OpenStack personas - an early draft proposal for personas to target (or not) & refine for the OpenStack project. Personas document: http://bit.ly/OpenStackPersonas
Personas were made famous by Alan Moore in "The Inmates are Running the Asylum", a seminal book on user interface design for computer programmers. They have been used for decades in the marketing industry to help target specific market segments with ads and products. Personas help you frame feature discussions while developing your software, guide your communication and conference strategy, and ultimately help you to have a more popular, better project.
This presentation will cover the basics of:
* What is a persona?
* How do I come up with one (or several) for my project?
* What can I do with them?
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.
Decision-making for teams - How to overcome cognitive biasesTobias Käfer
From Wikipedia (I could not create a better phrase wink):
A cognitive bias refers to the systematic pattern of deviation from norm or rationality in judgment, whereby inferences about other people and situations may be drawn in an illogical fashion.
Why do cognitive biases influence our daily business in decision-making as an individual and as a team?
How can we overcome such issues?
I will try to explain the ideas behind the topic and provide some strategies to overcome the issues.
Personas were made famous by Alan Moore in "The Inmates are Running the Asylum", a seminal book on user interface design for computer programmers. They have been used for decades in the marketing industry to help target specific market segments with ads and products. Personas help you frame feature discussions while developing your software, guide your communication and conference strategy, and ultimately help you to have a more popular, better project.
This presentation will cover the basics of:
* What is a persona?
* How do I come up with one (or several) for my project?
* What can I do with them?
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.
Decision-making for teams - How to overcome cognitive biasesTobias Käfer
From Wikipedia (I could not create a better phrase wink):
A cognitive bias refers to the systematic pattern of deviation from norm or rationality in judgment, whereby inferences about other people and situations may be drawn in an illogical fashion.
Why do cognitive biases influence our daily business in decision-making as an individual and as a team?
How can we overcome such issues?
I will try to explain the ideas behind the topic and provide some strategies to overcome the issues.
Legal policies can have unintended collateral effects on the growth and adoption of community open source projects. This was presented to the Legal DevRoom during FOSDEM 2016
Growing the next generation of Open Source developersDave Neary
We are living in an era when the "digital generation" knows how to use computers, but knows less and less about how to make technology. As the world moves to open source, and people's interaction with computers is dominated by embedded devices, ubiquitous computing, mobile devices and cloud, the typical computer user now has no real ability to change his computing environment in a meaningful way.
As a parent, I want to teach my kids control over their environment, and pass on to them the values of the free software and maker movements: curiosity, a desire to learn how things work and share knowledge, and above all, that we are the masters of our own destiny.
This presentation shares some of the things which we have done in our family to rear our children in the free and open source ethos.
The Ecclesiastes principle: Learning lessons of the pastDave Neary
We in the technology world often feel that what we're doing is *so* new, we don't have anything to learn from those who went before. And yet, wherever we look, we catch glimpses of wisdom learned in the past which can be applied to open source software development. Dave presents examples from three areas: city planning, architecture and diplomacy, and shows how they apply to the open source world.
Situational awareness is vital in any situation. If you are unaware of an issue, then you are in a poor position to fix it. However, there is a natural human response to the publication of metrics, which is to optimise for what is measured. Here are some cautionary tales of how performance metrics inadvertently created incentives for behaviour that was bad for the system.
Passing on the core values of the free software and maker culture is important to me - sharing is good, you have control over your physical and computing environment, and you can do great things with whatever tools and materials you have on hand.
Through hackable living space, creative toys, teaching my kids how to use tools and get comfortable with electronics, I hope I'm passing on those values.
Sometimes good intentions can lead to unintentional results. This was a presentation to the OPNFV Community on identifying and mitigating some community anti-patterns.
OpenShift is a Platform as a Service. It's straightforward to deploy it on top of the Infrastructure as a Service platform OpenStack using Heat templates, in a way which allows it to grow as more resources are required.
This presentation gives an overview of what OpenShift gives to developers, and how to deploy it on top of OpenStack.
