Recent Q&A Activity

(e.g. "Drive" by Daniel Pink is one of my favorites.)

Can we really get good insight,  while  asking certain questions on agility, how it is practiced etc from agile team menmbers.

Best Kanban and Lean Thinking book 

Some of our teams have struggled with not being able to complete the testing hours for stories in a sprint, and thus not reaching DONE for the story.  One team has vollied up the idea of doing the development work in one sprint & sizing that then doing the testing in the next and sizing that.  This doesn't seem like the best solution, but wanted input on others experiences.  We also think the root cause could be that the stories are too big for the 3-week sprint duration.  At this time we are not using any automated testing methods, but are working to begin this later this year.  Please

Can You guys tell me the current trends /techniques that are followed in the test case Designing 

Unless I've misunderstood the principle, agile sprints are about layering on features until you arrive at some final release.  

But software can become unwieldy complex and choosing the right data structures and class patterns, for the application, is crucial - isn't it?  

So, how can you decide on the right data structures and classes and patterns, at the very beginning of the process, if in the first sprint, you are only dealing with a few of the overall application features?

Is it possible to implement Lean principles in the ongoing Agile project?

Agile was not working well in my current project, due to the requirements gap and short in resources. Is it be safe to go back to SDLC waterfal model to continue the project.

Can you explain with a example? I believe that it may be possible to implement in personal activities.

Ususally agile development is used for new or geenfield projects but what if this development is used for existing or brownfield projects. What issues could agile development team face while working with exisiting project?

Pages

AgileConnection is a TechWell community.

Through conferences, training, consulting, and online resources, TechWell helps you develop and deliver great software every day.