Cerebro is a project management and collaboration tool created to improve communication and coordination between creative and administrative teams during media production. It provides a centralized platform for tasks, comments, file sharing and review to replace inefficient email exchanges. Key features include a visual media commenting tool called Mirada, an automated file transfer and storage module called Cargador, and visual Gantt charts for project planning. Cerebro aims to streamline workflows, reduce iterations and speed up project turnaround times.
Cerebro is a project management and collaboration tool created to improve communication and coordination between creative and administrative teams in media production. It provides a centralized platform for tasks, comments, file sharing and review using intuitive visual tools to keep all teams on the same page. Key features include a media reviewer for comments, automatic file transfer, scheduling via Gantt charts, and desktop applications for improved performance over web browsers. Cerebro aims to save time and costs through faster turnarounds, less iterations and coordination issues.
TTYL IRL :) : Strategies and Tools for Remote Library Teamsteaguese
The VCU Libraries Web team experimented with allowing some members to work remotely part-time. They tested several collaboration tools to facilitate virtual communication and work sharing. Daily online stand-up meetings and ambient chat availability helped the remote workers feel connected. Regular in-person meetings and not being afraid to ask questions also supported effective collaboration. While technology issues arose and some tasks were easier done in person, the nature of Web work and team members' familiarity with online tools made remote work successful.
This document summarizes a project management software called Cerebro designed for CG and VFX industries. Cerebro provides tools for project planning, task tracking, file storage, communication, and reporting. It aims to help teams avoid disorganization and wasted time by streamlining workflows and centralizing information. The software is available in free and paid versions for individual users, small studios, and large companies.
The document discusses requirements in agile projects. It defines what requirements are and notes that requirements are often insufficient on projects. Agile focuses on prioritizing user needs, collaborating with customers, and responding to change over comprehensive documentation. Some tips for capturing requirements in agile include writing requirements just in time, using visual models to find gaps, and noting when documentation is still needed for regulatory, compliance, architectural or long-range planning reasons. Agile is presented as an alternative to waterfall but no single approach fits every situation.
The Mekong e-Sim activity involves students being assigned personas from the Mekong region to adopt. They will complete readings and quizzes to understand their assigned persona and region. Students will then interact with each other through email and online forums, responding to news events and policy issues from the perspective of their persona. A debriefing session follows where students reflect on their experience and submit a final paper. The goal is for students to develop understanding of stakeholders in the Mekong region and skills in communication, negotiation, and decision making across cultures.
A Investigation of Cisco Technologies & Access SolutionsNTID
This document provides an overview of a proposed investigation into Cisco technologies and access solutions by RIT's NTID Center on Access. The investigation will have three strands: 911-411-211 communication, signing avatars, and telepresence evaluation. It will involve forming expert teams, conducting literature reviews, producing white papers, and making recommendations to improve accessibility and inclusion. The goal is to establish a collaborative relationship with Cisco and provide input from a deaf perspective to help guide future product development. The project is funded for one year with $65,000 in cash and $35,000 in equipment from the Silicon Valley Community Foundation.
Even though team collocation is strongly recommended in agile methodologies, a distributed team is often required in the real world today. What is so important about collocating anyway? Can you overcome the challenges of a distributed Scrum team and still remain agile? What are the solutions? Brian Saylor tackles these important questions and more. While Brian realizes that implementing Scrum and agile practices in a distributed team is not easy, he found that it is possible if you understand the inherent problems and work hard-every day-to overcome them. Brian walks you through the reasons collocating is important for agile teams and the extra challenges distributed agile teams face. Then he dives into practical, real-world tools, tips, and techniques that organizations should research and consider before jumping into distributed waters-and don’t forget your life jacket.
The document discusses using various mobile learning technologies for communication, assessment, and content delivery, including Moodle and Mahara as communication and content hubs. It then lists and briefly describes several mobile apps and tools that can be used for tasks like shooting and editing video, creating QR codes, using ePortfolios, slideshows, eAssessment, and more. The document concludes with discussing issues around mobile assessment and activities for participants to engage in like creating project plans and joining a Yammer group.