A complete Open Source cloud: Storage, Virt, IaaS, PaaSDave Neary
You can do everything in your datacenter with open source these days. With GlusterFS, oVirt, OpenStack, OpenShift, all running on CentOS or Fedora and orchestrated with the Foreman, you can run a complete open source cloud where all the pieces talk to each other and leverage integration points for no money.
What is NFV? How does it relate to SDN, what does it mean for the telecommunications industry, and why should anyone outside of that industry care?
Presentation delivered at CloudOpen Europe, Düsseldorf, October 2014
A presentation on how and why to engage upstream projects productively, and ensure that work is accepted upstream first.
Originally delivered at Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit 2015 in Santa Rosa.
Legal policies can have unintended collateral effects on the growth and adoption of community open source projects. This was presented to the Legal DevRoom during FOSDEM 2016
Growing the next generation of Open Source developersDave Neary
We are living in an era when the "digital generation" knows how to use computers, but knows less and less about how to make technology. As the world moves to open source, and people's interaction with computers is dominated by embedded devices, ubiquitous computing, mobile devices and cloud, the typical computer user now has no real ability to change his computing environment in a meaningful way.
As a parent, I want to teach my kids control over their environment, and pass on to them the values of the free software and maker movements: curiosity, a desire to learn how things work and share knowledge, and above all, that we are the masters of our own destiny.
This presentation shares some of the things which we have done in our family to rear our children in the free and open source ethos.
The Ecclesiastes principle: Learning lessons of the pastDave Neary
We in the technology world often feel that what we're doing is *so* new, we don't have anything to learn from those who went before. And yet, wherever we look, we catch glimpses of wisdom learned in the past which can be applied to open source software development. Dave presents examples from three areas: city planning, architecture and diplomacy, and shows how they apply to the open source world.
Situational awareness is vital in any situation. If you are unaware of an issue, then you are in a poor position to fix it. However, there is a natural human response to the publication of metrics, which is to optimise for what is measured. Here are some cautionary tales of how performance metrics inadvertently created incentives for behaviour that was bad for the system.
Passing on the core values of the free software and maker culture is important to me - sharing is good, you have control over your physical and computing environment, and you can do great things with whatever tools and materials you have on hand.
Through hackable living space, creative toys, teaching my kids how to use tools and get comfortable with electronics, I hope I'm passing on those values.
Sometimes good intentions can lead to unintentional results. This was a presentation to the OPNFV Community on identifying and mitigating some community anti-patterns.
OpenShift is a Platform as a Service. It's straightforward to deploy it on top of the Infrastructure as a Service platform OpenStack using Heat templates, in a way which allows it to grow as more resources are required.
This presentation gives an overview of what OpenShift gives to developers, and how to deploy it on top of OpenStack.
A complete Open Source cloud: Storage, Virt, IaaS, PaaSDave Neary
You can do everything in your datacenter with open source these days. With GlusterFS, oVirt, OpenStack, OpenShift, all running on CentOS or Fedora and orchestrated with the Foreman, you can run a complete open source cloud where all the pieces talk to each other and leverage integration points for no money.
What is NFV? How does it relate to SDN, what does it mean for the telecommunications industry, and why should anyone outside of that industry care?
Presentation delivered at CloudOpen Europe, Düsseldorf, October 2014
A presentation on how and why to engage upstream projects productively, and ensure that work is accepted upstream first.
Originally delivered at Linux Foundation Collaboration Summit 2015 in Santa Rosa.
Grails & DevOps: continuous integration and delivery in the cloudGR8Conf
Nowadays, companies require very short release cycles, especially in lean startup environments.
But to release often:
deployments should be routine, not terrifying.
configuration should require a few clicks, not a thousand-line shell script.
problems should be easy to spot, not buried in a log file.
You are a developer that need to release every week or every day with a single git commit and zero-downtime? Easily spot release performance or bugs issues? If required, roll back to previous version in few seconds and one click? And you don't want to manage any dedicated repository, monitoring, build, staging, production servers? So this talk is for you!
We will explore Lean startup and DevOps concepts and share our experience on how to create a simple and fully automated build pipeline for Grails apps with a live demo, based on SaaS/cloud services: GitHub, Travis CI, NewRelic, AWS (ElasticBeanstalk, CloudFront), etc.
