Scrum, XP, and Kanban have been proven to provide step changes in productivity and quality for software teams. However, these methods do not have the native constructs necessary to scale to challenges of building enterprise class software systems. What the industry desperately needs is a solution that moves from a set of simplistic, disparate, development-centric methods, to a scalable, unified approach that addresses the complex constructs and additional stakeholders in the organization- and enables realization of enterprise-class product or service initiatives via aligned and cooperative solution development.
In this talk, Dean Leffingwell describes how to accomplish this with the Scaled Agile Framework, a publicly - accessible knowledge base of proven Lean and Agile practices for enterprise-class software development. He approaches the problem from the perspectives of Lean thinking and principles of product development flow, illustrating how these core principles help deliver business results at scale, while keeping the development system - and the enterprise - lean and responsive to rapidly changing market needs. And since winning is more fun, he’ll also describe some of the personal benefits that come when teams master the art of delivering better enterprise-class software, at an ever faster pace.
The talk will begin with the experiences in the current organization w.r.t implementing Agile. It will start from the complexities that exist in the organization due to the way it has grown traditionally.
The next section will then focus on specific challenges , along with project examples, in the areas of
a. Client expectations on Agile
b. Estimation
c. Execution
d. Metrics
e. Project Comparison
Then the summary on where are we as an organization with these challenges and how are we trying to resolve these.
Finally, the session will conclude with some learning’s which can potentially help others.
The predominant mindset around complex problem solving is decomposition; we inevitably jump to ways of ‘chunking up’ a solution. At Aginic, our experience of delivering hundreds of engaging data experiences is that this often misses a step that is crucial to creating compelling digital experiences: experimentation. In this talk we’ll describe how we have baked in experimentation to our ability to explore and navigate complex problem spaces and how this has helped deliver engaging outcomes for our customers.
This talk is a must for anyone tackling complex projects, particularly involving data.
Being Agile, Doing Agile and Agile in Crisis: We have the Agile Industrial Complex, Dark Agile, Faux/Fake Agile, Zombie Scrum, Flaccid Scrum, CrAgile, FrAgile, WAgile, and more. What do they all mean, and how do we know if we are doing them instead of "Being Agile"
Building Your SAFe Implementation StrategyAlex Yakyma
In this presentation, Alex Yakyma will talk about practical aspects of SAFe rollouts in large Value Streams and Portfolios. Alex will provide numerous examples and practical advice to leaders and change agents that are about to start or are in the middle of their SAFe rollout.
Explore what is an Agile culture
Explore the Agile Mindset
Explore what is an Agile culture
Explore the Agile Mindset
Review the 6 basic steps required to transition to an agile culture that will accept the Agile Mindset
Agile Scrum Master is an advanced level Agile Project Management course that is ideal for individuals and enterprises that are looking to gain a comprehensive understanding of Agile methodologies and Scrum practices and covers Scrum Master role with regards to facilitating the Scrum team that adheres to Scrum theory, practices, and rules.
Agile and Scrum Master Certification training course accredited by EXIN is ideal for software developers, project team members, team leads, architects, project managers, scrum team members, scrum managers, scrum masters, teams transitioning to scrum, and any one who is part of IT and project management teams working on projects.
To know more about Agile Scrum Master Certification training worldwide,
please contact us at -
Email: support@invensislearning.com
Phone - US +1-910-726-3695,
Website: https://www.invensislearning.com
The talk will begin with the experiences in the current organization w.r.t implementing Agile. It will start from the complexities that exist in the organization due to the way it has grown traditionally.
The next section will then focus on specific challenges , along with project examples, in the areas of
a. Client expectations on Agile
b. Estimation
c. Execution
d. Metrics
e. Project Comparison
Then the summary on where are we as an organization with these challenges and how are we trying to resolve these.
Finally, the session will conclude with some learning’s which can potentially help others.
The predominant mindset around complex problem solving is decomposition; we inevitably jump to ways of ‘chunking up’ a solution. At Aginic, our experience of delivering hundreds of engaging data experiences is that this often misses a step that is crucial to creating compelling digital experiences: experimentation. In this talk we’ll describe how we have baked in experimentation to our ability to explore and navigate complex problem spaces and how this has helped deliver engaging outcomes for our customers.
This talk is a must for anyone tackling complex projects, particularly involving data.
Being Agile, Doing Agile and Agile in Crisis: We have the Agile Industrial Complex, Dark Agile, Faux/Fake Agile, Zombie Scrum, Flaccid Scrum, CrAgile, FrAgile, WAgile, and more. What do they all mean, and how do we know if we are doing them instead of "Being Agile"
Building Your SAFe Implementation StrategyAlex Yakyma
In this presentation, Alex Yakyma will talk about practical aspects of SAFe rollouts in large Value Streams and Portfolios. Alex will provide numerous examples and practical advice to leaders and change agents that are about to start or are in the middle of their SAFe rollout.
Explore what is an Agile culture
Explore the Agile Mindset
Explore what is an Agile culture
Explore the Agile Mindset
Review the 6 basic steps required to transition to an agile culture that will accept the Agile Mindset
Agile Scrum Master is an advanced level Agile Project Management course that is ideal for individuals and enterprises that are looking to gain a comprehensive understanding of Agile methodologies and Scrum practices and covers Scrum Master role with regards to facilitating the Scrum team that adheres to Scrum theory, practices, and rules.
Agile and Scrum Master Certification training course accredited by EXIN is ideal for software developers, project team members, team leads, architects, project managers, scrum team members, scrum managers, scrum masters, teams transitioning to scrum, and any one who is part of IT and project management teams working on projects.
To know more about Agile Scrum Master Certification training worldwide,
please contact us at -
Email: support@invensislearning.com
Phone - US +1-910-726-3695,
Website: https://www.invensislearning.com
DevOps short deck:- DevOps the Fire of Innovation
Some clarity on DevOps (Start-up, Pilot & Global Enterprise)
DevOps: an endless evolution of improvements & adaptations
Should Successful DevOps = Business Agility?
Exploring Agile Transformation and Scaling PatternsMike Cottmeyer
The goal of any enterprise agile adoption strategy is NOT to adopt agile. Companies adopt agile to achieve better business outcomes. Large organizations have no time for dogma and one-size-fits-all thinking when it comes to introducing agile practices. These companies need pragmatic guidance for safely and incrementally introducing structure, principles, and ultimately practices that will result in greater long term, sustainable business results. This talk will introduce a framework for safely, pragmatically, and incrementally introducing agile to help you achieve your business goals.
What are the Agile Metrics That Matter Most? Are they at the team-level? project/project? What about the people-side of agile (the "soft stuff"). What are common pitfalls to avoid? We categorize agile metrics into those about Value, Flow, Quality & Culture, and identify the most frequently used (and misused) in each of those areas.
