Archive for April, 2015

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Live Webinar – April 28th, 2015 1:00 – 2:00 PM EDT
Duration: 1 Hours + QA – 1 Category C Self Directed Learning PDUs
Presented by: SD Times (Software Development Times)

Managing the lifecycle of web applications can be filled with challenges. Apps need to be visually compelling, deliver a great user experience across desktops, tablets and mobile phones as well as be delivered on time and on budget.

Join Gautam as he discusses key innovations in Web App Lifecycle management.

In this session you will learn:

  • How to get a jumpstart on application design by leveraging new innovations in web app theming
  • How to develop for desktop, tablet and mobile with a single framework
  • How to add Business Intelligence capabilities to your web apps
  • How to more easily deploy and manage your web apps – without the need of a native packager

Presenter: Gautam Agrawal (LinkedIn profile) Director of Product Management for Sencha Frameworks and Tools

PDU Category C (PMBOK 5) documentation details:
Process Groups: Planning Executing
Knowledge Areas: 4 – Integration 5 – Scope

  • 4.2 Develop Project Management Plan
  • 5.2 Collect Requirements
  • 5.3 Define Scope
  • 8.1 Plan Quality Management

As a Category C ‘Self Directed Learning Activity’ remember to document your learning experience and its relationship to project management for your ‘PDU Audit Trail Folder’

Click to register for Lifecycle Management For Web Applications

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Live Webinar April 28th, 2015 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM EDT
Duration: 4 Hour Credits: Up to 4 Category C Free PDUs
Presented by : O’Reilly

Whether building a new architecture or fine-tuning and optimizing your current code base these speakers have insight to how to ease your troubles and help you excel!

From tweaking your Python unicode to optimizing your Java for performance,  O’Reilly will take you from line of code to the big picture with an introduction to microservices and making larger business choices with David McKinley’s session on Choose Boring Technology.

Optimizing Java Performance With HotSpot

Write Clean Code “Just-In-Time” and Worry Less As a Developer

HotSpot promises to do wonders for Java developers by identifying hot code and optimizing it “just-in-time.” For the most part, HotSpot stays true to its promises. However, it’s easier to trust this adaptive performance engine once you understand precisely how the magic works.

Douglas Hawkins will help Java developers of all levels better understand what this virtual machine can and cannot do for them.

By the end of this talk, developers will be able to use HotSpot to focus on solving critical performance issues with their code. They will also walk away with practical strategies they can use to implement a more efficient and productive development environment.

Unicode Solutions In Python 2 & 3

This webcast presentation tackles head-on the most common problems when dealing with Unicode data or any text data that is not limited to ASCII.

Each example is presented first with Python 3 code — which is easier to understand — and then with Python 2.7, the version used in most current projects.

Luciano Ramalho will cover:

  • Understanding character encodings and the encode/decode methods;
  • Diagnosing and fixing encoding errors raised by Python;
  • Handling text files and standard I/O in GNU/Linux, OSX and Windows;
  • Safe comparisons and pattern matching with Unicode;
  • Proper sorting of Unicode data

Microservices & You – The Straight Dope

You have started to hear about microservices and you want to learn more about what happens when the rubber meets the road.

In this talk Steve Pousty will cover the process he went through in constructing, a multi-device application for gamified recording of roadkill.

He will briefly cover how he went about the process paying particular attention on how to get started, understanding what microservices ACTUALLY needs. He will show you how you too can be a microservices practitioner.

His session will be an informal talk and interactive.  There will be a back and forth discussion of some of your implementation questions.

Come in curious, leave with some solid ideas on how to get started on your first microservice architected application.

Choose Boring Technology

How do you choose the technology to run your business?

The prevailing advice du jour is something like: “use the best tool for the job.” This is obviously right, but it is also devoid of meaning in an unfortunate way that lets people define the words “best” and “job” as myopically as they like.

Dan aims to give shape to these nebulous terms. Your job is to keep your company in business. The best tools tend to be the ones that solve the widest array of problems while requiring the least amount of operational overhead.

If innovation happens when preparation meets opportunity, Dan McKinley suggests that opportunity rarely appears in the form of an unforeseen data loss bug.

Of course,  technology is sometimes necessary.

It’s true that shiny new technologies can be useful, and it’s true that a mix of technology is healthy. But the world is beset by polyglot programmers and microservice proponents.

A framework for thinking about these issues systematically is necessary. That process must consider the organization as a whole, and it must reintroduce constraints that have gone to seed in the era of cloud infrastructure.

Choose boring technology.
If you can get past this, you can be exciting in ways you can’t imagine.

Presenters:

Douglas Q. Hawkins (LinkedIn profile, Gartner bio, @dougqh) is a VM Engineer at Azul Systems. He has been passionately developing software for over 10 years, and has created applications for a variety of industries including bioinformatics, finance, and online retail. However, his true interest has always been exploring what happens inside the virtual machines developers use on a daily basis. He is also a regular speaker on the No Fluff Just Stuff conference tour.

