Alexander Thurow presents - Thoughts on (Modern?) Software Development


Details
Alexander Thurow presents - Thoughts on (Modern?) Software Development
Abstract:
“If someone is taking a journey, he (or she) can tell a story. Therefore I would take my staff and hat and would choose to travel.” (Matthias Claudius, 1740-1815)
The present talk was designed with exactly this in mind, 1000-times heard (and slightly updated), German proverb.
Initially created for a student audience ("From education to employment: A requirements-set for modern software developers“), it tries to outline what the presenter identified as relevant for a productive survival in the software development business (aka "the wild“).
Have you ever been wondering why we, as a whole community of experts, so often struggle to tame the beast called software development?
The "Thoughts on (Modern?) Software Development" talk tries to present some answers to the question why our ongoing fight is a tough one.
Spoiler: Most of the time it is not about what your stakeholders, or you as someone who is directly involved, think it is…
About Alexander Thurow:
During the last twenty years Alexander Thurow (https://onmoderndev.de/en) worked at different German software providers. Currently he is a freelance software developer, consultant and speaker.
- Born in Hamburg in 1975, currently located at Lake Constance
- Dipl.-Wirtsch.-Inform. (FH), 2005 at the Leuphana Lüneburg and the University of Sydney
- Different positions: Software developer, consultant, technical trainer, lecturer and speaker
- Main areas of interest: Clean Code, Refactoring, Technical Debt, knowledge transfer and mentoring, technological disruption, books ("in- and outside of the box“, see: https://onmoderndev.de/en/reading), current affairs
Agenda (timezone in BST):
18:45 - 19.00 - Event Welcoming & Networking
19:00 - 20:20 - Talk
20:20 - 20:30 - Event Questions & Networking
SEUa:
As a ''Scrum Alliance User Group'' you will earn 1.5 SEUs from the event. Use the email scrumevent@gmail.com if asked

Alexander Thurow presents - Thoughts on (Modern?) Software Development