Scaled Agile Framework in 10 minutes (CAS2015)Unai Roldán
Scaled Agile Framework in 10 minutes (SAFe 3.0)
- Scaled: SAFe is designed for large-scale software development ecosystems of 50-125 people who need to resolve inter-dependencies
- Agile: SAFe is based on 9 Lean-Agile principles
- Framework: SAFe is a collection of a proven efficacy tools, and you only have to use what you need
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vysQQx7pQzg
El objetivo de la Lightning Talk es dar una visión "light" pero completa de lo que propone Scaled Agile Framework 3.0 como marco de referencia para el escalado de Agile.
Scaled Agile Framework es uno de los marcos de referencia para escalado de Agile que mayor aceptación está teniendo a día de hoy, sobre todo cuando hablamos de grandes organizaciones. El marco SAFe parte de las capas de abstracción clásicas de una organización para estructurar un cambio de perspectiva y de cultura basándose en los 4 valores y 9 principios Lean-Agile, apoyándose además en las prácticas Scrum-XP de desarrollo de productos. En la charla descubriremos de manera rápida los roles, artefactos y ceremonias que plantea el marco para conseguir un cambio de paradigma sostenible en las organizaciones.
Unai Roldán
UST Global
Opportunities for Project Managers in the Lean-Agile Enterprise with SAFeRichard Knaster
The shift towards Lean-Agile approaches for software and systems development continues to grow at an accelerated rate. As a result, the opportunities for Project Managers in the midst of this transition have never been greater. Over 70% of the Fortune 100 are using the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe®) to implement Lean-Agile practices. In this webinar, SAFe Fellow Richard Knaster (PMP, PMI-ACP) and SAFe Senior Program Consultant Trainer Dr. Steve Mayner (PMP, PMI-ACP) will outline the opportunities for Project Managers within the context of SAFe, as well as how SAFe addresses core PMI knowledge areas such as: - Scope management - Time management - Cost management - Quality management - Risk management There will be an opportunity for Q&A at the end of the presentation.
Having reviewed a number of Agile adoption approaches by big consulting companies given to organizations within the Kingdom, it's clear that many of them don't have the appropriate backgrounds to perform Agile transformations.
This session will discuss the Agile transformation adoption roadmap from real practitioners with numerous Agile adoptions in Saudi Arabia.
We will discuss what to try, what not to avoid, and some general things to consider.
Agile is not just for software development, it’s for the whole business! by O...Bosnia Agile
In this session, Olta will discuss how Agile is influencing company culture, human resources, customers, finance, marketing, and the company as a whole. The use of traditional approaches in other departments and the agile approaches in software development departments are bringing so much noise into the environment rather than a successful agile transformation.
What is scaling and how can it help to improve your organisation? What is the right mix of scaling principles and practices for your culture and teams? I will compare some agile approaches on scaling like Scaled Agile Framework aka SAFe, Large Scale Scrum (LeSS) both based on principles of Lean Product Development and Scaling Agile @ Spotify.
A 40 minute introduction to DevOps for the Wellington DevOps Meetup, March 2021.
Rob forgot to talk about DevSecOps, which was a fundamental topic, and the general concept of "Shift left". Only so much you can fit in an hour, but they are good topics to research further.
Rob also mentioned some books
IT Revolution DevOps Forum is the best sources of free ebooks about Devops. It costs you an email signup, but it is worth it.
Team of Teams, Stanley McChrystal - good for business agility.
(See also Brave New Work, by Aaron Dignan, as Rob's favourite primer on new ways of working)
The Phoenix Project, by Gene Kim et al. - KoolAid intro to Devops, convinces most people.
Devops Handbook, gene Kim at al - good general refence
Continuous Delivery, Humble and Farley - still the definitive textbook
The Checklist Manifesto, Atul Gawande - in praise of checklists
Field Guide to Human Error, Sidney Dekker - safety culture influences Devops
(see also Dekker's two Youtube videos on Safety Differently and Just Culture)
Rob England consults and trains in IT locally in Welly tealunicorn.com/nwomit
Or see the work Rob and Cherry do together at enterprise level tealunicorn.com/clients
Joint talk by one of my colleagues with Sita.aero discussing Sita's approach to Agile at Scale; how they have embedded that across a large diverse organisation and lastly the significant benefits resulting.
Presented at Unicom's Agile in the Finance Sector on the 26th Feb 2015.
Agile2014 conference presentation on "Smart Scaling" - how to compare scaling approaches. Our Agile Scaling Knowledgebase (ASK) and Decision Matrix help provide an objective way to compare approaches.
AgileLIVE – Accelerate Enterprise Agile with the Scaled Agile Framework®: Part IVersionOne
Interested in finding out how to scale agile faster, easier and smarter using the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe)? If so, make sure you watch this two-part webinar series!
Scrum, XP, Kanban and related methods have been proven to provide step changes in productivity and quality for software teams. However, these methods do not have the native constructs necessary to scale across the enterprise. What the industry desperately needs is a solution that moves from a set of simplistic, disparate, development-centric methods, to a scalable, unified approach that addresses the complex constructs and additional stakeholders in the organization – and accelerates the realization of enterprise-class product or service initiatives via aligned and cooperative solution development.
Part I: Join Dean Leffingwell, software industry veteran and Lean Systems Society Fellow, for an overview of SAFe, a publicly–accessible knowledge base of proven lean and agile practices for enterprise-class software development.
Dean Leffingwell, software industry veteran and Lean Systems Society Fellow, has spent his career helping software teams achieve their goals. A renowned methodologist, author, coach, entrepreneur and executive, Dean's most recent project is the Scaled Agile Framework (scaledagileframework.com), a public-facing website which describes a comprehensive system for scaling lean and agile practices to the largest software enterprises.
Andy Powell is Product Evangelist for VersionOne and Scaled Agile Framework Program Consultant. During his 12-year career in the software development industry, Andy has assisted in numerous 500+ person agile tool rollouts with companies such as Siemens, Adobe, EMC and Sabre, giving him considerable experience in leading major projects. Andy received a Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Notre Dame and graduated magna cum laude.
Lee Cunningham is an Enterprise Agile Coach for VersionOne focused on agile program and portfolio management. Lee has trained and consulted with hundreds of teams in organizations of all sizes in the US, Canada and the UK. Lee served in the United States Air Force and earned a Bachelor of Business Administration degree from the University of North Florida.
DevOps short deck:- DevOps the Fire of Innovation
Some clarity on DevOps (Start-up, Pilot & Global Enterprise)
DevOps: an endless evolution of improvements & adaptations
Should Successful DevOps = Business Agility?
