Where’s the new stuff?
You fire up a browser, log in to your appliance and pull up the dashboard… but where’s the new stuff? This post explains why some users might not see all the new features straight away and tells you what you can do about it.
by Adrian Long | 20 Jan 2012 | Permalink | Forum Thread | ADDM, User Experience
You fire up a browser, log in to your appliance and pull up the dashboard… but where’s the new stuff? This post explains why some users might not see all the new features straight away and tells you what you can do about it.
by Adrian Long | 28 Oct 2010 | Permalink | User Experience, Web & Community
About a year ago, Tideway was acquired by BMC, and Tideway Foundation became BMC Atrium Discovery & Dependency mapping. Naturally, there will be some changes to Tideway.com.
by Allan Mertner | 19 Sep 2009 | Permalink | Software, Software Engineering, User Experience
An outline of how Tideway manages to produce amazing software in an iterative, engaging and relevant way using 4-week sprints and online documentation.
by Richard Muirhead | 30 Jan 2009 | Permalink | Forum Thread | Everything Else, IT Management, Open Source, Software, Software Business Models, Software Engineering, User Experience, Web 2.0
The fast moving wave that is social computing swept through Davos on Thursday in a session titled “Organizing the Unorganizable: Social Computing and the Enterprise.” The interactive workshop assembled such luminaries as Paulo Coehlo, Jim Schwartz, Michael Arrington, Robert Scoble, Jimmy Wales, Matt Cohler, and Reid Hoffman, among others. The…
by Allan Mertner | 16 Sep 2008 | Permalink | Software, User Experience, Web 2.0
In a software company, deciding which one of a big pile of conflicting priorities to work on next is one of the hardest things to get right. And it is critical to the business: If your process for doing this works, you end up with products that your customers and…
by Alex Horstmann | 28 Aug 2007 | Permalink | Software, Software Engineering, User Experience, Web 2.0
I’m often asked why I prefer to use Ajax HTML rather than XML or JSON etc. There are multiple reasons I cite, one is it’s easier to maintain but the more important one is that it’s faster and less work (both on the frontend and the backend).
Here’s an interesting…
by Charles Oldham | 14 Aug 2007 | Permalink | Home Page, IT Management, Software, Software Business Models, User Experience
Originally I was going to comment on Allan’s excellent summary of our new provenance features, but it turned into a post in its own right. Whilst I think that the features provided by provenance will clearly be of use during pattern development I think they have wider scope than…
by Allan Mertner | 03 Jul 2007 | Permalink | Software, User Experience, Web 2.0
I recently discovered Google Reader, and it has changed how I interact with the web in general, and blogs in particular. As it becomes more widely used, I expect it to have even more of an impact.
In principle, the Reader is a simple aggregator of RSS feeds, just…
by Alex Horstmann | 02 Jul 2007 | Permalink | User Experience, Web 2.0
Allan wrote about Rethinking the Home Page and my response was getting to0 long to be a comment so I’m writing it as a post.
Allan said:
Today, visitors typically visit web sites as a result of a search or a deep link from somewhere…
by Allan Mertner | 01 Jul 2007 | Permalink | User Experience, Web 2.0
Back when the web was young, the home page was where most visitors to a web site would start and therefore it got the most attention. Is this still a valid way of thinking today?
Today, visitors typically visit web sites as a result of a search or a deep…
Copyright © 2012 BMC Software
