Opening Statement by San Murugesan
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December 31, 2002 | Authored By: Ed Yourdon, Tim Lister, Tim Lister, Tim Lister, Jim Highsmith, Rob Thomsett, Robert Charette, Robert Charette
Thomas C. Schelling was awarded the 2005 Nobel Prize in economics, 1 but his most famous work was not strictly in that field; it was in game theory.
July 31, 2006 | Authored By: E.M. Bennatan
June 30, 2005 | Authored By: Anthony Tarantino
This issue of Cutter Business Technology Journal (CBTJ) describes the range of methods, tools, techniques, and applications of the fintech revolution. The articles demonstrate fintech’s importance and explore the different levels of fintech technologies, experimentation, and applications. While many questions remain, fintech is unstoppable. Institutions, companies, and whole countries are adopting it for financial, political, and even military purposes. Make no mistake: fintech is a game-changer.
January 21, 2019 | Authored By: Steve Andriole
December 31, 2002 | Authored By: Ed Yourdon, Tim Lister, Tim Lister, Tim Lister, Jim Highsmith, Rob Thomsett, Robert Charette, Robert Charette
As manager of business systems analysis at Focus on the Family -- an international, nonprofit organization of Christian ministries including print publications, radio, and video -- Paul Lewa
October 31, 1999 | Authored By: Paul Lewandowski
The digital age is in full force.
September 7, 2010 | Authored By: Christine Davis
One of the unresolved issues associated with software methodologies is how to select a software product release date.
November 30, 2001 | Authored By: Luke Hohmann
Software Teams -- Your Most Important
May 31, 2004 | Authored By: E.M. Bennatan
With the recent economic downturn, technology managers -- looking for ways to stretch their budgets -- are considering or reconsidering the option of moving some or all of their software development activities to locations where labor costs are less expensive.
May 31, 2008 | Authored By: Stacey Berlow
One of the "megatrends" proposed by the Cutter Technology Council is a manifestation of the "dark side" of IT systems development: projects fail, and the developer and customer sue each other for the
June 30, 2000 | Authored By: Ed Yourdon
A psychological contract is a construct comprising an individual’s assumptions and beliefs about what each party to a contract must do and how they are to do it. All individuals in both parties have their own unique psychological versions of that contract, which makes managing expectations quite challenging. In this Update, we explore the topic of harnessing the value of the psychological contract.
December 1, 2015 | Authored By: Sara Cullen
Opening Statement David Garmus
Cutter IT Journal VOL. 26, NO. 9
September 25, 2013 | Authored By: Israel Gat, Tadas Remencius, Alberto Sillitti, Giancarlo Succi, Jelena Vlasenko
TECHNICAL VITALITY OF TECHNICAL PROFESSIONALS:
December 31, 1995 | Authored By: Paul Gehrmann
This article is a compilation of contributions from the Guest Editor’s colleagues at the Atlantic Systems Guild, who believe that the work modes of the pandemic years may have signaled a change in the way we need to work from now on. The article is organized into six potential patterns, from reinvention of the office, the value of group work, and challenges of remote work to work-life-balance, team cohesion difficulties, and the potential to move to an entirely virtual model.
March 18, 2022 | Authored By: Tom DeMarco, Peter Hruschka, Tim Lister, James Robertson, Suzanne Robertson