Exploring Agile Transformation and Scaling PatternsMike Cottmeyer
The goal of any enterprise agile adoption strategy is NOT to adopt agile. Companies adopt agile to achieve better business outcomes. Large organizations have no time for dogma and one-size-fits-all thinking when it comes to introducing agile practices. These companies need pragmatic guidance for safely and incrementally introducing structure, principles, and ultimately practices that will result in greater long term, sustainable business results. This talk will introduce a framework for safely, pragmatically, and incrementally introducing agile to help you achieve your business goals.
What are the Agile Metrics That Matter Most? Are they at the team-level? project/project? What about the people-side of agile (the "soft stuff"). What are common pitfalls to avoid? We categorize agile metrics into those about Value, Flow, Quality & Culture, and identify the most frequently used (and misused) in each of those areas.
Scaled Agile Framework in 10 minutes (CAS2015)Unai Roldán
Scaled Agile Framework in 10 minutes (SAFe 3.0)
- Scaled: SAFe is designed for large-scale software development ecosystems of 50-125 people who need to resolve inter-dependencies
- Agile: SAFe is based on 9 Lean-Agile principles
- Framework: SAFe is a collection of a proven efficacy tools, and you only have to use what you need
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vysQQx7pQzg
El objetivo de la Lightning Talk es dar una visión "light" pero completa de lo que propone Scaled Agile Framework 3.0 como marco de referencia para el escalado de Agile.
Scaled Agile Framework es uno de los marcos de referencia para escalado de Agile que mayor aceptación está teniendo a día de hoy, sobre todo cuando hablamos de grandes organizaciones. El marco SAFe parte de las capas de abstracción clásicas de una organización para estructurar un cambio de perspectiva y de cultura basándose en los 4 valores y 9 principios Lean-Agile, apoyándose además en las prácticas Scrum-XP de desarrollo de productos. En la charla descubriremos de manera rápida los roles, artefactos y ceremonias que plantea el marco para conseguir un cambio de paradigma sostenible en las organizaciones.
Unai Roldán
UST Global
Opportunities for Project Managers in the Lean-Agile Enterprise with SAFeRichard Knaster
The shift towards Lean-Agile approaches for software and systems development continues to grow at an accelerated rate. As a result, the opportunities for Project Managers in the midst of this transition have never been greater. Over 70% of the Fortune 100 are using the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe®) to implement Lean-Agile practices. In this webinar, SAFe Fellow Richard Knaster (PMP, PMI-ACP) and SAFe Senior Program Consultant Trainer Dr. Steve Mayner (PMP, PMI-ACP) will outline the opportunities for Project Managers within the context of SAFe, as well as how SAFe addresses core PMI knowledge areas such as: - Scope management - Time management - Cost management - Quality management - Risk management There will be an opportunity for Q&A at the end of the presentation.
Having reviewed a number of Agile adoption approaches by big consulting companies given to organizations within the Kingdom, it's clear that many of them don't have the appropriate backgrounds to perform Agile transformations.
This session will discuss the Agile transformation adoption roadmap from real practitioners with numerous Agile adoptions in Saudi Arabia.
We will discuss what to try, what not to avoid, and some general things to consider.
Agile is not just for software development, it’s for the whole business! by O...Bosnia Agile
In this session, Olta will discuss how Agile is influencing company culture, human resources, customers, finance, marketing, and the company as a whole. The use of traditional approaches in other departments and the agile approaches in software development departments are bringing so much noise into the environment rather than a successful agile transformation.
What is scaling and how can it help to improve your organisation? What is the right mix of scaling principles and practices for your culture and teams? I will compare some agile approaches on scaling like Scaled Agile Framework aka SAFe, Large Scale Scrum (LeSS) both based on principles of Lean Product Development and Scaling Agile @ Spotify.
A 40 minute introduction to DevOps for the Wellington DevOps Meetup, March 2021.
Rob forgot to talk about DevSecOps, which was a fundamental topic, and the general concept of "Shift left". Only so much you can fit in an hour, but they are good topics to research further.
Rob also mentioned some books
IT Revolution DevOps Forum is the best sources of free ebooks about Devops. It costs you an email signup, but it is worth it.
Team of Teams, Stanley McChrystal - good for business agility.
(See also Brave New Work, by Aaron Dignan, as Rob's favourite primer on new ways of working)
The Phoenix Project, by Gene Kim et al. - KoolAid intro to Devops, convinces most people.
Devops Handbook, gene Kim at al - good general refence
Continuous Delivery, Humble and Farley - still the definitive textbook
The Checklist Manifesto, Atul Gawande - in praise of checklists
Field Guide to Human Error, Sidney Dekker - safety culture influences Devops
(see also Dekker's two Youtube videos on Safety Differently and Just Culture)
Rob England consults and trains in IT locally in Welly tealunicorn.com/nwomit
Or see the work Rob and Cherry do together at enterprise level tealunicorn.com/clients
Joint talk by one of my colleagues with Sita.aero discussing Sita's approach to Agile at Scale; how they have embedded that across a large diverse organisation and lastly the significant benefits resulting.
Presented at Unicom's Agile in the Finance Sector on the 26th Feb 2015.
Agile2014 conference presentation on "Smart Scaling" - how to compare scaling approaches. Our Agile Scaling Knowledgebase (ASK) and Decision Matrix help provide an objective way to compare approaches.
AgileLIVE – Accelerate Enterprise Agile with the Scaled Agile Framework®: Part IVersionOne
Interested in finding out how to scale agile faster, easier and smarter using the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe)? If so, make sure you watch this two-part webinar series!
Scrum, XP, Kanban and related methods have been proven to provide step changes in productivity and quality for software teams. However, these methods do not have the native constructs necessary to scale across the enterprise. What the industry desperately needs is a solution that moves from a set of simplistic, disparate, development-centric methods, to a scalable, unified approach that addresses the complex constructs and additional stakeholders in the organization – and accelerates the realization of enterprise-class product or service initiatives via aligned and cooperative solution development.
Part I: Join Dean Leffingwell, software industry veteran and Lean Systems Society Fellow, for an overview of SAFe, a publicly–accessible knowledge base of proven lean and agile practices for enterprise-class software development.
Dean Leffingwell, software industry veteran and Lean Systems Society Fellow, has spent his career helping software teams achieve their goals. A renowned methodologist, author, coach, entrepreneur and executive, Dean's most recent project is the Scaled Agile Framework (scaledagileframework.com), a public-facing website which describes a comprehensive system for scaling lean and agile practices to the largest software enterprises.
Andy Powell is Product Evangelist for VersionOne and Scaled Agile Framework Program Consultant. During his 12-year career in the software development industry, Andy has assisted in numerous 500+ person agile tool rollouts with companies such as Siemens, Adobe, EMC and Sabre, giving him considerable experience in leading major projects. Andy received a Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Notre Dame and graduated magna cum laude.
Lee Cunningham is an Enterprise Agile Coach for VersionOne focused on agile program and portfolio management. Lee has trained and consulted with hundreds of teams in organizations of all sizes in the US, Canada and the UK. Lee served in the United States Air Force and earned a Bachelor of Business Administration degree from the University of North Florida.
