Sunday, October 13, 2019
Quality Issues In System Development :: essays research papers fc
 Quality Issues In System Development      The period between the 1970's and 1980's was a time of great advancement in  computer hardware technology which took an industry still in it's infancy, to a  level of much sophistication and which ultimately revelutionised the information  storage and processing needs of every other industry and that of the entire  world. However, it was also during this period when the shortcomings of  implementing such technology became apparent. A significant number of  development projects failed which resulted with disastrous consequences, not  only of an economic nature, but social aswell. Seemingly, although hardware  technolgy was readily available and ever improving, what was inhibiting the  industry was in the methods of implementing large systems. Consequently, all  kinds of limited approaches materialized that avoided the costs and risks  inherent in big-systems developments.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Times have changed, and with it our understanding and experience as how  best to develop large systems. Today's large systems yield greater benefits for  less cost than those of previous decades. Large systems provide better, more  timely information, the ability to integrate and correlate internal and external  information, the ability to integrate and facilitate streamlined business  processes. Unfortunately, not every system that information workers develop are  well implemented; this means that the computer system which was originally  intended to make a company more efficient, productive and cost-effective, is in  the end doing the exact opposite - namely, wasting time, money and valuable  manpower. So even with all the lessons learned from the 70's and 80's, our  vastly superior methodologies and knowledge of the 90's is still proving to be  fallible, as suggested in the following examples.    System Development Failures    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  In Britain, 1993, an incident occurred which forced the London  Ambulance Service to abandon its emergency system after it performed  disastrously on delivery, causing delays in answering calls. An independent  inquiry ordered by British government agencies found that the ambulance service  had accepted a suspiciously low bid from a small and inexperienced supplier. The  inquiry report, released in February 1993, determined that the system was far  too small to cope with the data load. For an emergency service, the system error  would not only cause the loss of money, but more essentially, fail to dispatch  ambulances correctly and promptly upon the arising of critical situations. Thus,  the implications of such a failure are apparently obvious, both socially and  economically. Since the failures, the ambulance service has reverted to a paper-  based system that will remain in place for the foreseeable future.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Another failure was the collapse of the Taurus trading system of the  London Stock Exchange. Taurus would have replaced the shuffling of six sorts of    					    
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