Think future technologies – corporate presentation (public)Tft Us
Think Future Technologies is a leading provider of outsourcing software development, QA & Testing and related services. Based in India and serving clients worldwide, Think Future Technologies delivers a wide variety of comprehensive end-to-end services that combine power, functionality, and reliability with flexibility, agility, and usability.
Our broad portfolio of service offerings includes software development, user interface design, and architecture planning, as well as quality assurance, implementation, deployment, maintenance, and documentation support. Through the efficient execution of these services, we can create robust, cutting-edge custom technology applications that most effectively address the unique business needs of our customers.
Discover the concept of 'on-the-fly' analysis with TIBCO Spotfire based on effortless of coding program for combining different types of file, cut cost of increasing in DB warehouse while DB growing, and real time analysis for digital era.
The video of the workshop can be found at http://goo.gl/c0EBd9 .
Learn from the co-founders of Innov8tif on the differences between sales & development strategies for consumer and enterprise products, as well as the activities involved in the delivery cycles.
Takeaway :
- Understanding the process of building your product for
enterprises
- How to sell and market enterprise products
The MSA Launch (http://bit.ly/1yhQPZV) is a 5-day event aiming to provide an introduction to MaGIC Academy. It is presented as a condensed version of how MaGIC Academy is going to contribute to you and the startup community. You will be able to experience a series of workshops, skill and sharing knowledge opportunity, and mentoring with our selected network of mentors.
Website : www.mymagic.my
Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/magic.cyberjaya
Twitter : https://twitter.com/magiccyberjaya
Youtube : http://goo.gl/HvrRLa
SlideShare : http://slidesha.re/1BfSncP
Email : enquiries@mymagic.my
Process and flows of an IT Project - presentation.pdfCasey Ordoña
Webinar Session (New Era University, College of Information Science & Tech) - Process and flows of an IT project - 2022 Apr 08
attended by 280 students.
Objective: Provide students an overview of how IT Projects advance today's real world.
Get a head-start and effortless transition as you join an organization.
INTRO
Understanding the process and flow of an IT Scheme will enable you to know your advantage in project development. Project Managers, IT Leads, and C-Level Executives expect your best foot forward when joining a company. Obj: Provides students a top-level view on how an IT project moves in the real world in order to get a head-start and easy transition as you join a the working world.
I know that most of you are graduating students or nearing the internship programs, some of you might be in between or are considering becoming a freelancer which is a smart move considering the advent of the remote work in the “new normal” then you will certainly benefit from this topic.
My favorite thing abt my work is simplifying complex information.
So I divided the phases and flows into 5 levels
Now keep in mind, it can be as extensive depending on the complexity of an IT proj but this is roughly the breakdown of each stage.
Let’s have a look at:
- what happens in each phase
- what are the processes and tools are,
- who are involved/ ppl you’ll be meeting,
- what you should do and how you can be useful!
An old presentation on community engagement practices, and communication in open source projects. Some of the references are a little outdated with current trends in open source (eg. github).
Community catalysts value of open sourceDave Neary
What is the value of using an open source product? If you're buying a product from a vendor, does it matter that the underlying software is open source? This presentation describes some of the benefits that only come from an open source product.
Crafting an open source product strategyDave Neary
Should I open source this project? If so, how do I do it successfully? A presentation explaining fundamental principles behind open source business models. For a prose accompaniment, see https://community.redhat.com/blog/2018/04/crafting-an-open-source-product-strategy/
There is no open source business model - only people selling complementary goods, and using an open source project as a development and distribution model.
oVirt and OpenStack look kind of similar from a distance. But they cater to different use-cases. That said, they do have some common needs. How can they work together? And when is it better to use one over the other?
Une présentation rapide des principes de base de Git - l'idée n'était pas de montrer le syntax des commandes, mais plutôt d'éclaircir les grandes lignes de Git, pour perrmettre à des gens de le prendre en charge dans le cadre d'un travail collaboratif.
A presentation on the Maemo Community Council, going through the problems which gave arise to it, the origins and various governance and process decisions which needed to be made, and the successes which the council has had since its inception. The presentation will eventually be accompanied by speaker notes which I need to copy from a notepad to the computer.
