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	<title>Comments on: CSER, Privacy, Agility, and Games</title>
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	<description>Data is ones and zeroes &#124; Software is ones and zeroes and hard work.</description>
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		<title>By: CSER and CASCON &#171; Catenary</title>
		<link>http://third-bit.com/blog/archives/675.html#comment-698</link>
		<dc:creator>CSER and CASCON &#171; Catenary</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Oct 2006 02:58:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>[...] This past Sunday and Monday I went to a meeting of the Consortium for Software Engineering Research (CSER). Popular topics there were empirical software engineering, research ethics, diagnostics, and models and visualization. There were a couple of talks from Peggy Storey and Ian Bull, from the University of Victoria&#8217;s Chisel Group, which has built some very cool tools for information visualization that I&#8217;ll talk about later. From our own group, Greg Wilson presented Dr Project as a tool to manage undergraduate software teams, which sparked an interesting discussion on student data collection for research. Aaand I presented one of the 22 student posters that graced the reception. [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] This past Sunday and Monday I went to a meeting of the Consortium for Software Engineering Research (CSER). Popular topics there were empirical software engineering, research ethics, diagnostics, and models and visualization. There were a couple of talks from Peggy Storey and Ian Bull, from the University of Victoria&#8217;s Chisel Group, which has built some very cool tools for information visualization that I&#8217;ll talk about later. From our own group, Greg Wilson presented Dr Project as a tool to manage undergraduate software teams, which sparked an interesting discussion on student data collection for research. Aaand I presented one of the 22 student posters that graced the reception. [...]</p>
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