From aee2da98d667192be55e594c39905453dc9d2313 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Paulo Meirelles Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2017 20:27:53 -0300 Subject: [PATCH] [ieeeSW] fixing the second paragraph --- ieeeSW/releaseEng3/IEEE_ThemeIssue_ReleaseEng_CD.md | 26 +++++++++++++------------- 1 file changed, 13 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) diff --git a/ieeeSW/releaseEng3/IEEE_ThemeIssue_ReleaseEng_CD.md b/ieeeSW/releaseEng3/IEEE_ThemeIssue_ReleaseEng_CD.md index 06d82d7..8980a93 100644 --- a/ieeeSW/releaseEng3/IEEE_ThemeIssue_ReleaseEng_CD.md +++ b/ieeeSW/releaseEng3/IEEE_ThemeIssue_ReleaseEng_CD.md @@ -22,19 +22,19 @@ agencies suddenly changed that reflected on the project’s requirements: each new leader wanted to fulfill their political agenda. In this scenario, delivery delays could have sunk the project into oblivion. -From 2014 to 2016, our team developed the new platform for the Brazilian Public -Software (SPB, Portuguese acronym) Portal (www.softwarepublico.gov.br) funded -by a grant of 2,619,965.00 BRL (about 1,000,000.00 USD in January 2014) from -the Federal Government. The SPB Portal has evolved to a CDE [1] and this -evolution has brought important benefits not just to the Brazilian government, -but also to society as a whole. For the government, the bureaucracy on using -the same software across government agencies, duplicate works and costs all are -reduced. The society gains a transparency and collaboration mechanism, since -anyone can check the government expenses on software and contribute to the -software communities. To achieve these goals, rather than writing everything -from scratch, we have chosen to integrate free software tools such as Gitlab -(www.gitlab.com), Mailman (www.gnu.org/software/mailman), Noosfero -(www.noosfero.org), and Colab (www.github.com/colab). +Our team from the University of Brasília (UnB) and the University of São Paulo +(USP) developed the new platform for the Brazilian Public Software (SPB, +Portuguese acronym) Portal (www.softwarepublico.gov.br) from 2014 to 2016. The +SPB Portal evolved to a CDE [1] and this evolution brought about important +benefits not just to the Brazilian government, but also to society as a whole. +For the government, the bureaucracy on using the same software across +government agencies, duplicate works, and costs all were reduced. The society +gained a transparency and collaboration mechanism, since anyone can check the +government expenses on software and contribute to the software communities. To +achieve these goals, rather than writing everything from scratch, we decided to +integrate free software tools such as Gitlab (www.gitlab.com), Mailman +(www.gnu.org/software/mailman), Noosfero (www.noosfero.org), and Colab +(www.github.com/colab). During the entire SPB Portal evolution project, we had to handle three distinct issues, usual in a software engineering scenario: reaching the goals which have -- libgit2 0.21.2