Cerebro is a project management and collaboration tool created to improve communication and coordination between creative and administrative teams in media production. It provides a centralized platform for tasks, comments, file sharing and review using intuitive visual tools to keep all teams on the same page. Key features include a media reviewer for comments, automatic file transfer, scheduling via Gantt charts, and desktop applications for improved performance over web browsers. Cerebro aims to save time and costs through faster turnarounds, less iterations and coordination issues.
TTYL IRL :) : Strategies and Tools for Remote Library Teamsteaguese
The VCU Libraries Web team experimented with allowing some members to work remotely part-time. They tested several collaboration tools to facilitate virtual communication and work sharing. Daily online stand-up meetings and ambient chat availability helped the remote workers feel connected. Regular in-person meetings and not being afraid to ask questions also supported effective collaboration. While technology issues arose and some tasks were easier done in person, the nature of Web work and team members' familiarity with online tools made remote work successful.
This document summarizes a project management software called Cerebro designed for CG and VFX industries. Cerebro provides tools for project planning, task tracking, file storage, communication, and reporting. It aims to help teams avoid disorganization and wasted time by streamlining workflows and centralizing information. The software is available in free and paid versions for individual users, small studios, and large companies.
The document discusses requirements in agile projects. It defines what requirements are and notes that requirements are often insufficient on projects. Agile focuses on prioritizing user needs, collaborating with customers, and responding to change over comprehensive documentation. Some tips for capturing requirements in agile include writing requirements just in time, using visual models to find gaps, and noting when documentation is still needed for regulatory, compliance, architectural or long-range planning reasons. Agile is presented as an alternative to waterfall but no single approach fits every situation.
The Mekong e-Sim activity involves students being assigned personas from the Mekong region to adopt. They will complete readings and quizzes to understand their assigned persona and region. Students will then interact with each other through email and online forums, responding to news events and policy issues from the perspective of their persona. A debriefing session follows where students reflect on their experience and submit a final paper. The goal is for students to develop understanding of stakeholders in the Mekong region and skills in communication, negotiation, and decision making across cultures.
A Investigation of Cisco Technologies & Access SolutionsNTID
This document provides an overview of a proposed investigation into Cisco technologies and access solutions by RIT's NTID Center on Access. The investigation will have three strands: 911-411-211 communication, signing avatars, and telepresence evaluation. It will involve forming expert teams, conducting literature reviews, producing white papers, and making recommendations to improve accessibility and inclusion. The goal is to establish a collaborative relationship with Cisco and provide input from a deaf perspective to help guide future product development. The project is funded for one year with $65,000 in cash and $35,000 in equipment from the Silicon Valley Community Foundation.
Even though team collocation is strongly recommended in agile methodologies, a distributed team is often required in the real world today. What is so important about collocating anyway? Can you overcome the challenges of a distributed Scrum team and still remain agile? What are the solutions? Brian Saylor tackles these important questions and more. While Brian realizes that implementing Scrum and agile practices in a distributed team is not easy, he found that it is possible if you understand the inherent problems and work hard-every day-to overcome them. Brian walks you through the reasons collocating is important for agile teams and the extra challenges distributed agile teams face. Then he dives into practical, real-world tools, tips, and techniques that organizations should research and consider before jumping into distributed waters-and don’t forget your life jacket.
The document discusses using various mobile learning technologies for communication, assessment, and content delivery, including Moodle and Mahara as communication and content hubs. It then lists and briefly describes several mobile apps and tools that can be used for tasks like shooting and editing video, creating QR codes, using ePortfolios, slideshows, eAssessment, and more. The document concludes with discussing issues around mobile assessment and activities for participants to engage in like creating project plans and joining a Yammer group.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
- New Zealand's population is unevenly distributed across the country, with 76% living in the North Island and over half living in just four regions. Most people live in urban areas near coasts.
- Natural factors like climate, landforms, and resources influenced where Māori and Europeans settled. Māori favored fertile coastal lowlands for cultivation while Europeans preferred milder climates.
