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The forerunner of BCS was the "London Computer Group" (LCG), founded in 1956. BCS was formed a year later from the merger of the LCG and an unincorporated association of scientists into an unincorporated club. In October 1957, BCS was incorporated, by Articles of Association, as "The British Computer Society Ltd": the first President of BCS was ...
logo of the DCSG, April 2012. The Data Centre Specialist Group (abbreviated as DCSG) is a Specialist Group (SG) of the British Computer Society (BCS). It was founded by Zahl Limbuwala, (also the CEO of Romonet) and held its first meeting in 2007.
The logo of the BCS Configuration Management Specialist Group. The Configuration Management Specialist Group (CMSG) is a Specialist Group (SG) [1] of the British Computer Society (BCS) a professional body, registered charity (incorporated by Royal Charter in 1984) and a learned society representing those working in Information Technology both in the United Kingdom and internationally.
Chartered IT Professional (in full, Chartered Information Technology Professional) denoted by CITP is a professional qualification awarded under Royal Charter to IT professionals who satisfy strict criteria [citation needed] set by the British Computer Society (BCS), which is a professional body for IT in the United Kingdom.
SFIAplus is the IT training and development model of the British Computer Society (BCS). [1] Based on the original Industry Structure Model, first published by the BCS in July 1986, which was remapped to the Skills Framework for the Information Age (SFIA) and rebranded as SFIAPlus.
It is published by Oxford University Press for the BCS [1] and is sent to more than 70,000 IT professionals. The editor is Brian Runciman. The table below provides a comprehensive overview of various articles featured in ITNOW, the magazine published by the British Computer Society (BCS) aimed at IT professionals. Each row in the table lists a ...
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The RESG's stated purpose is "to provide a forum for interaction between the many disciplines involved" in Requirements Engineering, [1] which it explains is "a key activity in the development of software systems and is concerned with the identification of the goals of stakeholders and their elaboration into precise statements of desired services and behaviour."