A friend of mine is working with scrum.org and was asking questions about product ownership. This got me thinking. So, I threw together this quick list of things that, I think, make a great Product Owner.
Continue reading "What Makes a Great Product Owner?" »
Investment advisors like to talk about about inflation these days in terms of raw money supply/purchasing power. But there's more to this.
Continue reading "The Real Value of Money" »
In the recent InfoQ article about free Test Driven Development classes in our new 'Gift Economy', there is a misguided notion that fundamental economics have somehow evolved to such an extent that scarcity isn't an economic driver any more:
http://www.infoq.com/news/2010/08/agile-training-gift;jsessionid=0E73B11FC39B86C6019D0CE4B3DD1307
I disagree. As I state in my comment to the article, I suspect the people pushing this gimmick do so more to attack capitalism as a whole than for any other reason.
Continue reading "Today's Scarcity: Reputation" »
Ultimately group success of any kind is determined by good people doing good work. Period. A good sponsor, designer, and developer can build great software, no matter what the process or team structure – should they care enough to do it.
Continue reading "Will Your Project Succeed?" »
"I want us to get into the mode of planning and stop just doing stuff." - Waterfall Czar I know of throwing out Scrum babies with bathwater.
We use ThoughtWork's (TW) products to manage development on our project, including Cruise. Cruise was often confused with CruiseControl - an entirely different thing.
After a good start with Cruise, TW has released a new version of it with a new look and a new name,'Go':
Continue reading "ThoughtWorks' Cruise now 'Go'" »
I think certain kinds of people - people who like to understand the depths of 'why' seek out tension. The tension drives them to resolve and normalize concepts. They do this because the act of resolving and normalizing is actually intellectually satisfying, in and of itself. They hope they never reach of the end of it.
I saw something on a team wiki the other day. Btw, why I was reading awiki is still a mystery me.
Continue reading "WACD Anti-Pattern: Putting Your Development Approach on Wiki" »
Save your valuable time and don't watch this attempt to pump blood into a cadaver: http://www.infoq.com/presentations/Reincarnation-SOA-Anne-Thomas-Manes. This presentation was so staggeringly ineffective and useless that I felt moved to write yet another SOA epitaph.
Continue reading "SOA, May You REST in Pieces." »
When running:
gem install wxruby-ruby19
I got the following RDoc error:
Continue reading "Ruby 1.9.1 RDoc No Memory Error" »
I'll trust that it was well intended, but President Obama's letter to his followers this Thanksgiving completely omits any mention of the one thing that still holds our country together: God.
Continue reading "No thanks, God" »
"We spend between 15% - 30% of our time
dealing with customer or support issues, so we have no concept of uninterrupted
development time."
I was told this in a recent email plea from a former developer-colleague-turned manager. He wanted suggestions on how to role out Scrum in a such a scenario.
My answer?
Continue reading "Flow Control In Scrum (Or Any Development Process)" »
To continue from an earlier post on the WACD methodology, here are some tips for keeping the pesky 'team' concept from eroding your development sovereignty.
Continue reading "No 'Team' in 'I': Going Solo with WACD" »
I couldn't delete a set of files on an old Windows OS because "The file name is too long". After fruitless Google searching, I found the solution and so, posting here for posterity.
Continue reading "Solution to Windows Bug: "The file name is too long"" »
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