[Don't forget!  IT Pro Forum meeting tomorrow night, with a special
 guest speaker who's come a long way to give the talk.  Should be fun!]
 
Using Software Toilet Plungers, Jeffrey Haemer
6:30pm Tuesday, November 16th
Eugene City Brewery (downstairs)

Science: fun!
Software development: glamorous!

Version control? Boring.
Code reviews? Boring.
Builds? Boring.
Testing? Boring.
Packaging? Releases? Boring.
Zzzz.

I'm not the guy who models obstructed water flows around oblate
spheroids in S-shaped pipes, using pentagonal, finite elements with
moving boundaries.  I do boring, practical stuff. I'm the guy who
unclogs your toilet.  It's worth knowing how to work a toilet plunger. 
Otherwise, you always have to pay a plumber, and we're expensive.

Come spend an hour learning a little more about software manufacturing
than you know now. It'll be fun and glamorous. Oh, okay, it won't. But
it'll be worth knowing.

I'll say things you can use.

Jeffrey S. Haemer is Software Configuration Manager at Aztek Networks
in Boulder, Colorado.  Dr. Haemer has worked and consulted on various
aspects of software manufacturing since 1983, when he helped produce
the first, Intel-based, Unix system: PC/IX on the IBM PC/XT.

He has done Unix and Linux education and training for organizations
like Uniforum and the University of Colorado, and in places like
Romania and Kuwait. He has served as Standards Representative for the
Usenix Association. He is a contributing author of The Linux
Administration Handbook and has published over a hundred articles and
papers on software engineering for Unix and Linux.
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