Accelerate [XLR8] your agile transformationEmiliano Soldi
How organizations nowadays could innovate and transform themselves, to catch up with this faster-moving world?
How is possible to incrementally change the organization from within?
How to leverage self-organization, collaborative leadership and motivation to involve people from the whole organization to reach the Big-Opportunity?
Structured organizations today are not keeping pace with a changing world incessantly. The Business Triathlon (Lean Strategy/Start-up, Agile and Change Management) could be the solution.
CBIZ and Mayer Hoffman McCann P.C. (MHM) are pleased to invite you to our 2016 Executive Education Series™ online training courses. This webinar-based training is designed to educate and inform our clients and the public on complex accounting and tax subject matters and current events. Continuing Professional Education (CPE) credit will be offered.
Online registration and more details about these free courses can be found at http://www.cbiz.com or http://www.mhmcpa.com.
The harder you push, the harder the system pushes you backEmiliano Soldi
Slide presented at Better Sofware conference in June 2016.
The talk was about how facilitation, change managment and coaching, are essentials in guiding Agile Transition program
The Agile Scaling Model (ASM) provides the context and advice for effectively tailoring agile techniques. It describes how to extend the agile construction life cycle into a full-fledged disciplined agile delivery life cycle. It then describes how to tailor agile practices to address scaling factors which an agile team may face, including team size, physical distribution, organizational distribution, regulatory compliance, organizational complexity, technical complexity, and enterprise disciplines (such as enterprise architecture, reuse, and portfolio management).
J1 2015 "Debugging Java Apps in Containers: No Heavy Welding Gear Required"Daniel Bryant
It’s easy to get seduced by being able to quickly deploy and scale applications by using containers. However, when things inevitably go wrong, how do you debug your application? This session covers various pro bug hunting tips and tricks. It shows live demos of tools such as the Docker stats API, Docker exec (and top, vmstat, and netstat), and how to use the ELK stack for centralized logging. It also dives into other more sophisticated tools that operate at the application and (micro)service layer, such as Twitter’s Zipkin tracing app, Spring Boot’s Actuator, and DropWizard’s Metrics library. Keep those container-based nightmares away by ensuring that when the worst does happen, you have the tools, info, and experience to debug containerized applications.
Presented at JavaOne 2015 with Steve Poole
There are as many types of agile coaches out there as there are flavors of ice cream. And, their levels of leadership maturity and skill can vary just as widely. It can leave one fretting, “What am I really getting when I bring in an agile coach? And, how do I ‘grow’ my own?” In fact, what are the “must have” skills of an agile coach and how can you tell if your coach has them?
The Agile Coach Competency Framework is one big clue to answering these questions. Over the past two years, this framework has guided the development of hundreds of agile coaches. Agile managers and champions also use it to obtain “truth in advertising” to hire the right coach at the right time.
We will explore this framework and provide lightening-talk-style case studies that showcase how it has been used in the real world. You’ll leave with ideas and actions to help you become a more savvy purveyor (and/or developer) of agile coaches.
Leadership @ Spotify by Kristian Lindwall at the Lean IT Summit 2014Institut Lean France
Spotify has been growing quickly as a company, and they are continuously experimenting with ways of making the company work as effectively as possible. At the Lean IT Summit 2014, Kristian explained how management and leadership work in a large agile organization like Spotify.
Find out what leadership looks like in a large agile organization? How can a leader support autonomy and alignment? How different forms of leadership – both formal and informal, product, organizational and technical – overlap and interact to create successful teams. More Lean IT on www.lean-it-summit.com
This is the talk I am doing at the 2010 SQE Better Software/Agile Development Practices Conference in Vegas this week. Not much new, but this is a combination of several ideas from many of my existing presentations.
Learn more about the scaled Agile Framework + scaling Agile. After a short introduction to several frameworks that aim to support the scaling of Agile (DAD, LeSS, SAFe®), this power point presentation from our webinar dives deeper into the details of the Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe®). Find the truth behind the often cited sentence “As Scrum is to the Agile team, SAFe® is to the Agile enterprise.”
An introduction to the Spotify matrix model including recent updates we've made as we have continued to grow. I presented this talk at the Spark the Change Conference in London, UK on July 1, 2015.
Keynote dean-leffingwell-keynote-be-agile-scale-up-stay-lean
Safe
Why SAFe
Pillars of SAfe
Value
Respect for People
Product development
Kaizen
Leadership
Agile manifesto
Agile India 2016 Keynote - The Lean-Agile Enterprise Awakens- Scalable and Mo...Richard Knaster
New competitive threats often require organizations to build increasingly complex, interconnected and sophisticated software and systems, faster, better and cheaper. Most organizations are not equipped to meet this new challenge! Meanwhile small, nimble competitors, like Airbnb and Uber are taking a big bite on the profits of the giants.
So what’s the answer? What have we learned in the past decade from our adventures in agile and our attempts at scaling? What does the future hold?
In this talk, Richard Knaster, Principal Consultant and SAFe Fellow, discusses a more scalable and modular lean-agile approach that enables even the largest enterprises to compete with smaller and nimbler competitors that are disrupting companies in all industries. Richard is a Principal Contributor to the Scaled Agile Framework and previously worked at IBM where his roles included Chief Agile Methodologist. World Wide Agile Practice Manager and various product management roles in the Rational Brand.
Keynote: Know the Way, Show the Way, Go the Way: Scaling Agile DevelopmentTechWell
Tired of the claims that Scrum, XP, and kanban don’t scale beyond a few teams? Overwhelmed by management’s resistance to the organizational changes needed to really follow agile principles? Concerned with the lack of proven practices required to scale agile methods to the next level? Exploring the Scaled Agile Framework™, Dean Leffingwell dispels these claims and answers these questions—and more. A publicly available set of practices for agile teams, projects, architectures, programs, and portfolios, this framework helps organizations scale lean and agile development from several small teams to hundreds—and even thousands—of practitioners. Working at companies including BMC Corporation and John Deere, Dean has discovered what works and what doesn’t work. He focuses on the critical role software development managers, leaders, and executives play in implementing and supporting the framework to achieve the full business benefits of enterprise agility.
Tech Mahindra and CollabNet have worked together on a number of mission-critical projects, and over the course of their partnership have developed unique expertise in lifecycle, development-to-production metrics. Gain an understanding not only of what metrics are important, but also practical approaches to building reports and dashboards that deliver a single-pane view of all your delivery pipelines across the enterprise.
