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Revision as of 00:26, 20 April 2020
Introduction to CNM Cyber (hereinafter, the Session) is a learning session introducing its participants to CNM Cyber. The Session consists of three lessons, each of which is made of three to five lesson parts, called lectios. Every lectio includes a presentation and a quiz. The official version of the Session is published at CNM Cert. Its materials are also published at CNM Page, CNM Page, CNM Wiki, and various channels for marketing and convenience purposes.
The Session is the first of four sessions of the CNM Cyber Welcome Course.
Contents
Outline
The predecessor activity is the CNM Cyber Welcome Course Preview.
CNM Cyber Essentials
- Main wikipage: CNM Cyber Essentials
CNM Cloud Essentials
- Main wikipage: CNM Cloud Essentials
Digital Transformations
- Main wikipage: Digital Transformations
- CNM Cloud Project. The endeavor that has been undertaken to create CNM Cloud. This project was started in 2014 and is currently in its third phase called CNM Cloud Usable.
- CNM Cloud Usable. The third phase of CNM Cloud Project; the phase goal is to upgrade all the software systems of CNM Cloud up to the sustainable minimum viable product (MVP) level.
- CNM Agile. A product development framework that represents an adaption of the Agile methodology to the learning and testing needs of the CNM Cyber Team.
- Project management. Practice and a set of concepts that are based on that practice that define culture of managing of projects from the moment when the project manager is authorized and up to the project closing. Project management aims to achieve specific goals and to meet specific success criteria. This management often has a defined beginning (often, constituted by funding) and ending (often, constituted by bringing desired deliverables to their beneficiary).
- Agile methodology. A product development framework that is based on development of deliverable increments in frequent iterations based on evolving requirements.
- Development hub. A center of development in which two or more developing parties work on one or more deliverables.
- Document. A single piece of data that represents one or more ideas, changes, processes, products, and/or systems. Those documents that are created to be used by people include bills of sale, books, instructions, memos, messages, national constitutions, passports, wikipages, written articles, etc. In information technology, a document can be a computer file or a system document such as a database record. Web browsers use web documents to display webpages, etc.
- Computer file (digital file). Any document that is created as a computer resource and is stored discretely in a computing device.
- Software. One or more computer files that present the data and programs that make the computing device produce specified results.
- Requirement. An expressed demand, desire, expectation, and/or wish to have or not to have a certain product and/or a certain capability, condition, feature, and/or property. The plural term, requirements, may refer to the aggregate of various requirements that the product owner or another authority for the requested product and/or its development process has approved, verified, and/or validated.
- Product epic. A detailed description of a proposed product that is designed to make its potential consumer understand what this product shall do. At CNM Cyber, the Epic is any wikipage that describes a desired product.
- User story. A brief description of a solution requirement to a desired system that is written from the point of view of a customer or end-user of this system. In other words, the story is a high-level, informal, brief, non-technical description of a solution capability that provides value to its stakeholder. The story is typically one or two sentences long and provides the minimum information necessary to allow a developer to estimate the work required to implement it.
In order to ..., as a ..., I need to ...
or, using another format,In order to [achieve some goal], as a [type of user], I need to [perform some task or execute some function]
is a generic example of the story.
- Requirements specification. A requirement in a form of technical description of a proposed system.
- CNM Page. The content management system (CMS) of CNM Cyber that is delivered to its end-users as a service.
- Content management system (CMS). A system for managing content and providing this content in various formats. Usually, CMS is built using content management software, with which the CMS shares its acronym.
- Single source of truth (SSOT). Either (a) a document which trustfulness is higher that the one of any other document or (b) a database that represents such documents. The concept of SSOT ensures that everyone in an organization bases enterprise decisions on the same data. If some data or document evolves over the time, the SSOT is the practice of working on that data or document in only one place. In database architecture, the SSOT is a model of using a master or federated database as the primary location to propagate any change to the entire system automatically.
- CNM Talk. The webconferencing system of CNM Cyber that, when it is launched, shall be delivered to its end-users as a service.
- Talk Next. The software system of CNM Cyber that, when it is launched, shall be identical to CNM Talk in order to be used for hands-on training for aspiring administrators of webconferencing systems.
- Webconferencing. A service that allows conferencing events to be shared with remote locations over the Internet. This service usually makes possible an audio or audiovisual meeting between two or more participants in different locations using webconferencing software.
- Webconferencing software. Webconferencing software is software that supports webconferencing, including just audio conferencing and audiovisual conferencing conducted over the Internet.
- Commercial off-the-shelf (COTS). A products that is commercially available and can be purchased "as is".
CNM Cyber for Competence is the successor session.