Archive for March, 2009

Ada LovelaceAda Lovelace

In celebration of Ada Lovelace, nearly two thousand bloggers have signed up to a pledge to blog about women in technology.

She is mainly known for having written a description of Charles Babbage’s early mechanical general-purpose computer, the analytical engine. She is today appreciated as the “first programmer” since she was writing programs—that is, manipulating symbols according to rules—for a machine that Babbage had not yet built. She also foresaw the capability of computers to go beyond mere calculating or number-crunching while others, including Babbage himself, focused only on these capabilities.

There is a big list of women computer scientists on Wikipedia, so it was difficult to choose, but I have chosen Wendy Hall, Professor of Computing Science at the University of Southampton, because I have actually seen her give a keynote at a conference.

She is also a founding director of the Web Science Research Initiative, and is interested in human-computer interaction:

Wendy HallWendy Hall

Her research interests now include the development of web technologies (particularly the Semantic Web), hypermedia systems and link services, advanced knowledge technologies, digital libraries, decentralized information systems, and human computer interaction. She has published over 350 papers in areas such as hypermedia, multimedia, digital libraries, and distributed information systems.

The UK Fawcett Campaign for equality between men and women named her as an Inspiring Woman in 2005, and the UK Research Centre for Women in Science, Engineering and Technology selected her as one of six world-class Women of Outstanding Achievement in SET in March 2006. In October 2006 she was the first non-US woman to receive the Anita Borg Award for Technical Leadership.

She is particularly prominent as a strong and vocal advocate for women’s opportunities in SET and for the need to ensure that girls are not excluded from participation in science and engineering careers. In her research and her public life she has sought to ensure that women are equal beneficiaries of technological advance, and her example of achievement and dedication has made her a distinguished role model for women.

Happy Ada Day!

You can read about more women in technology at the Ada Lovelace Day Collection.

All the currently registered posts can be seen:

See how the news system was developed courtesy of a Tom Natt walkthrough.

(and if you know how to convert this SWF into an FLV file please let us know! The usual ffmpeg magic has failed us!)

Off we go! by Tom Natt

Off we go! by Tom Natt

Why do paper prototyping?  It’s cheap.  It’s fun.  You get to move small green pieces of paper around, and play with scissors and glue.  And you can reinvent your information architecture several times in a day just by moving a piece of paper or two.

We started by reading an article about paper prototyping on A List Apart, which was helpful, but we could also have used more of the principles of card sorting, which is a similar exercise.  There are two types of card sorting – one with predefined categories, the other where the category title emerges from the grouping of the content.  We started by thinking that we had predefined categories, and then discovered that actually we needed to change the name of a couple of the categories, so perhaps the second type of card sorting approach would have been more appropriate.

Grouping complete, by Tom Natt

Grouping complete, by Tom Natt

Because of this confusion, we produced a storyboard but not many actual page mock-ups.

However, the paper prototyping approach allows a group of people to gather round a storyboard and discuss what content fits where, and try out moving it to a new location.  Having the bits of paper in front of you gives an overview of the structure of the site, which is harder to visualise with a directory tree.

It’s also easy to change the name of a section; all you have to do is write a new post-it note.  You can use different coloured notes for category headings and pages, which helps with visualising the structure.

Completed prototype, by Tom Natt

Completed prototype, by Tom Natt

Making a page mock-up was a lot of fun.  We created widgets and sections out of different-coloured post-its and stuck them to a sheet of A4.

This is a mock-up of the research homepage, with a searchbox, featured news and themes, and sections about the RAE, managing our research, publications, research jobs and postgraduate opportunities, a title section with research-related images, and global navigation at the top.

Note the fabulous drawings by Yvonne and Alison, and the lovely rounded corners on the various widgets and sections (much easier to do with scissors than to implement in a cross-browser compatible way).

You can see the drama of the paper prototyping as it unfolded on Tom Natt’s Flickr set.

Yesterday was a good day for Web Services as we not only launched the first of our ‘new external website’ projects but we’ve released the first application built using Scrum.

The publishing system for our news articles/press releases has been replaced with a new application built with Wordpress.  The decision as to why we chose Wordpress has been well documented on our blog and wiki as has our adoption of Scrum but yesterday our users got to see what we’ve been working on and our colleagues in Corporate Communications got a new system to manage news articles.

We’ve had an internal article published (on the new system) which explains some of the background to the project and we plan to launch a video (showing the inside of the app within the next few days).

* Thanks to @lovelychaos for the title!

We are now offering additional courses in using the CMS.

Level 1

Topic Audience Dates Times
Introduction to OpenCms All CMS users 16 March 2009 2.30pm – 4.30pm
1 May 2009 10.30am – 12.30pm

Level 2

Topic Audience Dates Times
OpenCms – the next level All CMS users 18 March 2009 2:30 – 4:30
Content issues in the CMS All CMS users 25 March 2009 2:30 – 4:30
Using galleries All CMS users 1 April 2009 2:30 – 4:30
Left navigation Site owners 8 April 2009 2:30 – 4:30
Using includes Site owners 16 April 2009 2:30 – 4:30
Creating and managing people pages Site owners 22 April 2009 2:30 – 4:30
Using the news macro Site owners 29 April 2009 2:30 – 4:30
Permissions model Site owners 7 May 2009 2:30 – 4:30
Admin tasks in the CMS Site owners 13 May 2009 2:30 – 4:30

To book on these courses, please email it-training@bath.ac.uk

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