Abstract | ||
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Software development paradigms are shifting. The development group's "team" ability, and the effects of the individual developer, become more important as organizations recognize that the traditional approach of increasing process pressure and overworking team members is not getting the job done. The pioneers of Agile methodologies question the preconceived processes within which development teams work. Rather than adding to the burden of the individual developer, Agile asks "how can we change the process so that the team is more productive, while also improving quality?" The answer is in learning to play the "game." Written for developers and project managers, Agile Software Development compares software development to a game. Team members play the game knowing that the ultimate goal is to win---always remembering what they have learned along the way, and always keeping in mind that they will never play the same way twice. Players must keep an open mind to different methodologies, and focus on the goal of developing quality software in a short cycle time. |
Year | DOI | Venue |
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2002 | 10.1076/csed.12.3.167.8613 | Computer Science Education |
Keywords | DocType | Volume |
agile software development,Agile methodology,software development paradigm,individual developer,software development,development teams work,Agile Software Development,quality software,development group,team member,open mind | Journal | 12 |
Issue | ISBN | Citations |
3 | 0-201-69969-9 | 220 |
PageRank | References | Authors |
44.64 | 0 | 1 |
Name | Order | Citations | PageRank |
---|---|---|---|
Alistair Cockburn | 1 | 1823 | 197.14 |