Use case modeling - online???
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I was just wondering if there was a place where we could model simple use cases online? Well, is there such a website?
Not sure if this is entirely relevant to what you're looking for, but I'm dying to tell people about this project I'm working on and it might help you out, so... The project I'm working on might be of some use to you, depending on just how much functionality you need. It's not exactly a use case modelling tool, but it is an online application creation tool which allows you to build use cases, processes and such. The difference is, when you build them, they get implemented. The videos on the website would do a much better job than me of explaining the thing, so check out the demos at http://www.icebergondemand.com and documentation at http://www.learniceberg.com - it's pretty interesting stuff. We're launching on the 28th. There's also some kind of limited discounting scheme for early adopters as far as I'm aware - if you call up and have a chat with the Marketing Director he'll probably do you a good deal. I'd be interested in general to see what the other CPians think of this project, so all comments welcome...
Smokie, this is not 'Nam. This is bowling. There are rules. www.icebergondemand.com
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Not sure if this is entirely relevant to what you're looking for, but I'm dying to tell people about this project I'm working on and it might help you out, so... The project I'm working on might be of some use to you, depending on just how much functionality you need. It's not exactly a use case modelling tool, but it is an online application creation tool which allows you to build use cases, processes and such. The difference is, when you build them, they get implemented. The videos on the website would do a much better job than me of explaining the thing, so check out the demos at http://www.icebergondemand.com and documentation at http://www.learniceberg.com - it's pretty interesting stuff. We're launching on the 28th. There's also some kind of limited discounting scheme for early adopters as far as I'm aware - if you call up and have a chat with the Marketing Director he'll probably do you a good deal. I'd be interested in general to see what the other CPians think of this project, so all comments welcome...
Smokie, this is not 'Nam. This is bowling. There are rules. www.icebergondemand.com
Why does the original question and your reply smell of well coordinated spam? Marc
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Why does the original question and your reply smell of well coordinated spam? Marc
Marc Clifton wrote:
well coordinated
Not that well coordinated, look at the time difference. :)
Simon
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Why does the original question and your reply smell of well coordinated spam? Marc
Dude, seriously, get a grip. If you want to question me on the relevance of my post to the question posed, feel free. But accuse me of spamming? The original post was in the CodeProject mail I got in my inbox this morning, which is the only reason I read it. I happen to be developing this app for a small startup company in which I have no interest, but I'm genuinely pleased to be a part of it and that's why I posted, because I wanted to get a response. If you can't be arsed to even check my details, which are up there for all to see, before dismissing the post as spam, then why are you even bothering to reply? I'll remove the post if more people chime in and say it was inappropriate. But my position would be that unless I'm actually selling something for myself, what's the problem? I'm not even a permanent employee here, just a contractor. Have you never shown anyone something you're working on to see what they think, particularly if you think it's a cool product, and they work in the same field as you? Surely that's part of what an online community is about?
Smokie, this is not 'Nam. This is bowling. There are rules. www.icebergondemand.com
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Not sure if this is entirely relevant to what you're looking for, but I'm dying to tell people about this project I'm working on and it might help you out, so... The project I'm working on might be of some use to you, depending on just how much functionality you need. It's not exactly a use case modelling tool, but it is an online application creation tool which allows you to build use cases, processes and such. The difference is, when you build them, they get implemented. The videos on the website would do a much better job than me of explaining the thing, so check out the demos at http://www.icebergondemand.com and documentation at http://www.learniceberg.com - it's pretty interesting stuff. We're launching on the 28th. There's also some kind of limited discounting scheme for early adopters as far as I'm aware - if you call up and have a chat with the Marketing Director he'll probably do you a good deal. I'd be interested in general to see what the other CPians think of this project, so all comments welcome...
Smokie, this is not 'Nam. This is bowling. There are rules. www.icebergondemand.com
It looks like Spam, it smells like Spam, I assume you eat Ham and Jam and Spamalot. Do you even get to push the Pramalot?
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
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It looks like Spam, it smells like Spam, I assume you eat Ham and Jam and Spamalot. Do you even get to push the Pramalot?
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
Well I do sing from the diaphragm a lot... :laugh: :laugh:
Smokie, this is not 'Nam. This is bowling. There are rules. www.icebergondemand.com
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Marc Clifton wrote:
well coordinated
Not that well coordinated, look at the time difference. :)
Simon
Simon Stevens wrote:
Not that well coordinated, look at the time difference.
