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Software Development Life Cycles and Methodologies: Fixing the Old and Adopting the New

Software Development Life Cycles and Methodologies: Fixing the Old and Adopting the New

Sue Conger
ISBN13: 9781466615625|ISBN10: 1466615621|EISBN13: 9781466615632
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-1562-5.ch006
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MLA

Conger, Sue. "Software Development Life Cycles and Methodologies: Fixing the Old and Adopting the New." Systems Approach Applications for Developments in Information Technology, edited by Frank Stowell, IGI Global, 2012, pp. 66-90. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-1562-5.ch006

APA

Conger, S. (2012). Software Development Life Cycles and Methodologies: Fixing the Old and Adopting the New. In F. Stowell (Ed.), Systems Approach Applications for Developments in Information Technology (pp. 66-90). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-1562-5.ch006

Chicago

Conger, Sue. "Software Development Life Cycles and Methodologies: Fixing the Old and Adopting the New." In Systems Approach Applications for Developments in Information Technology, edited by Frank Stowell, 66-90. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2012. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-1562-5.ch006

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Abstract

Information Systems as a discipline has generated thousands of research papers, yet the practice still suffers from poor-quality applications. This paper evaluates the current state of application development, finding practice wanting in a number of areas. Changes recommended to fix historical shortcomings include improved management attention to risk management, testing, and detailed work practices. In addition, for industry’s move to services orientation, recommended changes include development of usable interfaces and a view of applications as embedded in the larger business services in which they function. These business services relate to both services provided to parent-organization customers as well as services provided by the information technology organization to its constituents. Because of this shift toward service orientation, more emphasis on usability, applications, testing, and improvement of underlying process quality are needed. The shift to services can be facilitated by adopting tenets of IT service management and user-centered design and by attending to service delivery during application development.

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