Participants will learn:
KPI’s of end-to-end dashboard driven development and delivery
Best practices for metrics in Agile / DevOps environments
Role of technology frameworks for integrated planning and reporting
Agile Project Failures: Root Causes and Corrective ActionsTechWell
Agile initiatives always begin with the best of intentions—accelerate delivery, better meet customer needs, or improve software quality. Unfortunately, some agile projects do not deliver on these expectations. If you want help to ensure the success of your agile project or get an agile project back on track, this session is for you. Jeff Payne discusses the most common causes of agile project failure and how you can avoid these issues—or mitigate their damaging effects. Poor project management, ineffective requirements development, failed communications, software development problems, and (non)agile testing can all contribute to a failing project. Learn practical tips and techniques for identifying early warning signs that your agile project might be in trouble and how you can best get your project back on track. Gain the knowledge you need to guide your organization toward agile project implementations that serve the business and the stakeholders.
Foundations of the Scaled Agile Framework® (SAFe® ) 4.5netmind
El Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe) es una base de conocimientos para adoptar métodos de trabajo ágiles en grandes organizaciones. SAFe presenta de forma gráfica un modelo de gestión para escalar la aplicación de las prácticas ágiles de un equipo a la gestión de programas, y de la gestión de programas al conjunto de la organización.
Este modelo para la adopción y transformación ágil de las organizaciones fué diseñado por Dean Leffingwell, a partir de sus libros “Agile Software Requeriments: Lean Requeriments for Teams Programs and the Enterprise” y “Scaling Software Agility: Best Practices for Large Enterprise”, y se ha implementado con éxito en grandes organizaciones de todo el mundo. 60 de las 100 compañías más grandes de Estados Unidos están utilizando SAFe como guía de referencia para la adopción de Agile.
El modelo de gestión propuesto por SAFe cubre el conjunto de la organización, desde los equipos, hasta los niveles de mayor responsabilidad. El modelo estructura en tres niveles: Equipo, Programa y Portfolio, aunque en la última versión, SAFe 4.0, introduce un 4º nivel opcional para soluciones de extremadamente grandes y complejas. Para cada uno de estos niveles SAFe define los roles, estructuras, actividades, artefactos, prácticas y técnicas adecuadas.
Do you have highly functional scrum teams but are wondering how to get them to work in sync with each other, or wondering how get "start-up" efficiency in a large enterprise? Or maybe you just heard that the Scaled Agile Framework for the Enterprise (SAFe®) is gaining traction and you want to find out more about it. Before the year is out, we want to give you a primer on SAFe, so you can decide if it should be on your list of resolutions for the new year!
We continue to see that Agile and Scrum deliver value and are catching the eyes of leadership individuals. But how does a large enterprise thrive with a Scrum framework that was made for 5-9 individuals? SAFe has garnered a lot of attention as a potential framework for enterprises with large product teams (5 or more scrum teams on a product line). It calls for the overall alignment throughout the organization so that the Scrum teams making up a large product development team can deliver valuable, high quality product increments with transparency and technical excellence. The program execution is achieved by leveraging the existing Scrum Team practices and interfacing with the higher Program and Portfolio layers in the organization.
cPrime SAFe coach, Sri will provide an overview of the SAFe framework and show why it appeals not only to the engineers and architects, but also to the product management, customer support and the executive team.
Agile Upstream and Downstream Webinar - EnglishCollabNet
Enterprises continue to struggle with scaling agile planning across their varied development teams. As the chart above shows less than 20% have been able to scale agile planning. Still further, only 13% of workgroups have connected their upfront agile planning to their subsequent software development and delivery tools and practices. This leads to isolated high performing teams doing great work, but the enterprise continuing to struggle with the overall delivery of projects and products on time.
This webinar will show you CollabNet’s unique ability to bring these upstream and downstream practices together in a consistent repeatable manner, providing teams the ability to trace not only the work but the output of the work throughout the lifecycle and share that information with the business stakeholders.
Key Takeaways:
Understand the difference between agile upstream and agile downstream.
How CollabNet’s TeamForge platform can link together upstream and downstream agile.
Best practices for scaling agile development upstream and downstream across the enterprise.
How to gain visibility across the enterprise on how these teams are doing and how they can best collaborate with one another.
Agile Project Failures: Root Causes and Corrective ActionsTechWell
Agile initiatives always begin with the best of intentions—accelerate delivery, better meet customer needs, or improve software quality. Unfortunately, some agile projects do not deliver on these expectations. If you want help to ensure the success of your agile project or get an agile project back on track, this session is for you. Jeff Payne discusses the most common causes of agile project failure and how you can avoid these issues—or mitigate their damaging effects. Poor project management, ineffective requirements development, failed communications, software development problems, and (non)agile testing can all contribute to project failure. Learn practical tips and techniques for identifying early warning signs that your agile project might be in trouble and how you can best get your project back on track. Gain the knowledge you need to guide your organization toward agile project implementations that serve the business and the stakeholders.
SAFe (Scaled Agile Framework) 5 mins overview - Roni TamariAgileSparks
Why Scale? When choose each scaling approach? SAFe? LeSS? Enterprise Kanban? Other? Scaling experts will compare the different approaches, share from their experience and answer questions from the audience
This is the SAFe section presented by Roni Tamari
2i recently attended a DevOps Summit in London to learn more about how different companies have implemented DevOps. Read our overview to gain a better understanding of the DevOps operating model.
The fastest moving enterprises share one thing in common: They don’t let today’s technology slow down tomorrow’s innovations. With first-hand insights from Jeff Sutherland, technology innovation expert, this slideshow discusses:
- Overcoming legacy ERP and CRM system roadblocks
- Never building anything twice at your organization
- Creating a feedback culture to spur innovation
**Download report: Gartner 2015 Magic Quadrant for Enterprise Application Platform as a Service (aPaaS)
Download this report to better understand the aPaaS landscape and how the right platform can accelerate your software delivery cadence and capacity.
http://ww2.mendix.com/gartner-magic-quadrant-q1-2015.html
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Mendix
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/mendix
Similar to Be Agile. Scale Up. Stay Lean. And Have More Fun by Dean Leffingwell (20)
Everyone has stories of failure. That time you fell off your bike. The day you wore your jumper backwards without realising . That wireframe that confused your customers. The new feature no one used.
Failure is an inevitable part of life and as our delivery practices have matured we’ve celebrated the role that failure plays in building our products.
We Fail Fast. We Fail Forward. We Fail Better.
It almost feels like we want to fail.
It’s as if failure itself is our goal.
Has this obsession with failure clouded our thinking and distracted us from what we are actually trying to achieve?
In this session I will explore the prevailing ideas around failure and how they limit our ability to grow our teams and, just as importantly, the individuals that make up those teams. This talk will leave you with practical actions you can take to create a culture of learning and empowerment…and ultimately create a culture of success rather than failure.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8456/lessons-about-failure-from-the-girl-who-came-last
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
As part of Nedbank's nWoW initiative we also started implementing DevOps practices within product teams; breaking down cultural biases, redefining new processes and standardizing on our DevOps toolchain. Today, months later we’re successfully doing production releases on a weekly basis, fully automated.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8422/devops-in-action-how-nedbank-went-from-quarterly-to-weekly-releases-in-no-time
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Join me for a very short Design Sprint, where we go through the motions meant for 5 days in just 90 minutes, with a commentary from me about my personal experience in facilitating these.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8407/a-very-short-design-sprint
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Based on 12 years of experience in numerous transformations, some small, some mammoth, some successful and some not, this talk will outline how to craft a successful Agility transformation from scratch to finish.
