semperpeppe

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 months ago

Idk, she's black?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago

Regarding the jargon, I suggest this: https://youtu.be/RIHA53SWO20

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago

Thank you so much for your suggestions. I wasn't even thinking about something like notion or baserow, so this is definitely a good idea.

 

Hey everyone, I work as a business ans systems analyst and I need to manage a lot of requirements. We are using documents and spreadsheets, but this approach is sooo error prone and time consuming.

I am looking for something that I will use as the sole user, for the moment, as my company has other standards right now. This will help me in making sense of structure and avoid information loss.

My main needs are traceability matrixes for tracing requirements to implementation and test cases, versioning of requirements, tracing of changes in a requirement, analyze impacts of change requests.

I am looking for a tool that supports the following diagramming and modeling frameworks: UML, BPMN, SysML. ArchiMate support might be interesting. It also need to support written requirements and specifications, business rules, objectives.

The current project I am working on extensively uses ontologies, RDF/OWL, and XML. Support for these would also be useful, but not essential. I am mostly interested in the logic of the main requirements tracing processes.

I really liked the ease of use as it was in OSRMT. Unfortunately the software is pretty buggy and unmaintained. ReqView is another very good software for written requirements, but it supports diagramming only as attachment of files, and also is not free and open source :(

So, I tried Modelio, Papyrus, Archi, OSRMT, ReqView. Here's the source I checked the most: https://www.requirementsmanagementtools.com/opensource.php Something like Enterprise Architect from Sparx Systems is cool, but very complex to use.

Apparently, this kind of software is very niche and corporate oriented, so there is just a bunch of free and open source products for this kind of activities.

I am open for any idea! Thank you

 

Tim scoppiata in Italia? News?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago

On mobile I have etar calendar and davx5. It generally works pretty well, even if the sync is not instantaneous. I have a few problems with inviting people to events and sending the associated email/invitation, but it's just a matter of how the SMTP servers are managed, just a minor thing

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

This is pretty much my setup. I use nextcloud as a calendar, but for to-do lists I am experimenting with Joplin, with a mermaid plugin for also mindmaps. I'd like to automate everything and have a all-in-one solution but it does not look like an easy thing so far

 

Hi everyone! Due to so many projects I'm involved into, I need an easy way to organize and visualize tasks, dependencies, and durations in order to properly plan my week.

I'm looking for an organizer app that fulfills the following requirements:

  • must have a calendar management systems
  • it must support multiple caldav calendars at the same time
  • must have a to-do list
  • each time the user creates a to-do element, they should have the option to reserve a specific time on the calendar
  • when they decide to reserve a specific time on the calendar, the calendar might be chosen among the multiple support ones
  • to-do tasks might be visualized as a mindmap
  • for every leaf / "outer children" of the mindmap, must correspond a to-do element with the specific calendar

Does anybody knows something that does all of this?

Thank you

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

I've never played this game, but it's soundtrack helped me prepare for so many exams in uni that I can't even remember. I will have to try it once!

 

This is probably something for spit cooking, but looks like it could have been an amazing torture device lol