of large manufacturers, using internet based Data Mart technology. He is a specialist in the application of structured methods and has a strong background in Operational Research and its application to metrics and benchmarking. He was an academic in his early life with a Masters in OR and doctoral research in Computer Science. He is a director of QVIP, a company specialising in driving improvements via balanced scorecard IS assessment and IT project benchmarking (see |
| Title: | Smartsourcing |
| Abstract: | The IT industry has accumulated about 20 years of outsourcing experience, and most present-day organisations use outsourcing in one shape or another. This talk addresses today’s need to be selective and how with Smartsourcing we can assess outsource providers to ensure that they continuously strive to enhance their service levels. |
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| Comments: | More Detailed Abstract In the early days, many organisations simply outsourced IT – lock, stock and barrel – and in most cases this was found to be a sub-optimal approach. Hence today’s emphasis on Smart Sourcing, whereby companies are selective, aiming to retain strategic capabilities while farming out services that can be provided more efficiently by specialist firms. In the case of selective outsourcing of applications development and support, it is essential that these processes have a quantitative basis to help:
We have been retained to Benchmark application services providers to ensure that they sustain their focus on performance, improve visibility and transparency of their achievements, and to ensure that they continuously strive to enhance their service levels. Using our proprietary database (QuantiMetrics owns the world’s largest known validated database of completed software project and maintenance and support activities) our QPeP Benchmarking Service is particularly well suited to this purpose as it benchmarks projects on an individual like-for-like basis. |
Oct. 6 Using state transition testing | |
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| Title: | Using state transition testing |
| Abstract: | Faced with the seemingly impossible task of testing a system that has an infinite number of operational scenarios, a tester needs practical test techniques that define a finite number of tests and at the same time give realistic coverage. For the testing of function rich systems, state transition testing, enhanced by defining coverage level based on testing trees, fulfils this need. This presentation will demonstrate state transition testing and discuss three different levels of coverage that can be achieved. |
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Nov. 10 Open Source: joint with | |
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| Speaker: | Alan Lenton – Chief Technology Officer and Game Designer, ibgames |
| Title: | Open Source Software |
| Abstract: | In the last ten years Open Source software has come from being an 'interesting' plaything for hobbyists and geeks into the mainstream of business computing. The success of Open Source has been built on the rock solid components of the Linux operating system, the Apache web server, the MySQL database, and a scripting language whose name starts with 'P' – Perl, PHP or Python, depending on your religion. These components are commonly known by the acronym LAMP. This talk will look at the LAMP components, as well as Linux distributions and some of the strengths and weaknesses of Open Source software, and strategies for deploying it in business. The talk will also attempt to strip away some of the myths surrounding Open Source software – myths pushed both by fanatical supporters, and by equally fanatical opponents. |
| Comments: | The “Open Source Technology Stack” which has been in wide use for many years but only recently gained an acronym, is referred to as “LAMP”. LAMP stands for four components
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Nov. 29 Christmas Lecture | |
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| Speaker: | Neil Barrett |
| Title: | Computability and Crime – How Information Security Affects Criminal Prosecutions |
| Abstract: | As computers become implicitly involved in the execution, detection and prosecution of increasing numbers of cases, the issue of activity and responsibility becomes correspondingly more important. But ascribing responsibility for computer-recorded events is built on the foundation of information security – a poorly understood, poorly implemented aspect of our high-tech world. In this talk, I will explore the practical and theoretical limits of information security, and show that – at least in theory – a perfect solution is impossible and that we will therefore always be faced with ‘judgement calls’ in this crucial forensic arena. |
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Jan. 19 VoIP | |
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| Speaker: | For two years Peter chaired the He was one of the founding members of the |
| Title: | Current Issues in UK VoIP – an Introduction |
| Abstract: | Starting from when we lift the receiver, Peter will follow a phone call across the public telecoms network and onto the internet, discussing the different types of VoIP available, the issues that surround implementing them, including phone number provision, call quality, firewalling VoIP, identifying the location of a VoIP subscriber and connecting a 999 call. Topics covered:
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| Comments: | See John Naughton's |
Feb. 23 Web Intelligence | |
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| Speaker: | Nigel is also Vice-President Knowledge Services and Deputy President of the BCS. |
| Title: | Web intelligence |
| Abstract: | The extraordinary human construct that is the World Wide Web is a truly Disruptive Technology. There are now hundreds of millions of users, billions of indexed web resources, it is used in every country on Earth and yet only a tiny percentage of users is trained in any way. This remarkable construct is both massively distributed and largely open. With this amount of content and usage the integration of information across space and time leads to new opportunities. From on-line shopping to collaborative e-Science the web is changing how information is generated, deployed and used. This lecture will examine the extent to which intelligent web services are evolving to cope with diverse sources of information on a global scale. It will examine the particular way in which Artificial Intelligence is being woven into the web. |
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Mar 23 Guided Tour of Science Museum (Visit) | |
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| Speaker: | Geoff Marshall |
| Title: | Guided Tour of Science Museum, London |
| Abstract: | Morning 10:30: A guided tour of the Science Museum given by Geoff Marshall, a London Registered Blue Badge Guide and a professional scientist, finishing in the gallery which features Charles Babbage (1.5 to 2 hours) The tour will include items from the following:
Afternoon: Science Museum’s |
| Comments: | Travel by coach, with suitable pick-up points. |
Apr 27 Gaming technology | |
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| Speaker: | Simon Prytherch, Head of Internal Development |
| Title: | Computer Games Development: Past, Present & Future |
| Abstract: | This year will herald the arrival of new variants of both the XBOX from Microsoft and the Sony Playstation. The games industry is worth 20 billion dollars globally and UK companies are a significant force, contributing positively to the UK balance of payments to the tune of £200million in 2004. Simon Prytherch is Head of Internal Development for Empire Interactive a leading computer games developer and publisher who produce a number of very successful titles across all current games platforms. The average game takes between 70 and 120 man years and several million pounds to make; this is a chance to look behind the scenes at how your favourite games are put together. |
| Comments: | Simon gave a talk for Oxford Uni Computer Society a couple of years ago and has given a number of talks at the Games Developers Conference in the States and Europe |
May 25 AGM /Semantic Web | |
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| Speaker: | He has consulted on and developed numerous high-profile projects, including 300 million GBP education systems, national and international metadata standards, and IEEE reports. He is currently writing a series of semantic-web biased articles for xml.com, and is the guest |
| Title: | The Semantic Web: Too clever for its own good? |
| Abstract: | The Semantic Web is the natural next evolutionary step of the Web. By adding computer digestible semantics and logic to the currently available information, we can create software that helps us work more efficiently and discover new patterns and relationships. The enabling technologies have been around for some time – XML, RDF and OWL – together with the software to process and analyse this exciting new information. So why isn’t the Semantic Web a reality today? Will we see the Semantic Web in our lifetimes? And, most importantly, what are the technical and non-technical issues holding it back? This talk will attempt to answer these questions, to discover if the Semantic Web will be relegated to the Betamax and MiniDisc of history – great technologies with little impact |
| Comments: | Box UK supplies XML-based content management software for many |