- Cultural factors such as economic needs and preferences also impacted settlement patterns. Māori focused on resources near their tribal areas while Europeans gravitated towards cities, towns, and opportunities.
Population ageing is occurring across Europe. As people live longer lives, the percentage of older people is increasing relative to younger age groups. Governments face challenges supporting older populations with pensions and healthcare, and policies aim to promote active ageing and longer working lives to address these challenges.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is everywhere, promising self-driving cars, medical breakthroughs, and new ways of working. But how do you separate hype from reality? How can your company apply AI to solve real business problems?
Here’s what AI learnings your business should keep in mind for 2017.
Study: The Future of VR, AR and Self-Driving CarsLinkedIn
We asked LinkedIn members worldwide about their levels of interest in the latest wave of technology: whether they’re using wearables, and whether they intend to buy self-driving cars and VR headsets as they become available. We asked them too about their attitudes to technology and to the growing role of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the devices that they use. The answers were fascinating – and in many cases, surprising.
This SlideShare explores the full results of this study, including detailed market-by-market breakdowns of intention levels for each technology – and how attitudes change with age, location and seniority level. If you’re marketing a tech brand – or planning to use VR and wearables to reach a professional audience – then these are insights you won’t want to miss.
This document provides an overview of the CS 361 Software Engineering course. It outlines attendance rules, instructors, required coursebooks, and key topics that will be covered including Agile development methodologies, Waterfall methodology, the Agile Manifesto, enabling technologies for Agile development, pair programming, user stories, system metaphors, on-site customers, and more. The document aims to introduce students to the structure and content of the course.
Analyze the way Software Projects are developed among Distributed teams highlighting the various hurdles, a typical Distributed team may face, including the solutions and the most appropriate tools to help overcome those challenges
Analyzed the way Software Projects are developed among Distributed teams, and highlighted the various hurdles, a typical Distributed team may face, including the solutions and the most appropriate tools to help overcome those challenges, and explained how these tools help solve those problems.
Cerebro is project and asset management software designed for CG artists to manage international animation and visual effects projects. It offers features like unlimited task structuring, resource allocation, Gantt charts, budgeting, tracking, communication forums, daily reporting, file sharing, and supports Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS, and web interfaces. Customers include studios that have used it to manage critically acclaimed TV shows and films.
Choosing the right Technologies for your next unicorn.Gladson DSouza
Startup India had its 5th Meetup on "Choosing The Right Technologies For Your Next Unicorn” on August, 05 2017!
We’re had the coolest techies speak about the latest and tested technologies used by the Best global tech enterprises.
From what to why for you to reach your ultimate Goal – to become a Unicorn!
We cover a range of topics like:
• Technologies that aren't disrupted
• Languages and frameworks
• Agile Project Management
• Web Security
• Automated Testing
• Tech stacks of Whatsapp, Uber, Facebook and other large enterprises
Why should you have attend?
• To understand the future of technology and which direction is recommended as of 2017
• Great Insights on present Latest Technologies
• Growing tech adoption trend globally and in India
• Ready case studies of present Unicorns.
This document provides an overview and introduction to Azure Notebooks and Jupyter notebooks. It discusses what Jupyter notebooks are, how they can be used for tasks like data analysis, and how Azure Notebooks builds on Jupyter by providing a cloud-based notebook environment. The document then demonstrates various features of notebooks like code execution, markdown, and data visualization using examples. It also discusses where notebooks fit best versus other tools and environments.
This document provides an overview of tools for modern front-end web development. It discusses the history of front-end development and how it has grown recently. A number of popular front-end tools are then described, including Compass/Sass for generating CSS, Bootstrap/Foundation for building responsive sites quickly, CoffeeScript for cleaner JavaScript syntax, Grunt for automating tasks, and templating languages like Haml to simplify HTML. jQuery and jQuery UI are also highlighted for enabling interactive elements and mobile-first development.
