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Magazine article on EE [French]

June 09, 2008 1:52pm

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  • #1 / Jun 09, 2008 1:52pm

    Marie-Jo Jones

    23 posts

    For your information, just wrote a 2-page article on EE in IB com, the monthly trade magazine of french-speaking Switzerland for IT professionals.
    Article (in French) is here: http://www.ibcom.ch/pages/archives/pdf/08_06_com_ee.pdf

    EE will power the new version of IB com website, hopefully to be launched early July. For the moment, I am struggling with a long list of categories/subcategories which don’t show up in alphabetical order. Neither in the front page, nor in the publish/edit section of the admin although they do show up properly in the categories section of the admin. A real nuisance.

  • #2 / Jun 09, 2008 4:28pm

    Ingmar

    29245 posts

    Nice writup, in general. Less “hype” than Django, hm? Glad to hear it 😊 I am not sure that I share your criticsim concerning the “steadfast refusal” by EllisLab to provide a more detailed roadmap, however. The issue has been discussed time and again here on the forums.

  • #3 / Jun 09, 2008 5:32pm

    Marie-Jo Jones

    23 posts

    Hi Ingmar,

    Well I had forgotten you spoke French. Thanks for taking the time to go through this text.
    Yes, subject of roadmap is regularly discussed in the forums but I have yet to see an official one…
    Judging from Rick Ellis post http://ellislab.com/blog/the_planning_fallacy/ dated last March, assume we’ll never get one.

    “To explain why we at EllisLab never publish a software release date until we are nearly finished with the project.  In my experience, any date that is more then 30 days out will always be wrong.
    That’s also why we don’t publish a road map that describes where we’re going with our applications.  There is such a fluid and dynamic nature to technology that anything we plan for today will probably be irrelevant a year from now.  We just do not have enough information today to plan correctly for tomorrow.  Our development cycles, and the internet at large, are moving too fast.”

    Having covered the IT market for 20 years+, I’m quite aware that software projects are difficult to plan and often miss the projected deadline. However, some companies now are using new methodologies which have helped them reduce the gap quite effectively.

    I’m far less convinced by the last argument Rick Ellis produced. Would he have us believe that the development team works without knowing where it’s going and what’s it’s aiming at? Very much doubt it.

    But for sure, he doesn’t want to communicate about it and prefers to leave his clients in the dark.

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