Secure Communications - Service Assessment
...an intention to make the code available (excluding NHS code) and the team would be happy for it to be used. Senior management are aware of this and the team...
...an intention to make the code available (excluding NHS code) and the team would be happy for it to be used. Senior management are aware of this and the team...
...open source code but recommend that the team should aim to publish all source code and should not attempt to evaluate usefulness. By doing this the SFA can allow other...
...team to follow and for other teams to emulate. They explained how they now have a fully functioning development environment with integrated testing. Their process for getting code deployed is...
...explanation as to why this can’t be done for specific subsets of the source code). Code from the service has been published and is currently being reused by another government...
...making all of the source code open and reusable. Despite having identified some reusable components, the lack of a plan to open up any source code at all is disappointing....
...support to their users. Source Code The team weren’t able to talk the assessment panel through their plan for making all new source code open and reusable or, where necessary,...
...didn’t recognise. We’ve since implemented a new tracking code, which was easy to do using this tracking code generator from Google. To set up a code, you just need to...
...panel welcomed this news, and eagerly awaited a link from the service team to code on the internet. The panel would also like to see that code being the live...
...to make an analogy – is simply a computer in the cloud. You can use it to install code libraries, run your machine learning and store the results somewhere. Virtual...
...than taking an “Intro to R” course months before they ever get to use it. Paired programming, where two or more analysts code together with one “driving” and the other...