Un atelier de formation donné à l'ALDIL lors du Jeudi du Libre de janvier 2010, par Dave Neary, sur la base de la formation qui a donné Lionel Tricot à l'APRIL à Paris.
A lightning talk I gave on giving great presentations at the Maemo Summit 2009 in Amsterdam, in reaction to seeing so many poor technical presentations at conferences I attend. I hope people find it both entertaining and useful.
With thanks to Seth Godin, Garr Reynolds, Nancy Duarte and Guy Kawasaki for inspiration and material.
Nokia and the Maemo community has come a long way towards the goal of co-producing documentation for the Maemo project - this presentation presents some of the achievements so far and puts forward the next steps.
Pushing the limits of ePRTC: 100ns holdover for 100 daysAdtran
At WSTS 2024, Alon Stern explored the topic of parametric holdover and explained how recent research findings can be implemented in real-world PNT networks to achieve 100 nanoseconds of accuracy for up to 100 days.
Essentials of Automations: The Art of Triggers and Actions in FMESafe Software
In this second installment of our Essentials of Automations webinar series, we’ll explore the landscape of triggers and actions, guiding you through the nuances of authoring and adapting workspaces for seamless automations. Gain an understanding of the full spectrum of triggers and actions available in FME, empowering you to enhance your workspaces for efficient automation.
We’ll kick things off by showcasing the most commonly used event-based triggers, introducing you to various automation workflows like manual triggers, schedules, directory watchers, and more. Plus, see how these elements play out in real scenarios.
Whether you’re tweaking your current setup or building from the ground up, this session will arm you with the tools and insights needed to transform your FME usage into a powerhouse of productivity. Join us to discover effective strategies that simplify complex processes, enhancing your productivity and transforming your data management practices with FME. Let’s turn complexity into clarity and make your workspaces work wonders!
zkStudyClub - Reef: Fast Succinct Non-Interactive Zero-Knowledge Regex ProofsAlex Pruden
This paper presents Reef, a system for generating publicly verifiable succinct non-interactive zero-knowledge proofs that a committed document matches or does not match a regular expression. We describe applications such as proving the strength of passwords, the provenance of email despite redactions, the validity of oblivious DNS queries, and the existence of mutations in DNA. Reef supports the Perl Compatible Regular Expression syntax, including wildcards, alternation, ranges, capture groups, Kleene star, negations, and lookarounds. Reef introduces a new type of automata, Skipping Alternating Finite Automata (SAFA), that skips irrelevant parts of a document when producing proofs without undermining soundness, and instantiates SAFA with a lookup argument. Our experimental evaluation confirms that Reef can generate proofs for documents with 32M characters; the proofs are small and cheap to verify (under a second).
Paper: https://eprint.iacr.org/2023/1886
Communications Mining Series - Zero to Hero - Session 1DianaGray10
This session provides introduction to UiPath Communication Mining, importance and platform overview. You will acquire a good understand of the phases in Communication Mining as we go over the platform with you. Topics covered:
• Communication Mining Overview
• Why is it important?
• How can it help today’s business and the benefits
• Phases in Communication Mining
• Demo on Platform overview
• Q/A
Securing your Kubernetes cluster_ a step-by-step guide to success !KatiaHIMEUR1
Today, after several years of existence, an extremely active community and an ultra-dynamic ecosystem, Kubernetes has established itself as the de facto standard in container orchestration. Thanks to a wide range of managed services, it has never been so easy to set up a ready-to-use Kubernetes cluster.
However, this ease of use means that the subject of security in Kubernetes is often left for later, or even neglected. This exposes companies to significant risks.
In this talk, I'll show you step-by-step how to secure your Kubernetes cluster for greater peace of mind and reliability.
DevOps and Testing slides at DASA ConnectKari Kakkonen
My and Rik Marselis slides at 30.5.2024 DASA Connect conference. We discuss about what is testing, then what is agile testing and finally what is Testing in DevOps. Finally we had lovely workshop with the participants trying to find out different ways to think about quality and testing in different parts of the DevOps infinity loop.
