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Structegy: The Project
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A structured approach to strategic. Decision making in software projects. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Follow Me on Twitter. Carlo Pescio - blog. A Physics of Software. 169; 2011 Carlo Pescio. Powered by Blogger.
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Structegy: August 2011
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A structured approach to strategic. Decision making in software projects. Sunday, August 7, 2011. Posted by Carlo Pescio. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Follow Me on Twitter. Carlo Pescio - blog. A Physics of Software. 169; 2011 Carlo Pescio. Powered by Blogger.
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Structegy: test
http://www.structegy.com/2011/08/test.html
A structured approach to strategic. Decision making in software projects. Sunday, August 7, 2011. Posted by Carlo Pescio. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Follow Me on Twitter. Carlo Pescio - blog. A Physics of Software. 169; 2011 Carlo Pescio. Powered by Blogger.
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Carlo Pescio: September 2011
http://www.carlopescio.com/2011_09_01_archive.html
Friday, September 02, 2011. Notes on Software Design, Chapter 15: Run-Time Entanglement. So, here I am, back to my unpopular :-) series on the Physics of Software. It's time to explore the run-time side of entanglement, or more exactly, begin to explore, as I'm trying to write shorter posts, hoping to increase frequency as well. A lot of time has gone by, so here is a recap from Chapter 12. Two clusters of information are entangled when performing a change on one immediately requires a change on the other.
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Carlo Pescio: May 2011
http://www.carlopescio.com/2011_05_01_archive.html
Saturday, May 21, 2011. The CAP Theorem, the Memristor, and the Physics of Software. Where I present seemingly unrelated facts that are, in fact, not unrelated at all :-). If you keep current on technology, you're probably familiar with the proliferation of NoSQL. We'd like data to be consistent (that is, to respect all the underlying constraints at any time, especially replication constraints). We call this property C. By Seth Gilbert and Nancy Lynch. Availability is an external. Property, something the...
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Carlo Pescio: No Controller, Episode 3: Inglorious Objekts
http://www.carlopescio.com/2012/07/no-controller-episode-3-inglorious.html
Monday, July 30, 2012. No Controller, Episode 3: Inglorious Objekts. A week ago or so, Ralf Westphal published yet another critique of my post on living without a controller. He also proposed a different design method and therefore a different design. We also exchanged a couple of emails. However, on one side Ralf is misrepresenting my work to the point where I have to say something, and on the other, it's an interesting chance to talk a bit more about software design. 1) A critique of my design approach...
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Carlo Pescio: Life without a controller, case 1
http://www.carlopescio.com/2012/03/life-without-controller-case-1.html
Monday, March 12, 2012. Life without a controller, case 1. In my most popular post ever. I argued (quoting Alan Kay and Peter Coad along the way) that classes ending in –er (like the infamous Controller, Manager, etc) are usually an indication that our software is not really OO (built from cooperating objects), but still based on the centralized style of procedural programming. Not changing their name! Still, I can’t really sit here and do nothing while innocent objects get slaughtered, so I decide...
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Carlo Pescio: February 2012
http://www.carlopescio.com/2012_02_01_archive.html
Wednesday, February 01, 2012. Turn that If into a When. I've been absent for a few months now. The thing is, I'm spending my little free time writing a non-trivial Android app. Of course, I'm also taking thousands of notes on software design, ready for a comeback :-). Anyway, staying away from my blog so long is kinda painful :-), so here I am with a short post, inspired by a very simple design choice. I had to make. On the other hand, perhaps I'm just saying it wrong. What if I change it into " When.
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Carlo Pescio: December 2012
http://www.carlopescio.com/2012_12_01_archive.html
Thursday, December 27, 2012. Ask not what an object is, but. I can barely remember the days when objects were seen like a new, shiny, promising technology. Today, objects are. Often positioned between mainstream and. While the functional paradigm is enjoying an interesting renaissance. Still, . Last few months I stumbled on a couple of blog posts asking the quintessential question, reminiscent of those dark old days:. 8220;what is an object? The slightly older one. In our collective knowledge: how do we ...
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Carlo Pescio: March 2013
http://www.carlopescio.com/2013_03_01_archive.html
Thursday, March 07, 2013. Every once in a while, I take my head out the clouds and do a reality check. Today is one of those days. This blog is over for the time being. Take care guys. F you liked my blog, you may want to take a look at my. Project, where I'm exploring aspect-oriented design, outside the limits of blog posts, with full source code, etc. You may also want to. Follow me on twitter. Posted by Carlo Pescio. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Check out my free book:. Life without a controller, case 1.
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