Posts Tagged ‘open’

[#JRA-6482] Strict priority for all open issues - Atlassian JIRA

Tuesday, January 1st, 2008

[#JRA-6482] Strict priority for all open issues - Atlassian JIRA

For planning the work on open issues we need to set a strict priority for every open issue. That is, every open issue must either be more important or less important than every other open issue. It is not enough to set one of a finite set of priorities since we need to determine which issue to solve first even if both are Critical. These priorities are global per project. This way of strictly prioritizing issues is at the core of every agile methodology like XP, Crystal, and Scrumm.

This issue is very important to us, and I hope you will give it serious thought.

The whole thread is very informative/interesting

Use collatodo - see example: collatodo United Nations’ Millenium Development Goals

JIRA is a bug tracking, issue tracking, and project management application developed to make this process easier for your team. JIRA has been designed with a focus on task achievement, is instantly usable and is flexible to work with.

jira-greenhopper-plugin

GreenHopper

If you want to crank up your JIRA for project management, GreenHopper is for you.

JIRA Ranking Plugin

The Crunchies 2007 rule : One ballot per user per day

Tuesday, January 1st, 2008

Vote for Atlassian in the Crunchies

Done !

the Crunchies 2007 rules

Everyone is invited to vote for their favorite Crunchies winners. One ballot per user per day will be counted in the final vote. The Crunchies Committee reserves the right to discard any and all votes that it reasonably determines to be fraudulent or submitted by bots or other computer-generated voting applications. There are no fees to vote.

why one ballot per user per day ?

Anyway, it should be “one ballot per user per day per category” !

Why not let voters register and cast just 1 vote ! ?

Example United Nations’ Millenium Development Goals

the bug^H^H^Hfeature in Bloglines of showing edited posts has been fixed

Friday, December 28th, 2007

Paul’s Journal: in reply to “bloglines sucks”

Luckily or unlucky, depending on your perspective, I took some time this afternoon away from my family to read my feeds. For now the bug^H^H^Hfeature in Bloglines of showing edited posts has been fixed. I’ve have simply turned it off for all users.

Just because one-user (even though The Scoble) shouted.. how can something be simply turned off for all users ?

_Maybe_ the feature should have been turned off just for Scoble’s feed only !

Jon Udell and The itemized electric bill

Thursday, December 27th, 2007

Jon Udell: The itemized electric bill

Using Social Networking to Support Local Energy Management and Conservation : if data produced by smart electric meters were shared in social networks, we could work together to optimize our energy use.

ATTN Singtel - I have been requesting for an itemized phone bill for some time now

The comments contain a pointer to cooltools: Kill-A-Watt

Ross Mayfield’s Weblog: Made of People

Thursday, December 27th, 2007

Ross Mayfield’s Weblog: Made of People

Jive Talks of Jive Software contains we eat our own dog food - too missing

Tuesday, December 25th, 2007

0) At http://www.jivesoftware.com, the link next to Jive Software News is http://www.jivesoftware.com/news/wp-rss2.php [ where is the search box @ photomett.net ? ]

Jive Software’s mantra seems to be “What’s next in collaboration” - It is the TITLE of the home page

1) Is it a question or a statment ? not obvious!

2) Why am I interested in jive software ? 1) My company’s name is listed as a “business partner” on the home page 2) Am the developer founder of collatodo and a 2008 goal for me/collatodo is collatodo will be a finalist in Jolt Awards 2008 in category Collaboration Tools

3) Why is jive software’s products not a finalist in the Jolt Awards Collaboration Tools category ?

4) I do not see a explaining clearly the differences between various products ?

5) When an email is entered at the bottom of the home page in the field “Newsletter signup”, the page refreshes. But it is not obvious whether the email has been accepted! There was no “success message”

6) At the bottom of Jive Talks: is

Jive Talks is powered by Clearspace out of our development community, Jivespace. We use Openfire and Spark daily to communicate with one another with instant messaging. We proudly support our XMPP open-source community, Ignite Realtime. We use Jive Forums to provide crucial customer support. In other words, we eat our own dog food.

include a “too” and link to WordPress :-)

7) Am not able to logon to Jive Software Support. Waiting for a reply..

8 ) Go to that link.. On the top right is a phone number and below is “click to email + red-dot + offline”
-> mouse over on click to email and
-> text becomes “click to chat + green-dot + online” !
-> freedback to jive software - check that !

Why Giving Away Your Code Is Not Dangerous | iface thoughts

Tuesday, December 25th, 2007

Why Giving Away Your Code Is Not Dangerous | iface thoughts

One of the things that the beginners learn is that coding is important, and that code is an important artifact. Which makes it difficult to convince them why giving away code is not dangerous. The philosophy of open source is usually met with raised eyebrows and skepticism in classrooms, especially if they have come to read how Bill Gates and Steve Jobs built companies and made money.

check for duplicate links/text in other posts and lead people to each other

Thursday, December 20th, 2007

wiki like revision history

Thursday, December 20th, 2007

un mdg 8 - develop a global partnership for development

Friday, November 23rd, 2007