The talk will address the following million-dollar questions:
Why would you even want to transform and why is Business Agility one of the most popular options today?
Once you’ve decided to transform, where do you start and how to plan and set up the transformation for success?
What are the parts of a business or organization that need to be transformed? Think of the 3 ‘S’s – Structure, Systems, and Style.
What is the target transformation state?
How do you manage the transformation and tackle the issue of scale?
What to do when the organizational antibodies come for you?
What does success look like and how do you measure it?
When should you stop and get the hell out?
A talk filled with real-world stories and ‘too funny to be true’ incidents that will show you the way, or what to avoid?
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8363/how-to-successfully-craft-a-business-agility-transformation
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Getting new teams to work together is hard. Really. Hard.
Is it because there is so much hype around new Agile teams? Or is it because there is such a focus on “doing things right” (or “doing” Agile right), that we forget about the people actually doing the work? Regardless of the reason, before we can change the way people work... we need to focus on the things that are important for teamwork to work!
We believe that the key to high-performance teams is creating an intentional culture that respects and embraces diversity - whether it be race, gender, class, culture, age, beliefs, language, skills or background. So join us as we explore the Team Canvas – sort of like a Business Model Canvas for teamwork - covering nine essential teamwork elements:
Purpose - Why we are doing what we are doing?
People & Roles - What are our names, roles and responsibilities?
Common goals - What do we as a group want to achieve together?
Personal goals - What do I as an individual want to achieve?
Team values - What do we really stand for and believe in?
Needs and expectations - What do each of us need to be successful in a diverse team?
Rules & Activities - How do we communicate and keep everyone up to date?
Strengths & Assets - What skills do we have in the team?
Weaknesses & Risks - What are the weaknesses we have, as an individual and as a team?
We will walk through our agenda for team lift-offs, facilitation posters and preparation work required, materials needed, and facilitation tips and tricks. All packaged in a handy pocket guide, that you can use to explore tried and tested techniques for each essential element. We will also have an opportunity to practice some of these techniques during the session.
Get ready to lift-off your team in T-minus 10... 9... 8...
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8348/t-minus-10-9-8-we-have-lift-off
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Test Encapsulation has its basis in a research paper I wrote about a decade back for Testing Experience magazine and later presented in a some conferences. At the heart of test encapsulation is introspection - making 'test' the most powerful component of the test automation engine, providing all meta data to it so that it can make run time decisions for itself. It's a complete rethinking of the way test automation engines are architected internally.
The ideas were at a very nascent stage at that time. And well, they were just ideas and I was told how impossible they were. So, I ended up experimenting with the concept for almost a decade, creating 20+ automation engines, big and small, touching the philosophies to various levels. They had varying amount of success w.r.t. where I wanted them to be.
At last, I have got it right to a fair extent. This presentation would be more than theoretical exploration of possibilities. I would demonstrate a test engine that achieves many of the ideas that I discuss. The engine would be free and open-sourced so that attendees can freely experiment further.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8347/test-encapsulation-automated-tests-that-decide-for-themselves
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
What a joy to be in a key leadership position in one of the largest-ever corporate experiments - the transition to new ways of working. I'm accountable for establishing and operating the Centre of Expertise, New Ways of Delivering - how we uplift culture, delivery & technical capability. We're doing this through consulting, coaching, educating, facilitating & mentoring.
The scope - 5000 people, 500 squads, 6 regions.
The process - Think systemically, optimise locally.
The result - it's a process...
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8344/from-dogma-to-pragma-helping-500-squads-on-the-road-to-agile-maturity
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Anti-Patterns are like patterns, only more informative. With anti-patterns you will first see what patterns reoccur in "bad" retrospectives and then you will see how to avoid, or remedy, the situation.
Based on her experience with facilitating retrospectives, join Aino for an entertaining and informative presentation on the anti-patterns she has seen and how to overcome the problems. We also encourage the audience to chip-in with their experiences or questions along the way.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8342/retrospective-anti-patterns
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Today success comes from building products people love, creating loyal customers and serving the broader stakeholder community. In this thoughtful exploration on the future of work, the authors explore the past, present and future of the “project”. And why, in today’s fast changing & hyper-competitive world, running a temporary endeavour is the wrong approach to building sustainable products and how #noprojects is fundamentally changing the way companies work.
The metrics by which we have historically defined success are no longer applicable and we need to re-examine the way value is delivered in the new economy. This book starts from the premise that our goal is to create value, for the customer, for the organisation and for society as a whole and shows how to empower and optimise our teams to achieve this.
The authors draw on modern management approaches to provide proven techniques and tools for producing, and sustaining, creative products that go beyond “meeting requirements”. By creating teams who are accountable for business outcomes, engineering for customer delight, and creating value for all stakeholders - profitability, customer satisfaction and employee engagement are all increased.
This book is far more than just a catalogue of practices and tools which you can apply in your product development. It contains inspirational stories from individuals, teams and organisations who have switched to this new way of thinking and working. It exposes the risks on the pathway and how others have overcome these obstacles
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8313/noprojects-why-what-how
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Deep Work™ is real. It's effective. It's immensely valuable for knowledge work. And yet, it's rare.
Organizations write software in two modes, the focussed mode centered around individual technical skill, and the collaboration mode centered around the communication within the team.
By nature, these two styles are at odds with each other and preferring one means downplaying the other. We know that stellar quality work can come out of an intensely focused mode of working. But we also know that equally stellar quality of work comes from highly aligned teams that work together like a well-oiled engine.
How then should we find a balance between the two? What can leaders and managers do to encourage both? How do we keep the changes small but fundamental?
Modern work cultures and environments are tailored for collaborative work and do not give enough thought to deep work. We will look at how making small changes to the work-day schedule, and the work environment can bridge the gap and support knowledge workers to do the best work of their life.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8290/the-deep-work-divide
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
The default use of an "estimate-driven" approach is pervasive in software development efforts. While estimates can be useful, it is worthwhile to scrutinize our use of estimates, and to seek better ways to manage the development of software when estimates are not appropriate. [NOTE: For this session, I am referring to the use of estimates of cost, time, or effort for software projects, features, or tasks.]
There are a number of things to explore. For example, do we really need estimates for everything we currently use them for? Are we getting a reasonable benefit from them? Is it possible to manage software development without them?
