InfoQ Homepage Agile Techniques Content on InfoQ
-
From Good to Great Developer
A good developer writes code quickly but hard to maintain. A great one keeps an eye on the future trying to make sure the code evolves cleanly. Hedgate advices on how to move from good to great.
-
CI from the Trenches: Real-World Continuous Integration Challenges (and what to do about them)
This session will attempt to answer all those questions and more. The presenter will share his experiences of 5 years of being a professional build manager, using examples taken from real projects.
-
Turning on a sixpence - No excuses: Concept To Cash Every Week
This session shows the technical aspects of what's required to iteratively build a product that always performs, and the skill and discipline needed to deliver software to production every week.
-
When it Just HAS to Work
This talk gives practical tips for adopting an agile approach to planning, team interactions and risk management. When the culture shifts, teams achieve goals sooner and safety is greatly enhanced.
-
I Come to Bury Agile, Not to Praise It
Agile came from small, colocated projects in the 1990s. Agile development now sits in a larger landscape and should be viewed accordingly. This talk discusses the new, larger agile development space.
-
Agile by the Numbers: What People Are Really Doing in Practice
This talk summarizes the results of 4 years of industry surveys around agile technique adoption and effectiveness. Reality can be very different from the rhetoric in mailing lists, articles and books.
-
Integration Tests Are a Scam
Integration tests are a scam, they burden you with long-running, fragile, hard-to-understand test suites. Learn the two-pronged attack that solves the problem: collaboration tests and contract tests.
-
Behaviour-Driven Development - a road to effective design and clean code
Dan describes a proven "outside-in" approach based on real life experience - engaging with and listening to our stakeholders. .
-
Artisanal Retro-Futurism and Team-Scale Anarcho-Syndicalism
The Agile movement gave unconventional people cover while they sneaked odd and productive ideas (like Ruby) into projects. Today, Agile is sick and this FutureRuby talk shows what’s gone missing.
-
Three Years of Real-World Ruby
Martin Fowler talks about ThoughtWorks's experience with using Ruby on client projects for the past three years.
-
Realistic about Risk: Software development with Real Options
This session introduces Real Options and shows how it can help in running your project. Real Options is a decision-making process that can be used to manage risk.
-
Time to Live
This presentation explores lean software development principles for the build, run, and manage cycle, how they can be applied to various deployment models and how Spring technologies are supportive.