InfoQ Homepage Agile Techniques Content on InfoQ
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Continuous Delivery: Responding to Change, Faster than Ever Before
Mike Bowler discusses CD, the build pipeline and version control practices and automated testing, exploring best practices and pitfalls, and making the deployment question a business decision.
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Continuous Delivery: Tools, Collaboration, and Conway's Law
Matthew Skelton shares his recent experience of helping many different organisations to evaluate and select tools to facilitate DevOps and Continuous Delivery.
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The Rationale for Continuous Delivery (The culture and practice of good software development)
Dave Farley discusses the problems raised by inefficient processes creating poor quality output, too late to capitalise on the expected business value, and proposes solutions to them.
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Open Agile Adoption - Reaching Escape Velocity
Stuart Turner explains how to achieve both rapid and sustained transformation with Open Agile Adoption which combines games, rites-of-passage and other techniques into a framework.
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Making Continuous Delivery Work for You: The Songkick Experience
Amy Phillips explains how the core principles can be used to drive process change and how their team removed many of the delays and frustrations from their release process.
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Implementing Continuous Delivery: Adjusting Your Architecture
Rachel Laycock focuses on the architecture of an application, addressing patterns such as microservices and evolutionary architecture, which can speed up delivery.
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Evolutionary Architecture and Microservices - A Match Enabled by Continuous Delivery
Rebecca Parsons explores the relationship between evolutionary architecture, continuous delivery and microservices, focusing on how they support each other in the creation of complex systems.
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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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Gradle for Android
Ken Kousen introduces Gradle to Android developers and shows how easy it is to integrate into Android projects.
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Tiny
Chad Fowler attempts to convince people that keeping things "tiny" –small iterations, small methods, small teams - is the best thing one can do for himself and his team.
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Building Stuff with Shake
Neil Mitchell introduces the Shake build system. Users of Shake write a Haskell program which makes heavy use of the Shake library, while still allowing the full power of Haskell to be used.
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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.