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en:abouttool [2018/11/02 17:28]
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 ====== Design cabinet toolkits - capitalising tools ====== ====== Design cabinet toolkits - capitalising tools ======
  
-A lot of things have already been written on toolkits. Here are some inspiring projects explaining the background of AYCH toolkits. There is also a presentation of the methodologies used.  
  
-They take the form of a website with resources in .pdf (user manual and sheets and contents to print). This can be a source of inspiration. Or, on the contrary, a path not to follow, concerning the final form of the project.+Contenu aussi disponible en [[fr: recherchesencours | Version fr]] 
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 +A lot of things have already been written on toolkits. Here are some inspiring projects explaining the background of tools and how we imagine the wiki / we make a difference. ​They take the form of a website with resources in .pdf (user manual and sheets and contents to print). This can be a source of inspiration. Or, on the contrary, a path not to follow, concerning the final form of the project.
  
 ===== Some examples :​methodologies ===== ===== Some examples :​methodologies =====
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   * The cargo cult refers to popular rites of some indigenous peoples of Oceania. "It consists of imitating the American and Japanese radio operators commanding supplies (distributed by cargo plane) and more generally the technology and Western culture (means of transport, military parades, clothing, etc.) hoping to lead to the same effects […]. In fact, the natives do not know the existence and the modalities of Western production; hence, they attribute the abundance and sophistication of goods brought by cargo to a divine favor."​ This term is also used in computer science "when a programmer borrows a piece of code (copy and paste) without understanding it. and hope he will do the expected thing in a different context. At a higher level, this phenomenon can also be found in the adoption of a software development method by the project manager. [[Https://​fr.wikipedia.org/​wiki/​Culte_du_cargo#​cite_note-rev-2 | source]]. ​   * The cargo cult refers to popular rites of some indigenous peoples of Oceania. "It consists of imitating the American and Japanese radio operators commanding supplies (distributed by cargo plane) and more generally the technology and Western culture (means of transport, military parades, clothing, etc.) hoping to lead to the same effects […]. In fact, the natives do not know the existence and the modalities of Western production; hence, they attribute the abundance and sophistication of goods brought by cargo to a divine favor."​ This term is also used in computer science "when a programmer borrows a piece of code (copy and paste) without understanding it. and hope he will do the expected thing in a different context. At a higher level, this phenomenon can also be found in the adoption of a software development method by the project manager. [[Https://​fr.wikipedia.org/​wiki/​Culte_du_cargo#​cite_note-rev-2 | source]]. ​
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