by Dwayne Phillips A review of one of the fundamentals of systems engineering. We create and manage budgets of key technical performance measures. System engineers work with technical budgets. Examples: size weight power attenuation memory use RAM memory use disk time to complete an operation We are building a smartphone. We are told to keep […]
Entries Tagged as 'Engineering'
Technical Budgets
September 21st, 2017 · No Comments
Tags: Engineering · Systems
Software Systems Engineering and Agile Development
March 2nd, 2017 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Agile development is not an excuse for knowing what you did, why you did it, and how you did it. You’re doing agile development. You hold a meeting to start a sprint (different methods use different names for this). You sprint! You meet again at the end of the sprint. What did […]
Tags: Agility · Analysis · Communication · Engineering · Systems
Everyone Agrees about That, So…
February 6th, 2017 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Take great care when everyone agrees about something. Once the world was plagued with the longitude problem. Long-distance sea travel was dangerous and fraught with the great unknown, “where are we?!?!?!?” Everyone agreed on the solution to the longitude problem. Everyone, that is, except the carpenter who solved the problem. For background, […]
Tags: Engineering · General Systems Thinking · Ideas · Observation · Science
Systems Engineering—Opening the Black Boxes
January 30th, 2017 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips One function of systems engineering is to open the black boxes, look at the entire system, and apply some wisdom. We often build systems by connecting existing systems and subsystems. These existing pieces are black boxes, i.e., we don’t know or don’t care to know what is inside them and how they […]
Tags: Adults · Analysis · Engineering · Systems · Technical Debt
Systems Engineering and Interfaces
January 23rd, 2017 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Systems are commonly built by connecting smaller systems. This requires that the systems are connect-able, and that requires a defined interface. Most of the time, we build systems by connecting large boxes together in a system diagram. There are exceptions, and another post will discuss some of those. Still, connect the boxes […]
Tags: Adults · Communication · Engineering · General Systems Thinking · Systems
When Documentation is More Valuable than Working Software
November 24th, 2016 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Working software is more valuable than documentation—except when it isn’t. And we have Dwayne’s Declaration. Part of the Agile Manifesto states: We…value working software over comprehensive documentation Some of us are old enough to have known this years before the manifesto was manifest. Of course we wanted working software, except when we […]
Tags: Agility · Analysis · Authentic · Communication · Engineering · Management · Thinking · Work
Engineering the Software versus Banging Out the Code
April 18th, 2016 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips There are major differences between engineering systems and “just doing it.” The consequences are both obvious and predicted. For at least 25 years, I have heard and seen in action the mantra of “good enough software.” Get a partial solution, ship it, improve it. Great stuff. Except time has shown that the […]
Tags: Engineering · Programming · Systems
Software Engineers and Software Engineering
March 17th, 2016 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Being a computer programmer does not make me a software engineer. Deep sigh before I begin. This is yet another post borne of frustration in talking with recruiters and hiring managers. Now that the sigh is out of the way. A computer programmer is not a software engineer. There. Wrote that bit. […]
Tags: Computing · Engineering · Programming · Work
Design Success! (or is it failure?)
February 15th, 2016 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips If a system designed to last a few months last 12 years, is that a success or a failure? A recent story hailed the success of the NASA Mars rover. The rover was “designed” to last a few months, but is still going after 12 years. Wow! What a great design and […]
Tags: Design · Engineering · Government · Requirements · Systems
Lie to Everyone but Me
January 11th, 2016 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips If someone could overcome the scientific and logical barriers to backdoors to encryption systems, they would still face one of trusting liars. Many of our elected representatives want our technology companies to build encryption systems with “backdoors.” (Here is a link to one story of such.) These magical backdoors would permit the […]
Tags: America · Communication · Engineering · Government · Privacy · Security