Unlocking Productivity: Leveraging the Potential of Copilot in Microsoft 365, a presentation by Christoforos Vlachos, Senior Solutions Manager – Modern Workplace, Uni Systems
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.
A tale of scale & speed: How the US Navy is enabling software delivery from l...sonjaschweigert1
Rapid and secure feature delivery is a goal across every application team and every branch of the DoD. The Navy’s DevSecOps platform, Party Barge, has achieved:
- Reduction in onboarding time from 5 weeks to 1 day
- Improved developer experience and productivity through actionable findings and reduction of false positives
- Maintenance of superior security standards and inherent policy enforcement with Authorization to Operate (ATO)
Development teams can ship efficiently and ensure applications are cyber ready for Navy Authorizing Officials (AOs). In this webinar, Sigma Defense and Anchore will give attendees a look behind the scenes and demo secure pipeline automation and security artifacts that speed up application ATO and time to production.
We will cover:
- How to remove silos in DevSecOps
- How to build efficient development pipeline roles and component templates
- How to deliver security artifacts that matter for ATO’s (SBOMs, vulnerability reports, and policy evidence)
- How to streamline operations with automated policy checks on container images
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 6DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 6. In this session, we will cover Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI webinar offers an in-depth exploration of leveraging cutting-edge technologies for test automation within the UiPath platform. Attendees will delve into the integration of generative AI, a test automation solution, with Open AI advanced natural language processing capabilities.
Throughout the session, participants will discover how this synergy empowers testers to automate repetitive tasks, enhance testing accuracy, and expedite the software testing life cycle. Topics covered include the seamless integration process, practical use cases, and the benefits of harnessing AI-driven automation for UiPath testing initiatives. By attending this webinar, testers, and automation professionals can gain valuable insights into harnessing the power of AI to optimize their test automation workflows within the UiPath ecosystem, ultimately driving efficiency and quality in software development processes.
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into integrating generative AI.
2. Understanding how this integration enhances test automation within the UiPath platform
3. Practical demonstrations
4. Exploration of real-world use cases illustrating the benefits of AI-driven test automation for UiPath
Topics covered:
What is generative AI
Test Automation with generative AI and Open AI.
UiPath integration with generative AI
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
Generative AI Deep Dive: Advancing from Proof of Concept to ProductionAggregage
Join Maher Hanafi, VP of Engineering at Betterworks, in this new session where he'll share a practical framework to transform Gen AI prototypes into impactful products! He'll delve into the complexities of data collection and management, model selection and optimization, and ensuring security, scalability, and responsible use.
Dr. Sean Tan, Head of Data Science, Changi Airport Group
Discover how Changi Airport Group (CAG) leverages graph technologies and generative AI to revolutionize their search capabilities. This session delves into the unique search needs of CAG’s diverse passengers and customers, showcasing how graph data structures enhance the accuracy and relevance of AI-generated search results, mitigating the risk of “hallucinations” and improving the overall customer journey.
5. Persona basics
●
A persona should have enough detail to make the
person “feel” real
–
–
Photo
–
Age
–
Job
–
●
Name
Family situation
Distilled characteristics of market segment (Cooper
calls these “archetypes”)
16. User experience design
●
What are the main tasks?
●
What is the mental model audience has?
●
Separating different workflows (admin vs user vs
deployer)
20. OpenStack User Committee
An OpenStack User may have different roles:
● A consumer [...]
● An operator [...]
● An ecosystem partner [...]
● A distribution provider or appliance vendor [...]
An OpenStack User may have different types of organizational
affiliation: [...]
An OpenStack User may come from different market segments:
[...]
An OpenStack User may come from different geographic regions:
[...]
