Coaching Technique for Requirement DevelopmentKent Ishizawa
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オ`プンコミュニティ仝勣箔_kアライアンス々(http://www.openthology.org)の2008定6埖協箭氏k燕Y創です。
Open Community "Requirement Development Alliance" 2008 June regular meeting of the presentation materials.
Coaching Technique for Requirement DevelopmentKent Ishizawa
?
オ`プンコミュニティ仝勣箔_kアライアンス々(http://www.openthology.org)の2008定6埖協箭氏k燕Y創です。
Open Community "Requirement Development Alliance" 2008 June regular meeting of the presentation materials.
箸擦襭 How to fascinate audiences by your Lightning TalkHiromu Shioya
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1) The document provides tips for giving an effective lightning talk to fascinate audiences.
2) It recommends keeping the talk simple, using minimal but impactful slides, and focusing on conveying one clear message in the short time allotted.
3) The document includes various links to additional resources on delivering lightning talks.
The document appears to be a log of content posted by various users on a platform. It includes content posted by users with names like Alexandre Dulaunoy, greyloch, Csizmadia Tam│s, Mesq, sparktography, scragz, Clover_1, Lake Effects Photography, Steve Rhode and kaymobile. There are repetitions of some user names, suggesting they contributed multiple times. The document also includes some numerical data lists.
The document discusses Tupper, a Ruby gem for processing uploaded files via web forms. It provides instructions for creating the Tupper gem using Bundler, publishing the gem to RubyGems.org, and making code more readable through open source social coding practices. The document encourages creating libraries, using Bundler, and publishing code to share it with the community.
This document summarizes a presentation about moving from a legacy development approach to an agile development approach. It discusses topics like social coding and the agile manifesto after 10 years. It also introduces the Tupper gem for processing uploaded files via web forms. The presentation concludes that social coding is the way to the Rubyist's way and thanks attendees for listening.
This document is an invitation from Hiromu Shioya of kwappa to an Engineer Support New Year's Party 2012. It includes the date and details about Shioya and links to kwappa's website and other technology conferences and events happening in 2012. The invitation encourages connecting through shared interests in technology and the internet.
This document is a transcript from a lightning talk given by Hiromu Shioya from kwappa.net on January 17, 2012. It introduces Shioya and provides links to kwappa.net, information on job openings from Dwango, a slideshow presentation, and information on an upcoming developer conference. The talk concludes by thanking the audience for listening.
This document provides biographical information about Hiromu Shioya, including details about his work with Kwappa, a company focused on web development, as well as links to their website and recruitment page. It also includes links to Kwappa's work on a renderer and GitHub's mascot website.
Hiromu Shioya gave a lightning talk about being born in and connected by the internet. He shared several links to book recommendations on his website about various technical topics such as PHP, web development, and computer networking. The talk concluded by providing a link to apply for jobs at his company.
The document discusses version control systems and the Git version control system. It provides an overview of common Git commands like clone, pull, push, checkout, commit, and branch. It also discusses branching workflows in Git and managing branches. Several links are provided to online resources for learning more about Git.
This document is a congratulatory lightning talk for Noritsuyo's wedding on 2011-10-22. It contains links to photos of the wedding party and references tweets congratulating the couple. The document thanks attendees for listening at the end.
The document is a transcript from a 2011 keynote speech given by Hiromu Shioya at an event. In the speech, Shioya introduces himself as a programmer who is also a parent. He discusses various programming conferences and events he has attended. The speech expresses feelings of uncertainty over whether he has become somebody important in his career and life, despite his involvement in the programming community. He closes by thanking the audience for listening.