Archive for the ‘practices’ Category
Posted by Chris Sterling on Wednesday, July 15th, 2009
I have worked with many individuals, teams, and organizations in the use of Scrum. During that time, I have found that 2 parts of Scrum continually overlooked in implementation. Since Scrum is already a minimal framework, just enough to keep a team out of chaos, when a piece of Scrum is left out problems are [...]
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Posted in Agile, Scrum, coaching, how-to, practices, product owner, programming, tools | No Comments »
Posted by Chris Sterling on Saturday, June 20th, 2009
During an interview at the Better Software conference this week, I mentioned that I thought maintaining a single list of work prioritized by the business was important for our industry to improve. The following text is an excerpt, in first draft form, from chapter 2, “Architecture Integrity”, of my upcoming book “Architecture in an Agile [...]
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Posted by Chris Sterling on Wednesday, May 27th, 2009
To reduce duplication and rigidity of the programmer test relationship to implementation code, move away from class and methods as the definition of a “unit” in your unit tests. Instead, use the following question to drive your next constraint on the software: What should the software do next for the user? The following coding session [...]
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Posted in Agile, XP, excellence, how-to, practices, programming, teams, tools | 3 Comments »
Posted by Chris Sterling on Sunday, May 17th, 2009
I have been using a tool for some time with clients and teams to find out what software quality attributes the product development team should focus on in the project. ISO standard 9621 describes the quality attributes found in software. The following image shows the 6 categories and specific attributes contained within them. Before I [...]
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Posted in Agile, Lean, ROI, Scrum, XP, coaching, excellence, practices, product owner, programming, teams, testing, tools | No Comments »