Designing for User Experience (UX) with Atlassian ToolsAtlassian
The document discusses integrating design and development. It outlines 5 steps to solve challenges: 1) braindump to brief, 2) brief to wireframes, 3) wireframes to design, 4) design to implementation, and 5) implementation to validation. Key points include using tools like JIRA and Confluence for collaboration, bringing designs to life with prototypes, and validating designs through internal and external testing.
No Silver Bullet - Essence and Accidents of Software EngineeringAditi Abhang
”There is no single development, in either technology or in management technique, that by itself promises even one order of magnitude improvement in productivity, in reliability, in simplicity.”
Presentation given at Publishing and Media Expo, London in Feb 2013. The topic is building a practical production workflow for responsive, cross-platform content.
Deep Dive into the Idea of Software ArchitectureMatthew Clarke
This talk was an experiment in combining a number of ideas I'd been learning and thinking about into a coherent presentation, that would hopefully be useful. The was to give a solid grounding to the idea of software architecture, including taking a critical look at what it is and if it really matters. It then moves into the topics of boundaries and abstractions, horizontal and vertical layers, cross-cutting concerns, "Clean Architecture" and the Dependency Rule it rests upon. It was presented internally at Genesis Energy in September 2018.
SACon 2019 - Surviving in a Microservices EnvironmentSteve Pember
Many presentations on microservices offer a high-level view of the architecture; rarely do you hear what it’s like to work in such an environment. Stephen Pember shares his experience migrating from a monolith to microservices across several companies, highlighting the mistakes made along the way and offering advice.
How to Implement Domain Driven Design in Real Life SDLCAbdul Karim
The document discusses the traditional approach to software development and some of its shortcomings. It then introduces Domain-Driven Design (DDD) as an alternative approach that focuses on designing the system around the problem domain from the top-down rather than the bottom-up. Some key DDD concepts discussed include ubiquitous language, core domain, bounded contexts, entities, value objects, aggregates and aggregate roots, and persistence ignorance. The document uses examples from designing a residential building to help explain these DDD concepts.
Going native - Taking desktop applications to mobile devicesTanzer Consulting
How does a business make informed decisions around taking their desktop apps to the mobile world? Elan Tanzer will share some of the experiences in exploring which functionality makes sense to port to mobile devices, what the differences in human/computer interaction will be, and whether it makes sense to go native to each OS or to use a more portable solution such as HTML5.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
- New Zealand's population is unevenly distributed across the country, with 76% living in the North Island and over half living in just four regions. Most people live in urban areas near coasts.
- Natural factors like climate, landforms, and resources influenced where Māori and Europeans settled. Māori favored fertile coastal lowlands for cultivation while Europeans preferred milder climates.
- Cultural factors such as economic needs and preferences also impacted settlement patterns. Māori focused on resources near their tribal areas while Europeans gravitated towards cities, towns, and opportunities.
Population ageing is occurring across Europe. As people live longer lives, the percentage of older people is increasing relative to younger age groups. Governments face challenges supporting older populations with pensions and healthcare, and policies aim to promote active ageing and longer working lives to address these challenges.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is everywhere, promising self-driving cars, medical breakthroughs, and new ways of working. But how do you separate hype from reality? How can your company apply AI to solve real business problems?
Here’s what AI learnings your business should keep in mind for 2017.
Study: The Future of VR, AR and Self-Driving CarsLinkedIn
We asked LinkedIn members worldwide about their levels of interest in the latest wave of technology: whether they’re using wearables, and whether they intend to buy self-driving cars and VR headsets as they become available. We asked them too about their attitudes to technology and to the growing role of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the devices that they use. The answers were fascinating – and in many cases, surprising.
This SlideShare explores the full results of this study, including detailed market-by-market breakdowns of intention levels for each technology – and how attitudes change with age, location and seniority level. If you’re marketing a tech brand – or planning to use VR and wearables to reach a professional audience – then these are insights you won’t want to miss.