Luciano Ramalho  (LinkedIn profile, O’Reilly bio, @ramalhoorg)  author of Fluent Python was a Web developer before the Netscape IPO in 1995, and switched from Perl to Java to Python in 1998. Since then he worked on some of the largest news portals in Brazil using Python, and taught Python web development in the Brazilian media, banking and government sectors. His speaking credentials include PyCon US (2013), OSCON (2002, 2013, 2014), and many talks over the years at PythonBrasil (the Brazilian PyCon) FISL (the largest FLOSS conference in the Southern Hemisphere) and RuPy. Ramalho is a member of the Python Software Foundation and co-founder of Garoa Hacker Clube, the first hackerspace in Brazil. He is co-owner of Python.pro.br, a training company.

Steve Pousty Phd (LinkedIn profile, O’Reilly bio, @TheSteve0), Partner, author of Getting Started with OpenShift and PaaS Dust Spreader (developer evangelist) with OpenShift. Steve shows off all the great work the OpenShift engineers and can teach you about PaaS with Java, Python, PostgreSQL MongoDB, and JavaScript. With deep subject area expertise in GIS/Spatial, Statistics, and Ecology he has spoken at over 50 conferences and done over 30 workshops including Monktoberfest, MongoNY, JavaOne, FOSS4G, CTIA, AjaxWorld, GeoWeb, Where2.0, and OSCON. Before OpenShift, Steve was a developer evangelist for LinkedIn, deCarta, and ESRI.

Dan McKinley (LinkedIn profile) After starting his career in finance, Dan McKinley freaked out and moved to Brooklyn. He stumbled into a fledgling Etsy.com in 2007, and spent his first years there trying to stop overwhelming traffic from reducing the site to its constituent elements. In the long summer that followed he worked on activity feeds, search, recommendations, experimentation, and analytics. Dan currently works for Stripe from Los Angeles, California.

PDU Category C (PMBOK 5) documentation details:
Process Groups: Planning Executing
Knowledge Areas: 5 – Scope 8 – Quality

  • 4.1 Develop Project Charter
  • 4.2 Develop Project Management Plan
  • 5.3 Define Scope
  • 8.1 Plan Quality
  • 9.4 Manage Project Team

As a Category C, ‘Self Directed Learning’, activity remember to document your learning experience and its relationship to project management for your ‘PDU Audit Trail Folder.’

Click to register for the:
O’Reilly Software Engineering Online Conference

After starting his career in finance, Dan McKinley freaked out and moved to Brooklyn. He stumbled into a fledgling Etsy.com in 2007, and spent his first years there trying to stop overwhelming traffic from reducing the site to its constituent elements. In the long summer that followed he worked on activity feeds, search, recommendations, experimentation, and analytics.

Dan currently works for Stripe from Los Angeles, California.

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Online Webinar – Recorded May 16th 2014
Offered by ASPE (REP 2161) 1 Category A PDU – Free PDU

In the last couple of years, more and more organizations have switched to Business Process Model and Notation (BPMN) as their preferred (often, the standard) way to capture, model, and analyze business processes.

There are several reasons for this trend:

  • Simple notation: easy to learn and communicate with all stakeholders, on both the business and the technical sides
  • Flexible: 3 levels of abstraction that allow modeling simple high-level processes (Descriptive level), analysis and optimization (Analytic level), and specifying complex processes for IT implementation and/or execution (Execution level)
  • Showing the whole-picture + hierarchal structure: allows abstraction at high-levels and elaboration into further details, without losing the relationships between different process components
  • Efficiency/reuse: projects and analysts reuse/elaborate same models as more details are added throughout the Solution/System Development Lifecycle (SDLC)
  • Widely adopted standard: common set of conventions and symbols, with no need to (re)invent the wheel
  • Wide adoption by tool providers: virtually all major vendors, commercial or open-source, have adopted BPMN

In this seminar we will introduce core concepts and principles of Business Process Management (BPM) and BPMN and demonstrate how this knowledge will significantly improve Business Analysts’ ability to elicit/capture, analyze, manage, and communicate business and solution requirements.

Presenter: Razvan Radulian’s (LinkedIn profile) CBAP OCEB PMP passion has always been to help/coach people analyze and solve problems and to design & implement business/technical solutions. Razvan is fond of rescuing troubled projects, tackling the most challenging problems and delivering “impossible” solutions.  Rasvan holds on MS in Biochemistry from the University of Bucharest and an MBA from Duke University.

PDU Category C (PMBOK 5) documentation details:

Process Groups: Planning Executing

Knowledge Areas: 4 – Integration 5 – Scope 6 – Time

  • 4.3 Direct and Manage Project Work
  • 5.3 Define Scope
  • 5.4 Create WBS
  • 5.6 Validate Scope

As a Category C, ‘Self Directed Learning’, activity remember to document your learning experience and its relationship to project management for your ‘PDU Audit Trail Folder.’

