TY - BOOK ED - Syngress Media, Inc. TI - MCSD analyzing requirements study guide (Exam 70-100) SN - 0072119551 U1 - 004.678 22 PY - 1999/// CY - Berkeley PB - Syngress Media, Osborne McGraw-Hill KW - Electronic data processing personnel KW - Certification KW - Microsoft software KW - Examinations KW - Study guides KW - Computer architecture N1 - Table of Contest Table of Contents 1 MICROSOFT SOLUTION FRAMEWORK- AN OVERVIEW Identifying the business pressures on IT Identifying key areas where IT and business are Identifying problems that IT must overcome to drive Analyzing the scope of a project 2 USING THE TEAM, PROCESS, AND APPLICATION MODELS FOR DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS. Understanding Microsoft’s team model Understanding Microsoft’s development process Identifying common service needs across development Completing different phases of a project in parallel 3 RISK MANAGEMENT Defining risk management The components of a risk statement The risk management process 4 SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT TRACK MILESTONES The process model The vision/scope approved milestone The project plan approved milestone The scope complete/first use milestone The release milestone Etc. 5 INFRASTRUCTURE DEPLOYMENT TRACK MILESTONE. Enterprise architecture overview Infrastructure: overview and drill down Infrastructure: deployment and the MSF process model The vision/scope approved milestone The project plan approved milestone The scope complete/first use milestone Etc. 6 DESIGNING COMPONENT SOLUTIONS-AN OVERVIEW Success in software design Identifying typical problems that lead to design flaws or failure Microsoft’s process for designing solution How solution design relates to enterprise architecture 7 ANALYZING BUSINESS REQUIREMENTS The total cost of ownership (TCO) model Analyzing the extent of s business requirement 8 NARROWING YOUR FOCUS TO ANALYZE SPECIFIC BUSINESS REQUIREMENT Analyzing security requirement Analyzing performance requirements Analyzing maintenance requirements Analyzing extensibility requirements Analyzing availability human requirements Analyzing requirements for integrating a solution with existing applications Etc. 9 CONCEPTUAL DESIGN Understanding the purpose and value of conceptual design Applying the conceptual design process to a business Gathering user requirements and gaining user perspective Constructing conceptual designs based on scenarios Designing the future work state: Identifying appropriate Etc. 10 LOGICAL DESIGN Logical design basics Deriving a logical design from a conceptual design Deriving the components and services of the logical Distinguishing between objects serves and components Incorporate business rules into object design Etc. II INTEGRATED DESIGN The three tracks of solutions design Designing a user interface and user services The value of prototypes The significance of metaphors Developing data models: database design activities A SELF TEST ANSWERS. ER -