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Help finding amusing Byte cartoon
Dear all,
Way back in the late 80s when I was doing my degree, our systems analysis lecturer showed us a cartoon which I believe came from Byte magazine and must have first been published in the 70s. It spoofed the systems analysis and design process by showing a series of drawings of a simple garden swing hanging from the branch of a tree, with subtitles like 'What the user asked for', 'What the designers thought the user wanted', 'What the designers specified', and so on. Today's Google challenge, if you choose to accept it, is to find said cartoon on the web for me. I've been looking for hours on both Byte.com, normal Google and Google Images and I can't flippin' well find it! Cheers! cbl. ps SSADM - has anyone ever actually used it, or was it just a way to ruin the lives of computer studies students? |
4 minutes, yawn!! :)
www.businessballs.com Select "tree swing picture" from the list on the left.businessballs |
I particularly like the team briefing link, hilarious in it's own right but even better considering the opening statements.
Team Briefing is a powerful method of enabling communications up and down the management structure of any organisation with a number of management levels. Team Briefing was developed by the British Industrial Society (now called the Work Foundation) during the mid-20th century, particularly the 1960's, and introduced in the mid 1970's. |
Excellent, cheers ORAC. I thought I was a bit handy on Google but I'm obviously just a beginner!
cbl. |
ORAC CBLONG TINKER
Thanks CB for asking and ORAC, thats going for gold. Great site definately agree with YOU Tinker on this one.
:) :cool: :) |
Howja do it ORAC?
Puhleeze! |
Magic. :D
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I remember that there were some other cartoons:
"What the finance department agreed" - picture of tree with knotted rope hanging from branch "What health and safety accepted" - picture of tree stump Any more? cur |
Oh, all right Mac, if you're going to sulk on other threads.
The secret was he was looking at it the wrong way round - he had obviously tried everything he could think of from the company point of view, but he hadn't looked at it from the customer's point of view. I just turned the question on it's head and asked what the customer originally wanted. Go to google and search on: tree swing "what the customer wanted" See what's top of the list. You can scream now. :D :D |
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