This document provides an overview of the CS 361 Software Engineering course. It outlines attendance rules, instructors, required coursebooks, and key topics that will be covered including Agile development methodologies, Waterfall methodology, the Agile Manifesto, enabling technologies for Agile development, pair programming, user stories, system metaphors, on-site customers, and more. The document aims to introduce students to the structure and content of the course.
Analyze the way Software Projects are developed among Distributed teams highlighting the various hurdles, a typical Distributed team may face, including the solutions and the most appropriate tools to help overcome those challenges
Analyzed the way Software Projects are developed among Distributed teams, and highlighted the various hurdles, a typical Distributed team may face, including the solutions and the most appropriate tools to help overcome those challenges, and explained how these tools help solve those problems.
Cerebro is project and asset management software designed for CG artists to manage international animation and visual effects projects. It offers features like unlimited task structuring, resource allocation, Gantt charts, budgeting, tracking, communication forums, daily reporting, file sharing, and supports Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS, and web interfaces. Customers include studios that have used it to manage critically acclaimed TV shows and films.
Choosing the right Technologies for your next unicorn.Gladson DSouza
Startup India had its 5th Meetup on "Choosing The Right Technologies For Your Next Unicorn” on August, 05 2017!
We’re had the coolest techies speak about the latest and tested technologies used by the Best global tech enterprises.
From what to why for you to reach your ultimate Goal – to become a Unicorn!
We cover a range of topics like:
• Technologies that aren't disrupted
• Languages and frameworks
• Agile Project Management
• Web Security
• Automated Testing
• Tech stacks of Whatsapp, Uber, Facebook and other large enterprises
Why should you have attend?
• To understand the future of technology and which direction is recommended as of 2017
• Great Insights on present Latest Technologies
• Growing tech adoption trend globally and in India
• Ready case studies of present Unicorns.
This document provides an overview and introduction to Azure Notebooks and Jupyter notebooks. It discusses what Jupyter notebooks are, how they can be used for tasks like data analysis, and how Azure Notebooks builds on Jupyter by providing a cloud-based notebook environment. The document then demonstrates various features of notebooks like code execution, markdown, and data visualization using examples. It also discusses where notebooks fit best versus other tools and environments.
This document provides an overview of tools for modern front-end web development. It discusses the history of front-end development and how it has grown recently. A number of popular front-end tools are then described, including Compass/Sass for generating CSS, Bootstrap/Foundation for building responsive sites quickly, CoffeeScript for cleaner JavaScript syntax, Grunt for automating tasks, and templating languages like Haml to simplify HTML. jQuery and jQuery UI are also highlighted for enabling interactive elements and mobile-first development.
Designing for User Experience (UX) with Atlassian ToolsAtlassian
The document discusses integrating design and development. It outlines 5 steps to solve challenges: 1) braindump to brief, 2) brief to wireframes, 3) wireframes to design, 4) design to implementation, and 5) implementation to validation. Key points include using tools like JIRA and Confluence for collaboration, bringing designs to life with prototypes, and validating designs through internal and external testing.
No Silver Bullet - Essence and Accidents of Software EngineeringAditi Abhang
”There is no single development, in either technology or in management technique, that by itself promises even one order of magnitude improvement in productivity, in reliability, in simplicity.”
Presentation given at Publishing and Media Expo, London in Feb 2013. The topic is building a practical production workflow for responsive, cross-platform content.
Deep Dive into the Idea of Software ArchitectureMatthew Clarke
This talk was an experiment in combining a number of ideas I'd been learning and thinking about into a coherent presentation, that would hopefully be useful. The was to give a solid grounding to the idea of software architecture, including taking a critical look at what it is and if it really matters. It then moves into the topics of boundaries and abstractions, horizontal and vertical layers, cross-cutting concerns, "Clean Architecture" and the Dependency Rule it rests upon. It was presented internally at Genesis Energy in September 2018.
SACon 2019 - Surviving in a Microservices EnvironmentSteve Pember
Many presentations on microservices offer a high-level view of the architecture; rarely do you hear what it’s like to work in such an environment. Stephen Pember shares his experience migrating from a monolith to microservices across several companies, highlighting the mistakes made along the way and offering advice.