Click to register for Business Process Model & Notation (BPMN) Primer

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Live Webinar April 28th, 2015 11:00 am – 12:30 pm EDT
Duration: 1 Hour 30 Min Credits: 1 PDU Category A – Free PDU
Presented by: Computer Aid Inc IT Metrics & Productivity Institute (Rep 2733)

In this webinar Linda Rising (LinkedIn profile) examines how you can learn to introduce new ideas. The webinar is based on her book co written with  Mary Lynn Manns (LinkedIn profile) PhD Fearless Change: Introducing Patterns into Organizations

Also Check out their other books:

Click to register for Organizational Change Myths & Patterns For Evangelists

The Live Session Is Free But…

You can get the recorded version of this session & over 500+ other Quality Category A PDU Sessions with an
ITMPI Membership

Premium Memberships are only $199 USD per year
An Excellent Value!!

Search for “2733” to see other great titles available!
Memberships Include all PDU Codes

Note: ITMPI charges a fee to obtain individual PDU codes. This fee ONLY needs to be paid if you ask the provider for the code – This code should be able to be obtained from the PMI.ORG site for free. An ITMPI Membership entitles you to receive all ITMPI PDU Codes and recordings.

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Live Webinar – April 29th, 2014 10:00 am – 11:00 pm EDT
Duration: 1 Hour Credits: 1 PDU Category C – Free PDU
Sponsored by: PEX  – The Process Excellence Network

All across the Internet you will find references to solutions, offerings, and products that try to align with business process management (BPM) solutions.

Whether you’re a Business Analyst or in IT strategy, this webinar will illustrate how easy it is to model and automate business processes with modern BPM tools in the travel industry.

If you are talking to an airline, a baggage handler, a bookings agency or anyone in between, they all have one thing in common. They are dealing with complex business processes that often need to combine rules, events, resource planning, and processes.

Take a deep look into a sample solution for this industry, simulating a travel agency booking system with:

  • Service integration;
  • Multiple tasks;
  • Complex BPM elements; and …
  • Rule-based fraud detection for payment processing;

You will leave with an advanced overview of the capabilities of the Red Hat® JBoss® BPM Suite

Presenter: Eric Schabell (LinkedIn profile) is the JBoss technology evangelist for Integration and BPM products at Red Hat. He is responsible for various outbound technical aspects of promoting JBoss Enterprise Middleware integration products and services, has traveled the world speaking at conferences, and is the author of The OpenShift Primer. He has been working within software development since 1998 for many different enterprises. Be sure to check out his site at Schabell.org

PDU Category C (PMBOK 5) documentation details:
Process Groups: Planning, Monitoring & Controlling
Knowledge Areas: 5 – Scope

  • 5.2 Collect Requirements
  • 5.5 Validate Scope
  • 5.4 Create WBS
  • 5.6 Validate Scope

As a Category C ‘Self Directed Learning Activity’ remember to document your learning experience and its relationship to project management for your ‘PDU Audit Trail Folder’

Click to register for A Beginner’s Guide To Modern BPM Tools

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Live Webinar April 28th, 2015 – 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm EDT
Duration: 1 Hour Credits: 1 PDU Category C – Free PDU
Featured Sponsor : Jama

VDC Research analyst Andre Girard (LinkedIn profile) will describe the market drivers for modern requirements management and explain why your organization is in peril if it maintains the status quo.

Andre will discuss how modern requirements management tools can dramatically improve delivery times, slash product line complexity and enhance communication across all players in the product ecosystem.

Embedded market companies face increasingly complex market pressures to accelerate the product-delivery process.

Their business goals require products to be delivered to customer satisfaction, with no defects, and faster than ever. And yet, 42% of embedded systems are behind schedule.

Among the many challenges to efficient, on-time product delivery are:

  • Managing growing complexity in distributed organizations, within their products, and across a network of interrelated and interdependent products
  • Maintaining consistent software security and quality standards
  • Integrating the supply chain, formalizing acceptance benchmarks for code from supply chain partners
  • Demonstrating compliance to process standards
  • Verifying requirements traceability
  • Inadequate and changing specifications
  • Shifting priorities

These are competing, yet equally critical, imperatives.

Despite widespread knowledge of these mounting challenges, engineering organizations are not doing enough to adapt.

They need to make fundamental changes in the planning, management, and execution of system designs; they need new tools and methodologies to change outcomes because in-house and ad-hoc tools are inadequate for modern requirements management.

PDU Category C (PMBOK 5) documentation details:
Process Groups: Planning Executing
Knowledge Areas: 5 – Scope

  • 5.1 Plan Scope Management
  • 5.2 Collect Requirements
  • 5.3 Define Scope
  • 5.5 Validate Scope
  • 5.6 Control Scope

As a Category C ‘Self Directed Learning Activity’ remember to document your learning experience and its relationship to project management for your ‘PDU Audit Trail Folder’

Click to register for Under Pressure: Your Embedded System Needs To Modernize RM