InfoQ Homepage Agile Conferences Content on InfoQ
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Overcoming Cultural Differences by Focusing on Similarities
Jutta Eckstein presents techniques that helped her to create a common culture in different global projects she worked on.
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Business Engagement with Agile
Stephen Grafton shares from his experience working with distributed teams in a large organization, bringing together business and agile practices.
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How to Mix Together XP and Scrum to Enable Self Organized Teams
Cecile Diener shares her experience at eBay Europe building small self-managed teams along with their practices.
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Integration Test from the Trench
Nicolas Frankel discusses the pros and cons of unit testing and integration testing, and looks at the unique challenges posed by integration testing, presenting tools and techniques to deal with them.
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Can Agile Work for Off-the-shelf Software?
Ceri Shaw, Adrian Banks discuss the challenges and rewards of Agile when working on an enterprise software product and contrast them with working in a more traditionally Agile SaaS setting.
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Making Sense of Complexity by Designing Dynamic Environments: The Lens
Daryl Chan, Martin Kearns present The Lens - a physical space orientated around dialogue, transparency and co-creation, discussing techniques used to stimulate inquiry, curiosity and introspection.
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Growth Hacking Takes Agile to the Extreme
Shaun Clowes discusses Growth Hacking, a way of minimizing waste in all aspects of product development and go to market.
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Evolving a Process for Product Development from X to Xban
Andy Carmichael shares the experiences of a team new to Scrum adopting a customized Kanban process that would allow changes that were kept only if they were confident they resulted in improvements.
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Two Sides of a Story
Brindusa Axon, David Evans debate the pros and cons of using stories and discuss practices and techniques for improving them.
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User-Centered Agile Product Development in an Enterprise and a Startup
Michael Ong shares an approach that was used in two environments with success to bring products to market with a focus on users while considering business conditions and constraints.
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Worse Is Better, for Better or Worse
Kevlin Henney revisits the original premise and definition of “Worse is Better”, and looks at how this approach to development can still teach something surprising and new.
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Applying Agile Development Practices in Distributed Teams
Jutta Eckstein discusses the impact and application of agile development practices in distributed teams and how such a team can ensure its technical excellence.