How to Implement Domain Driven Design in Real Life SDLCAbdul Karim
The document discusses the traditional approach to software development and some of its shortcomings. It then introduces Domain-Driven Design (DDD) as an alternative approach that focuses on designing the system around the problem domain from the top-down rather than the bottom-up. Some key DDD concepts discussed include ubiquitous language, core domain, bounded contexts, entities, value objects, aggregates and aggregate roots, and persistence ignorance. The document uses examples from designing a residential building to help explain these DDD concepts.
Going native - Taking desktop applications to mobile devicesTanzer Consulting
How does a business make informed decisions around taking their desktop apps to the mobile world? Elan Tanzer will share some of the experiences in exploring which functionality makes sense to port to mobile devices, what the differences in human/computer interaction will be, and whether it makes sense to go native to each OS or to use a more portable solution such as HTML5.
An overview of the way developers approach problems, for Entrepreneurs, Managers & Designers, to facilitate discussion and understanding. Developers are creative problem solvers who use words and logic to “model” stuff with objects, properties, methods, inheritance, composition, apis, and frameworks, to build: web sites, web apps, mobile apps, and iot in a repository on a stack with tools and tests at scale for our users.
This presentation outlines the development of a personal voice assistant called Scars. It discusses:
1) Scars aims to provide a user-friendly interface for tasks using voice commands and can assist with daily activities like conversations, searches, music, alarms and more.
2) Current assistants have issues with voice recognition of certain accents and are better suited for mobile than desktop. Scars aims to address these issues.
3) Scars uses machine learning to analyze user statements and provide optimal solutions to requests. It requires training on large datasets to work efficiently.
Basic concept on Systems/Software Analysis, Design & Development, how software engineering, large projects are done, collaborated, best practices & standards.
A design system is a framework of practices that bring designers and products together. It is a platform to identify, and document what to share, whether a visual style, design patterns, front-end UI components, and practices like accessibility, research, content strategy.
The role of design with enterprise organizations is expanding, spreading across product teams and influencing decision-making at higher and higher levels. This scale, paired with the array of devices, browsers, screen sizes, locales, and environments, makes it increasingly challenging to align designers and developers to deliver cohesive user experiences.
In this talk, I’ll discuss the lessons learned, the challenges faced, and best practices for creating and maintaining an effective interface design system.
3. Cerebro was created Is it OK that dead-
because we couldn’t lines are broken and
stand it all anymore. budgets wasted due
Why chaos should be to trifle reasons - poor
communication and
the word to describe our
coordination?!
collaboration?
Designers always ignore
emails... Accounts have
no idea how to open a
media file... Talks with a
client often look like a
Chinese whispers
game...
4. We got it! Advertising and media produc-
tion workflow – is, mostly, a communica-
tion process between creators and admin-
istrators.
Same goals - different approaches, different
tools and different languages.
We got an idea to make an integrated
toolkit to make creators and administra-
tors always be “on the same page”, using
common tools, handy and easy!
5. We created Cerebro, mostly, for ourselves.
But today it works for the most part
of media production in Russia.
7. Cerebro is a powerful project management system
with a rich toolkit for collaboration in production
of visual content.
8. Cerebro unites!
Administrative part: Creative part:
•• Scheduling •• Visual reviewing
•• Reporting •• Handy file viewing, stor-
•• Budgeting age and transfer
•• Сonnection with clients
9. Cerebro – is an “anti-Babylon” opportunity for
the whole team to speak the same language.
10. Cerebro means “Order” and “Logic”
in collaborative workflow.
Better coordination
••
Less iterations
••
Faster turnovers
••
11. Cerebro is a faster and easier tool,
no special training required.
Intuitive and user-friendly.
••
Integrated tools.
••
Special features for advertising and media
••
production.
14. Use Mirada to get rid of “Chinese whispers” and give out tasks, reviews
and comments fast and clear!
Mirada is a built-in media editor, specially designed for audio-
visual reviewing.