In this session we will start with an information gathering exercise to help us gain a shared idea of our current understanding of the purpose and use of estimates. From here we'll move on to examine the nature of software development projects and a few possible other ways to approach our work.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8277/beyond-estimates-estimates-or-noestimates
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Five people at one computer? How can that possibly be productive?
While this seems like a reasonable question, it's not easily answered - until we begin to understand the power of flow.
Mob Programming grew from the quest of one team to learn how to work well together. Once we started We almost immediately noticed that working this way provided better results in a variety of ways:
We were getting more done, and they were the more important thing
The quality of our work was increasing dramatically
Our Knowledge, skills, and capabilities were improving rapidly
And all while we were having a lot of fun as well!
While we noticed these benefits and more, and it was clear this was in a large part due to working well together throughout the day - we didn't have an understanding of why this was working so wonderfully for us.
A hint came early on when we recognized we were achieving a one-piece flow - but we didn't realize the importance of this until we started exploring the meaning and power of "flow".
In this presentation, we'll share the results of that exploration, and see if we can get a better understanding of Mob Programming and the power of flow.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8275/mob-programming-and-the-power-of-flow
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
This day is all about the “Agile Mindset”, but what about the “Kanban Mindset?” What’s the same and what is different? Kanban is certainly consistent with the “Agile Mindset,” but also brings in concepts from Lean and other management approaches.
Join Todd as he shares how the Kanban Method focuses on the following areas in order to drive continuous improvement:
Understand the system
Manage the flow of value
Balance Demand and Capacity
Limit WIP to improve predictability
Find and address bottlenecks
Make Policies Explicit
Incremental improvement through experiment and measurement
Double loop learning (process improvement & product improvement)
Scale through the enterprise
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8214/the-kanban-mindset
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
The talk is to share experiences and learnings with the digital transformation at the company Siemens.
All of us who work in large, traditional cooperation can undoubtedly learn a lot from agile showcase companies like Spotify and Airbnb. But we also understand that these approaches are not easy to transfer in every context. Large companies with structures, processes and culture that evolved over decades have very special challenges in such a transformation.
A few years ago, Siemens embarked on its transformation journey. We are in the middle of the transformation from a classic industrial company of the 20th century to a digital company of the 21st century.
Some typical questions addressed by specific Siemens examples
What scaling framework to apply; if any?
Top-down or bottom-up transformation?
What are the pillars of a transformation initiative?
How to become efficient and adaptable at the same time?
How to accelerate leadership development on all levels?
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8188/travel-notes-from-the-journey-of-a-170-year-old-industrial-company-to-a-digital-company-siemens-case-study
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Quality in Eurofins Genomics is a central focus point - analysis we do or products we produce have critical applications, be it production of drugs, identifying rare diseases or gene editing. IT is a driving force behind the scenes which challenges us to ensure the highest quality standards without compromising on speed.
When we start a new project, we do it with enthusiasm and feeling of doing something meaningful or even cool. Following scrum we quickly establish our velocity and deliver soon first release into production. Overall quality is quite good; results from testing acceptable, deadlines are coming so nothing can stop us. Let’s prioritize last bugs, fix critical, move rest into backlog – now we can be proud of having delivered value to users!
We continue delivering at ever increasing speed as team matures! Unfortunately the idyllic scenery gets soon destroyed by first, more and more effort needs to be spent addressing issues from both QA and production. We spend time arguing with QA and users on what is bug or if this defect is P2 or P3 or can even be seen as P4, from time to time we take a sprint to “stabilize”, but all too often nothing changes. User stories are getting spilled to next sprints, we postpone releases to have more time for testing, club them with next releases and finally find ourselves in downward spiral..
As quality cannot be compromised we quickly decide that Agile is fine, but as we work in regulated environment we need to be pragmatic and adjust Agile to our needs. What comes out is unfortunately not much different to Waterfall or V-Model, we still keep sprints and do reviews, but realize that only form is left. I am directly responsible for IT in Eurofins Genomics so will share experience from the field on how did we overcome this and reanimated Agile.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8187/regulations-eat-agile-for-breakfast
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
In 2008 I was member of a leadership team at Ericsson starting the transformation towards agility for a 2000 people organization. Soon we heard, that agile is a mindset and somehow that sounded right. But it was so hard to get: for me that full mindset change journey took about a year. Through it, I have become one of the transformation drivers at enterprise level. Today I am driving the transformation of a 15000 people business unit as organizational coach/inhouse consultant. Having worked with all kinds of people in all kinds of roles on all levels in the hierarchy across the company gave me a lot of experience with how to get the mindset across. One key learning is, that there is no one-size-fits all approach to it. People are different and different groups of people react in different ways through the group dynamics.
In this talk I will share my 10-year-experience with facilitating mindset change. I will share several examples of different kinds of people and groups of people I encountered and what I found working to facilitate the mindset change.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8182/10-years-of-transforming-mindset
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Adaptive handling and flow of financials are an important ingredient to business agility. Essentially what we want to achieve is, to have the money in a company flow to where it creates most value. In the modern dynamic business environment this is an increasing challenge as we on one side see the need to be very adaptive throughout the year to cope with the changes in the business and on the other side people in enterprises as well as suppliers and partners would like to have sufficient financial stability to plan their work. On top of that come regulatory requirements.
For ICAgile I led an international team of professionals in 2018 to create a learning curriculum outlining the most important things you need to know about finance in an agile enterprise. This curriculum is published under creative commons license. In this talk you will get an overview of finance agility based on the professional knowledge of this team.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8181/agile-finance-enabling-business-agility
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Modifying the schema of a production database is hard. If something goes wrong, the impact on both customers and the team can be enormous. And it can be hard or even impossible to rollback a database schema change if things go wrong. And the same is true for any architectural change for a production application.
The Branch by Abstraction and Strangler Pattern makes significant application changes easier. Are there any similar patterns we can use to make production database changes less risky?
Indeed, there are. The Expand/Collapse pattern is a blueprint for making the database migration. It makes the remodelling both reversible and safe. By expanding the application to accommodate both the old and the new schemas in parallel, we can give ourselves time to:
Migrate any downstream dependencies on the old database schema
Gain confidence that the migration is safe
We contract the application to the new version, once we’ve satisfied that the old schema is no longer needed.
The pattern helps to make significant, but necessary refactorings to your data model in a continuous delivery way. Most importantly, without threatening the robustness of your production applications.
While working with our product, I’ve successfully applied this pattern to make major changes to the core of the application, all while serving customers in production. I’ve learned some important lessons about how to best implement the Expand/Contract pattern.
In this session, I’ll share my experiences on how to avoid pitfalls and succeed at these kinds of major data remodelling with hardly any downtime.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8174/expand-contract-pattern-for-continuous-delivery-of-databases
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
I'll present how the dynamics of today's world means that old ways of organizing power in businesses are no longer working.
