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| Re: Flash movie (viewlets) tutorials of Useme available online [message #5360 is a reply to message #2859] |
Mon, 10 March 2008 18:47  |
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Originally posted by: neil.prestemon.sri.com
Given the wide variety of approaches to Requirements capture, definition,
management, (etc) - in common practice in the industry; and the latitude
in how these approaches are supported in various RM tools, being able to
SEE the tools in-use in these videos made a big difference for me, as far
as being able to understand the approach that is being taken with Useme.
Other RM tools offer a structured, forms-based way of capturing
requirements data, but Useme proposes to model the functionality of the
use cases in a way that, as far as I can tell, is unique. (My practical
experience is limited to Doors, and a few other tools which I have briefly
evaluated).
I see great potential in this approach, to correcting one of the biggest
problems of software development: requirements capture, definition, and
interpretation. (As a person who is frequently involved in QA - I'm
especially interested in how we can apply this to generation of test cases
for reliable validation of requirements).
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| Re: Flash movie (viewlets) tutorials of Useme available online [message #561903 is a reply to message #2859] |
Mon, 10 March 2008 18:47  |
|
Originally posted by: neil.prestemon.sri.com
Given the wide variety of approaches to Requirements capture, definition,
management, (etc) - in common practice in the industry; and the latitude
in how these approaches are supported in various RM tools, being able to
SEE the tools in-use in these videos made a big difference for me, as far
as being able to understand the approach that is being taken with Useme.
Other RM tools offer a structured, forms-based way of capturing
requirements data, but Useme proposes to model the functionality of the
use cases in a way that, as far as I can tell, is unique. (My practical
experience is limited to Doors, and a few other tools which I have briefly
evaluated).
I see great potential in this approach, to correcting one of the biggest
problems of software development: requirements capture, definition, and
interpretation. (As a person who is frequently involved in QA - I'm
especially interested in how we can apply this to generation of test cases
for reliable validation of requirements).
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