Business Problems and Software Solutions

Closed
Course
en
English
6 h
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Source
  • From www.futurelearn.com
More info
  • 2 Sequences
  • Intermediate Level
  • Starts on July 8, 2018
  • Ends on July 22, 2018

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Course details

Syllabus

  1. business and requirements analysis
  2. determining system boundaries
  3. modelling requirements

By the end of the course, you'll be able to...

  • explore business domains and identify causes of pain for customers
  • apply modelling techniques to refine the requirements of a system
  • identify and describe the various types of software requirements
  • explain the role of requirements analysis in software projects

Prerequisite

None.

Instructors

Michael Hobbs
I am a senior lecturer in the School of IT at Deakin University. My research interests are in the areas of distributed systems, operating systems and more recently IoT scalability & interoperability.

Dr Thanh Nguyen
Dr Thanh Nguyen (PhD in Computer Science) is currently a Lecturer at the School of Information Technology, Deakin University. Nguyen is an expert in Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition.

Editor

Deakin University is an Australian public university with approximately 50,644 higher education students in 2014. Established in 1974, the University was named after the leader of the Australian federation movement and the nation's second Prime Minister, Alfred Deakin. It has campuses in Geelong, Warrnambool and Burwood, Melbourne and learning centres in Dandenong, Craigieburn and Werribee, all in the state of Victoria. It was formally established in 1974 with the passage of the Deakin University Act 1974.

Platform

FutureLearn is a massive open online course (MOOC) learning platform founded in December 2012.

It is a company launched and wholly owned by The Open University in Milton Keynes, England. It is the first UK-led massive open online course learning platform, and as of March 2015 included 54 UK and international University partners and unlike similar platforms includes four non-university partners: the British Museum, the British Council, the British Library and the National Film and Television School.

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