Comments on: What is Scrum? http://agilethinking.net/blog/2006/08/05/what-is-scrum/ Tobias Mayer's Blog Fri, 27 May 2011 13:57:11 -0700 http://wordpress.org/?v=2.8.4 hourly 1 By: When agile projects become mini waterfalls « Derivadow http://agilethinking.net/blog/2006/08/05/what-is-scrum/comment-page-1/#comment-8836 When agile projects become mini waterfalls « Derivadow Fri, 30 Mar 2007 09:23:21 +0000 http://agilethinking.net/blog/what-is-scrum/#comment-8836 [...] There are of course a wide range of agile methods available and plenty of consultants and training companies out there promoting them. However, I fear that too often the way agile methods are employed, on the ground, is more akin to a sequence of mini waterfalls. That is there is a tendency, within each iteration, to lead with design (often creating Photoshop files) before coding up the application based on those designs. I suspect that this often happens for a number of reasons, including: [...] [...] There are of course a wide range of agile methods available and plenty of consultants and training companies out there promoting them. However, I fear that too often the way agile methods are employed, on the ground, is more akin to a sequence of mini waterfalls. That is there is a tendency, within each iteration, to lead with design (often creating Photoshop files) before coding up the application based on those designs. I suspect that this often happens for a number of reasons, including: [...]

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By: Mechanism Alley » Blog Archive » What is Scrum? http://agilethinking.net/blog/2006/08/05/what-is-scrum/comment-page-1/#comment-14 Mechanism Alley » Blog Archive » What is Scrum? Sun, 06 Aug 2006 23:03:14 +0000 http://agilethinking.net/blog/what-is-scrum/#comment-14 [...] Probably the best place to get a thorough grounding in Scrum is — big surprise, an ongoing conversation — the Scrum discussion group. Tobias Mayer, one of the more active members of the group, recently wrote an article, “What is Scrum,” in which he talks about Scrum from a qualitative perspective. He wrote it as a salve against market devaluation of the terms used to describe Scrum. I think what he’s written is a start towards summarizing Scrum’s underlying concepts (either of Schwaber’s slender volumes on Scrum would be a digestable suvey of this as well), but there’s not much about what process there is in Scrum in his article. [...] [...] Probably the best place to get a thorough grounding in Scrum is — big surprise, an ongoing conversation — the Scrum discussion group. Tobias Mayer, one of the more active members of the group, recently wrote an article, “What is Scrum,” in which he talks about Scrum from a qualitative perspective. He wrote it as a salve against market devaluation of the terms used to describe Scrum. I think what he’s written is a start towards summarizing Scrum’s underlying concepts (either of Schwaber’s slender volumes on Scrum would be a digestable suvey of this as well), but there’s not much about what process there is in Scrum in his article. [...]

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