Source: http://bit.ly/1102DAP
21. Contributing sources
●
●
Aeolus Conductor personas:
https://aeolusproject.org/redmine/projects/aeolus/wiki
/Personas
NTT Com Security “Cloud Personas”:
http://www.integralis.com/en/uploads/files/Cloud
%20Personas%20whitepaper%20-%20FINAL.pdf
●
IBM Cloud user roles: ACM CHIMIT ’11
●
EMC UX blog: http://uxblog.emc.com/2013/05/
●
Bruce Reeler & Ju Lim from Red Hat
●
RDO Forum users
23. Anna the Enterprise Admin
●
●
Big company – 3 datacenters worldwide
Mostly VMware, HyperV, KVM on host, mostly
Windows & Linux guests
●
Considering IaaS for self-service
●
Needs reassurance, monitoring, marketplace
●
Anna deploys what the CIO/Director of IT decides
24. Simon the SMB Admin
●
●
●
Medium sized company with developers – Simon
dabbles and adopts technology he thinks will make
his life easier
Already using AWS – wants private IaaS for devel &
QA self-service
Needs easy way to apply security updates, good
monitoring for nodes, quotas & guests
25. Dan the Deployer
●
●
●
●
Services company
Dan looks at a lot of technology, but spends his time
where the money is – project-based work
Dan's an installer & architect – wants an easy way to
spec out & design a cloud, deploy it, and get out
Involved during installation, major version upgrades,
but not admin
26. Erin the DevOps web dev & deployer
●
Erin has been using AWS for a while
●
Very familiar with CI/CD tools and workflows
●
●
Primarily developing apps for internal usage, helping
other web developers do their deployment
Focused on her apps, and doesn't care much what
the underlying infrastructure is
27. Diane the Developer
●
●
●
Diane develops applications which build on and
integrate with OpenStack – her company is a vendor
of cloud-related hardware
Cares about the upstream experience, and about the
quality, stability and documentation of the APIs
Diane's company cares about generating revenues
from sales of hardware for OpenStack deployments
28. Ursula the University IT Director
●
●
●
●
Ursula manages the university's 400 servers, spread
over 2 data centers, to manage the university IT
needs, grid computing, and student IT requests
Ursula prefers open source for cost and control
reasons
Has some pressure from staff and students to
provide more flexible IT management for projects,
teaching, on-demand scientific computing resources
Cares about monitoring, security updates
29. Brad the Beginner
●
●
●
●
Brad is a dabbler
Needs easy install and set-up – get main ideas
quickly, but brush over details
Wants “Getting started” tutorials up to and including
“something useful running”
Brad lacks the knowledge to dig in and debug issues
with installation and configuration
30. Victor the VI Admin
●
●
●
●
Victor knows all there is to know about vSphere. Has
mastered automation and control of his infrastructure
Maintains compute, storage & network resources for
a medium-sized company
IT needs are evolving, and he's considering IaaS to
respond to self-service requests from technical
colleagues
Pain points: Capacity planning, integrating Iaas in a
heterogeneous environment
31. Dennis the Director of IT
●
Dennis is nervous about new technology
●
Unsure about the cost and benefits of a private IaaS
●
●
Pressure to evolve due to tightening IT budgets,
demand for faster response time to IT ticket requests
for new services
Worried how he's going to control & manage things
when anyone can create a service
32. Alan the AWS Enthusiast
●
Works for a start-up that makes mobile applications
●
Been using AWS for years
●
●
●
Wants to concentrate on application, not on
managing the platform
“Automate all the things” – security updates, test,
staging, production deployment cycle
Cost & effort of moving to an alternative IaaS are key
concerns for him
33. Walter the Web Developer
●
●
●
Walter doesn't care about infrastructure or
deployment, he cares about web development
Happy developing Symfony/Bootstrap/HTML5 apps
on his Macbook, testing via VirtualBox
Needs guidance on how to build apps for the cloud
without having to learn the ins & outs of an IaaS
34. Help!
●
Key audiences not personified
–
–
Core developers
–
●
Press, analysts, pundits
Distributors/product managers
Personas need polish
–
Compare to reality
35. Help!
●
●
Integrate User Committee survey results & get user
feedback/interviews
Personas are useful when they're used
–
User interface design
–
Documentation
–
Marketing
–
Feature prioritization
36. Resources (added for SlideShare)
●
●
●
OpenStack personas on Google docs:
http://bit.ly/OpenStackPersonas
OpenStack user stories:
https://www.openstack.org/user-stories/
OpenStack user committee survey results:
http://bit.ly/OpenStackSurveyNov13