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Craig Anslow

Researcher at Victoria University of Wellington

Publications -  111
Citations -  1500

Craig Anslow is an academic researcher from Victoria University of Wellington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Agile software development & Software development. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 103 publications receiving 1171 citations. Previous affiliations of Craig Anslow include Middlesex University & University of Calgary.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Co-located Collaborative Block-Based Programming

TL;DR: This paper presents Multi-Device Grace, the first application to explore block-based programming in a cross-device environment consisting of digital tabletops, mobile tablets, and laptops, and results show that the majority of participants felt they were able to collaborate quickly and easily, and the cross device interaction would be particularly beneficial in an education setting.
Book ChapterDOI

Collaborative business process modeling in multi-surface environments

TL;DR: Testing this approach in three different settings found indications that interactive technology not only improves involvement by participants but also speeds up workshops and improves the quality of collaboration outcomes.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Collaboration Meets Interactive Surfaces: Walls, Tables, Tablets, and Phones (CMIS)

TL;DR: This workshop proposes to bring together researchers who are interested in improving collaborative experiences through the use of multi-sized interaction surfaces, ranging from large-scale walls, to tables, tablets and phones, of particular interest is the potential synergy that one can obtain by effectively combining different-sized surfaces.
Proceedings Article

Information security in agile software development projects: a critical success factor perspective

TL;DR: This study identifies practices that address the problem of information security in agile development projects by identifying four categories of practices – organisational, team, project, and technical – and twelve critical success factors that should be explicitly considered by practitioners to assure agile security.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Adventures in Hologram Space: Exploring the Design Space of Eye-to-eye Volumetric Telepresence

TL;DR: The design space for interacting with volumetric representations of people is discussed and an approach for dynamically manipulating scale, orientation and the position of holograms which guarantees eye-contact is presented.