Mirada looks very much the same as an ordinary media play-
er but has specific tools to take notes, draw sketches, record
your mouse and voice - right over a source picture or a video!
15. By means of Mirada you can explain what you want from your
peers as if you had a face-to-face meeting with them.
Speak up and pin down the issues right over the media
source!
Your review will be saved and posted to Cerebro.
16. Cerebro offers a new technology to store and ex-
change project files!
Ordinary methods
of file download and exchange Cerebro method
•• via emails
•• via FTP server
•• via file exchange service
•• via physical media -
Cargador
DVD, portable HDD, etc.
17. Use Cargador to save time you spend on file transfer.
Cargador is a built-in module for “smart” file transfer,
••
indexing and storage.
•• works automatically and faster than FTP - no need to
It
waste time waiting.
18. •• checks data integrity - no file will arrive corrupted.
It
•• It archives folders on-the-fly - no need to pack them up manually.
•• It works in the background - and saves your time for something really
useful.
•• It indexes transferred files - no unnecessary duplications will
occur on your file storage. It speeds up transfer and saves your
diskspace.
19. Usual way of task scheduling
Cerebro
sheduling tools
are visual too! Project planning in Cerebro
20. Use Gantt charts to plan and track your projects
•• Actually Gantt charts do your traffic manager’s job.
•• A Gantt chart turns a chaotic pile of single tasks into a clear,
logical interconnected sequence.
•• is easily editable - just drag a task along the timeline and all intercon-
It
nected tasks will be shifted and recalculated as well.
21. Gantt charts offer the following advantages:
••To have a bird’s eye overview of all your projects.
••To edit the project plan in a native visual way.
••To interconnect the tasks.
••To track work in progress.
22. Cerebro means a stable performance without web
browser’s limitations!
Don’t bind yourself with “browser applications”, as they often are annoyingly slow
and poor in features.
••Cerebro is one of the few online project management
systems running on sterling desktop applications.
••Cerebro is installed onto a computer as a standalone
software.
23. ••We’ve been developing Cerebro applications for the most
popular operating systems.
••Cerebro is designed to work in a multiplatform environ-
ment.
••Cerebro has light versions for iPhone and iPad with a sim-
ple user-friendly interface and offline work mode.
24. ••Of course, if you still prefer browser applications -
we have the one to offer you as well.
••Cerebro web interface provides basic project
tracking features and access to project files.
26. Cerebro means Economy!
••Cerebro saves working hours due to faster turnovers.
••Cerebro users spend 30% less time on management, coordi-
nation and communication.
••Investments in Cerebro pay off after the 1st month after sys-
tem adoption.
27. Cerebro means Free implementation!
••You don’t pay for system installation on your server.
••You don’t pay for training sessions and consultations.
••You don’t pay for a 30-days trial period.
28. Cerebro means Easy Adoption!
•• It takes from 4 days to 2 weeks to switch to Cerebro completely. It’s not a
promise, it’s statistics.
•• Even novice level computer users can learn to operate Cerebro within a
month.
•• After spending time on Cerebro learning, a user makes up for it fast and
easy.
•• Our TechSupport consultants are always here to help you out.
29. Cerebro means Addiction!
Cerebro is comfort and for many - is a must, like email or mobile
••
phone.
Cerebro hasn’t lost a single client in its history. No company that
••
had adopted Cerebro, changed its mind and refused from using it
later on.
85% of our prospects become our clients after a trial period.
••
30. Cerebro means Safety!
•• You don’t necessarily need to have your sensitive project files hosted by any third
party, including ours, while using Cerebro. 2 of 3 possible configurations offer an op-
tion to host your files locally - right where you keep them now:
1. Private cloud - all server components are hosted in our data center.
2. Hybrid cloud - only an application server is hosted in our data center, your files are
hosted on your premises and never transferred through our cloud.
3. Local installation - all server components are hosted on your server.
•• Cerebro servers are being under supervision 24/7, all data is encrypted.
•• Safety and Privacy of your data are the things our business is based on.