from bletchley park to modern computing: the value of twitter
DESCRIPTION
Bletchley Park is the historic site of secret British codebreaking activities during World War II and the work carried out there by Alan Turing and others led to the birth of the modern computer. How did we get from Bletchley Park to modern software engineering? Dr Black will discuss how the use of social media can leverage capability in very diverse areas, from campaigning for a historical site to improving the quality of software. Speaker: Dr Sue Black, Senior Research Associate, UCL Department of Computer Science http://events.ucl.ac.uk/event/event:gkr-h9smshux-zhsk26/lunch-hour-lecture-from-bletchley-park-to-modern-computing-the-value-of-twitterTRANSCRIPT
From Bletchley Park to modern computing: the value of Twitter
UCL Lunch Hour Lecture8th January 2013
Dr Sue Black
Senior Research Associate
Software Systems Engineering
University College London
#UCLLHL
• Arguably one of the most important sites of 20th Century
• Codebreaking in WW2 made huge impact on outcome of war
• Enigma 158,184,000,000,000,000,000:1
• First programmable, digital computer Colossus developed to break high grade German code
• Story kept secret until 1975• Struggled to survive 1992 - 2010• Now recognised as a site of truly
international importance
Bletchley Park
#UCLLHL
#UCLLHL
#UCLLHL
#UCLLHL
#UCLLHL
#UCLLHL
Photo by @Documentally
Photo by @Jemimah_Knight
#UCLLHL
Photos by @Documentally
#UCLLHL
#UCLLHL
Photos by @Documentally
#UCLLHL
#UCLLHL
The Power of Twitter
•Reach people that you couldn’t otherwise reach•Build a community•Build conversations around areas of interest•Gives everyone a voice•Breaks through traditional hierarchies•Adds speed •See what people are saying about your area of interest•Keep up to date with areas of interest
#UCLLHL
Cite as: Black, S. E., Harrison, R. and Baldwin, M., A Survey of Social Media Use in Global Systems Development, Web2SE Workshop at IEEE International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE), Cape Town, May 4th 2010.
A Survey of Social Media Use in
Software Systems Development
Sue Black, Rachel Harrison and Mark
Baldwin
Using Web 2.0 to Improve Software Quality
Sue Black and Joanne Jacobs
Cite as: Black, S. E. and Jacobs, J. Using Web 2.0 to Improve Software Quality, Web2SE Workshop at IEEE International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE), Cape Town, May 4th 2010.
#UCLLHL
#UCLLHL
What is your gender?
30%
63%
7%
Female
Male
No response
Comparison of education and gender
024
68
10
Bache
lors
Degre
eM
aste
rs
Degre
e Other
PhD
High
Schoo
l
Female
Male
How old are you?
7
109
1
3
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 Noresponse
25-34
35-44
45-54
55-64
No response
How long have you worked for your current employer?
02468
10
<1 year 1-2 years 2-5 years 5-10 years 10 years + Noresponse
Total
#UCLLHL
10
6
13
11
2
15
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Googlewave
IM client
Plaxo
Comparison of Social Media types used
0
51015
2025
Asia Europe No response NorthAmerica
On which physical continent do you work?
Total
Number of Social Media types used
45
7
32
31
5
02468
0 2 4 6
Number of types used
Num
ber
of p
eopl
e
#UCLLHL
0% 50% 100%
New ideas
System specificationinformation
System design information
Source code and relatedinformation
Operational data
Marketing data
Logistics
Social information
What information do you communicate using social media?
Total yes
Total no
Total No response
#UCLLHL
“I use social media the entire time I'm at work - it's on constantly and I use it concurrently with other applications. If I was to pull out the time on
various forms of social media and put them into one block it'd be about 30 minutes a day on average, spread over an 8 or 9 hour day.”
How many hours per day do you use social media applications to communicate?
13
6
1
10
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
0-2 3-5 6-8 No response
#UCLLHL
What can your team do now that they could not do before
social media?
“Communicate out of hours, conveniently and from any suitable device”
“Avoid having to turn to email as primary communication tool”
“Communicate rapidly”“Work from home to a greater
degree”“Ask questions without interrupting
each other‘s flow; clarify small questions quickly; chat informally while working”
“work from different locations”“access more expertise”“ensure transparency”“work with open source community
”
• Faster and easier problem solving
• More rapid and comprehensive testing
• Ongoing user feedback• Easier to share best
practice• More communication
between stakeholders• More information available
for decision making
Social media brings many benefits to the software development process
#UCLLHL
91% of respondents said that using social media at work has improved their working life
Many thanks to all of our respondents for their time
#UCLLHL
Tommy Flowers
Inventor of Colossus: the world’s first programmable digital computer
Bill Tutte
Worked out the logical structure of the Lorenz machine
#UCLLHL
Thank you for listening, any questions?
Dr Sue Black @Dr_Black
[email protected] www.sueblack.co.uk
www.unbound.co.uk/saving-bletchley-park
#UCLLHL