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        <title>ACCU  :: Letters: Software Project Management Classics?</title>
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<div class="xar-mod-head"><span class="xar-mod-title">Letters to the Editor + Overload Journal #61 - Jun 2004</span></div>

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   <h1><strong>Title:</strong>&nbsp;Letters: Software Project Management Classics?</h1>
<p><strong>Author:</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
<strong>Date:</strong> 01 June 2004 14:26:10 +01:00 or Tue, 01 June 2004 14:26:10 +01:00</p>
<p><strong>Summary:</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Body:</strong>&nbsp;      <p>Dear Mark,</p>

      <p>Your Overload 60 editorial was very timely for me. An
      opensource software project on which I am involved is just
      getting going, and it is clear that good communication
      between participants is of paramount importance. I&#8217;m
      also rather unimpressed by the project management tomes that
      line the shelves of today&#8217;s bookshops. I have a
      question, arising from your editorial, that I&#8217;d be
      interested in pursuing via the ACCU, but I&#8217;m not sure
      which would be the best forum.</p>

      <p>First some brief background: I&#8217;m an ex-academic,
      just over halfway through a career change into software
      development. I have only a little formal education in
      computer science and virtually none in project
      management.</p>

      <p>Frederick Brooks&#8217; book &#8220;The Mythical
      Man-Month&#8221; was one of the first project management
      books I read, and it still stands head and shoulders above
      the doorstops. Not only do I re-read Brooks, but many of his
      ideas have taken root in my head (I like to think); the
      doorstops are in general eminently forgettable. I completely
      agree with you on the waste exemplified in your story about
      your friends from Bucks: knowledge sent out to fallow, and
      new generations treading the same ground blindly. This kind
      of amnesia is surely unimaginable in any other field (not
      even pop music is so forgetful).</p>

      <p>Is there a good list of &#8216;classics&#8217; of software
      project management, like Brooks&#8217; essays? If not,
      I&#8217;d be interested in doing a straw poll of ACCU members
      and keeping a tally linked from my homepage (<a href=
      "http://www.iau.ukfsn.org" target=
      "_top">http://www.iau.ukfsn.org</a>).</p>

      <div class="literallayout">
        <p>Yours&#160;sincerely<br>
        Ivan&#160;Uemlianin</p>
      </div>
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