No, that WAS part of the "well coordinated" criteria! ;P Marc
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Dude, seriously, get a grip. If you want to question me on the relevance of my post to the question posed, feel free. But accuse me of spamming? The original post was in the CodeProject mail I got in my inbox this morning, which is the only reason I read it. I happen to be developing this app for a small startup company in which I have no interest, but I'm genuinely pleased to be a part of it and that's why I posted, because I wanted to get a response. If you can't be arsed to even check my details, which are up there for all to see, before dismissing the post as spam, then why are you even bothering to reply? I'll remove the post if more people chime in and say it was inappropriate. But my position would be that unless I'm actually selling something for myself, what's the problem? I'm not even a permanent employee here, just a contractor. Have you never shown anyone something you're working on to see what they think, particularly if you think it's a cool product, and they work in the same field as you? Surely that's part of what an online community is about?
Smokie, this is not 'Nam. This is bowling. There are rules. www.icebergondemand.com
melchizidech wrote:
If you can't be arsed to even check my details, which are up there for all to see, before dismissing the post as spam, then why are you even bothering to reply?
Yeah, yeah, I was being my usual b***y self. Consider it a vetting process to see how you respond. Or just call me an a******. Do note thought that I did not downvote your post--I left myself a little wiggle room, hahaha. BTW, it does look interesting, as far as these things can go without actually requiring a coder to do something outside of what the framework handles. Out of curiosity, how does the company regard competitors like TenFold (which recently got bought by a bigger company)? Marc
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Dude, seriously, get a grip. If you want to question me on the relevance of my post to the question posed, feel free. But accuse me of spamming? The original post was in the CodeProject mail I got in my inbox this morning, which is the only reason I read it. I happen to be developing this app for a small startup company in which I have no interest, but I'm genuinely pleased to be a part of it and that's why I posted, because I wanted to get a response. If you can't be arsed to even check my details, which are up there for all to see, before dismissing the post as spam, then why are you even bothering to reply? I'll remove the post if more people chime in and say it was inappropriate. But my position would be that unless I'm actually selling something for myself, what's the problem? I'm not even a permanent employee here, just a contractor. Have you never shown anyone something you're working on to see what they think, particularly if you think it's a cool product, and they work in the same field as you? Surely that's part of what an online community is about?
Smokie, this is not 'Nam. This is bowling. There are rules. www.icebergondemand.com
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melchizidech wrote:
If you can't be arsed to even check my details, which are up there for all to see, before dismissing the post as spam, then why are you even bothering to reply?
Yeah, yeah, I was being my usual b***y self. Consider it a vetting process to see how you respond. Or just call me an a******. Do note thought that I did not downvote your post--I left myself a little wiggle room, hahaha. BTW, it does look interesting, as far as these things can go without actually requiring a coder to do something outside of what the framework handles. Out of curiosity, how does the company regard competitors like TenFold (which recently got bought by a bigger company)? Marc
I do hear them talking about a oouple of competitors - it's a small office and the competition are a bit of an obsession with the owners, as you can imagine. I'm not sure if Tenfold was the one (I'm terible with remembering proper nouns, but it was a two-syllable name), but I heard them speaking with some rancour about a bunch that were pretty much at the same stage of development as them or a bit behind about a year ago, and who are now overtaking them due to a massive investment and massive availability of dev reource. I get the impression they were taking them quite seriously as competitors, but they're confident in the product. I'm not as personally involved in it, so I haven't seen the competing products and so I cant make a statement on their relative merits. Perhaps I should take a peek at TenFold to see what they're doing. I think the plan is to avoid going overboard with features for the moment and build the thing up iteratively, to compensate for the relatively small team. For example, it's not skinnable yet. That's a major requirement, and it's scheduled to be implemented about a month after launch as far as I'm aware. I'd say the feature set will fill out over 6-8 months or so. Personally, I just find this sort of work a breath of fresh air after so many years working in endless WinForms apps and cut-and-paste type web apps. I think Ireland still has a way to go in terms of the way it approaches IT. or maybe that's just the cockamamie companies I've worked for... ;P
Smokie, this is not 'Nam. This is bowling. There are rules. www.icebergondemand.com
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Ok, i am a good tester. I got several error messages after I clicked on the "How to" link.
I'll mention it to the website chap - cheers for the steer.
Smokie, this is not 'Nam. This is bowling. There are rules. www.icebergondemand.com
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Why does the original question and your reply smell of well coordinated spam? Marc
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I was just wondering if there was a place where we could model simple use cases online? Well, is there such a website?
Well, I think the simple answer to your question is argouml at http://argouml.tigris.org/[^]. Just click below the "Launch via Java Web Start" title. It works pretty well. :suss:
Regards, Ricardo Corona