We need to re-look at our organization structures so that the emerging culture allows for more effective ways of using power.
I'll cover:
The Decay of Power and What It Means For Your Organization
Current Structures Make it Difficult to Get Things Done
Holacracy — A New Social Technology To Organize Power in Pursuit of Purpose
5 Ways Holacracy Organizes Power to Thrive in a Rapidly Changing World
1. The purpose is the new Boss
2. Autonomy: Everyone is a Leader (but lead roles not people)
3. Create Fractal structures (not Hierarchical or Flat)
4. Power vested in rules (not people)
5. Dynamic org structure that evolves (instead of rigid top-down ones)
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8145/re-thinking-how-power-is-organized-in-businesses-to-thrive-in-a-rapidly-changing-world
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Do you want to hire the best? I suppose yes. Do you want them to grow, to improve their skills continuously and to develop your company? Hope so? But what happens if people grow quicker than the company itself? That might be an issue and you need serious changes in your company to keep employees interested to stay, to grow and to develop your company. We are using open salaries, money transparency and an advice process in ScrumTrek company to retain interest, to have a new source of enthusiasm and motivation of our employees. We started our journey 2.5 years ago and we are happy to share how it feels from inside.
More details:
https://confengine.com/agile-india-2019/proposal/8090/open-salaries-from-employees-to-managing-partners
Conference link: https://2019.agileindia.org
Neuro-symbolic is not enough, we need neuro-*semantic*Frank van Harmelen
Neuro-symbolic (NeSy) AI is on the rise. However, simply machine learning on just any symbolic structure is not sufficient to really harvest the gains of NeSy. These will only be gained when the symbolic structures have an actual semantics. I give an operational definition of semantics as “predictable inference”.
All of this illustrated with link prediction over knowledge graphs, but the argument is general.
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
Connector Corner: Automate dynamic content and events by pushing a buttonDianaGray10
Here is something new! In our next Connector Corner webinar, we will demonstrate how you can use a single workflow to:
Create a campaign using Mailchimp with merge tags/fields
Send an interactive Slack channel message (using buttons)
Have the message received by managers and peers along with a test email for review
But there’s more:
In a second workflow supporting the same use case, you’ll see:
Your campaign sent to target colleagues for approval
If the “Approve” button is clicked, a Jira/Zendesk ticket is created for the marketing design team
But—if the “Reject” button is pushed, colleagues will be alerted via Slack message
Join us to learn more about this new, human-in-the-loop capability, brought to you by Integration Service connectors.
And...
Speakers:
Akshay Agnihotri, Product Manager
Charlie Greenberg, Host
Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey 2024 by 91mobiles.pdf91mobiles
91mobiles recently conducted a Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey in which we asked over 3,000 respondents about the TV they own, aspects they look at on a new TV, and their TV buying preferences.
GraphRAG is All You need? LLM & Knowledge GraphGuy Korland
Guy Korland, CEO and Co-founder of FalkorDB, will review two articles on the integration of language models with knowledge graphs.
1. Unifying Large Language Models and Knowledge Graphs: A Roadmap.
https://arxiv.org/abs/2306.08302
2. Microsoft Research's GraphRAG paper and a review paper on various uses of knowledge graphs:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/blog/graphrag-unlocking-llm-discovery-on-narrative-private-data/
Essentials of Automations: Optimizing FME Workflows with ParametersSafe Software
Are you looking to streamline your workflows and boost your projects’ efficiency? Do you find yourself searching for ways to add flexibility and control over your FME workflows? If so, you’re in the right place.
Join us for an insightful dive into the world of FME parameters, a critical element in optimizing workflow efficiency. This webinar marks the beginning of our three-part “Essentials of Automation” series. This first webinar is designed to equip you with the knowledge and skills to utilize parameters effectively: enhancing the flexibility, maintainability, and user control of your FME projects.
Here’s what you’ll gain:
- Essentials of FME Parameters: Understand the pivotal role of parameters, including Reader/Writer, Transformer, User, and FME Flow categories. Discover how they are the key to unlocking automation and optimization within your workflows.
- Practical Applications in FME Form: Delve into key user parameter types including choice, connections, and file URLs. Allow users to control how a workflow runs, making your workflows more reusable. Learn to import values and deliver the best user experience for your workflows while enhancing accuracy.
- Optimization Strategies in FME Flow: Explore the creation and strategic deployment of parameters in FME Flow, including the use of deployment and geometry parameters, to maximize workflow efficiency.
- Pro Tips for Success: Gain insights on parameterizing connections and leveraging new features like Conditional Visibility for clarity and simplicity.
We’ll wrap up with a glimpse into future webinars, followed by a Q&A session to address your specific questions surrounding this topic.
Don’t miss this opportunity to elevate your FME expertise and drive your projects to new heights of efficiency.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 3DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 3. In this session, we will cover desktop automation along with UI automation.
Topics covered:
UI automation Introduction,
UI automation Sample
Desktop automation flow
Pradeep Chinnala, Senior Consultant Automation Developer @WonderBotz and UiPath MVP
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
JMeter webinar - integration with InfluxDB and GrafanaRTTS
Watch this recorded webinar about real-time monitoring of application performance. See how to integrate Apache JMeter, the open-source leader in performance testing, with InfluxDB, the open-source time-series database, and Grafana, the open-source analytics and visualization application.
In this webinar, we will review the benefits of leveraging InfluxDB and Grafana when executing load tests and demonstrate how these tools are used to visualize performance metrics.
Length: 30 minutes
Session Overview
-------------------------------------------
During this webinar, we will cover the following topics while demonstrating the integrations of JMeter, InfluxDB and Grafana:
- What out-of-the-box solutions are available for real-time monitoring JMeter tests?
- What are the benefits of integrating InfluxDB and Grafana into the load testing stack?
- Which features are provided by Grafana?
- Demonstration of InfluxDB and Grafana using a practice web application
To view the webinar recording, go to:
https://www.rttsweb.com/jmeter-integration-webinar
Elevating Tactical DDD Patterns Through Object CalisthenicsDorra BARTAGUIZ
After immersing yourself in the blue book and its red counterpart, attending DDD-focused conferences, and applying tactical patterns, you're left with a crucial question: How do I ensure my design is effective? Tactical patterns within Domain-Driven Design (DDD) serve as guiding principles for creating clear and manageable domain models. However, achieving success with these patterns requires additional guidance. Interestingly, we've observed that a set of constraints initially designed for training purposes remarkably aligns with effective pattern implementation, offering a more ‘mechanical’ approach. Let's explore together how Object Calisthenics can elevate the design of your tactical DDD patterns, offering concrete help for those venturing into DDD for the first time!
Slack (or Teams) Automation for Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Soluti...Jeffrey Haguewood
Sidekick Solutions uses Bonterra Impact Management (fka Social Solutions Apricot) and automation solutions to integrate data for business workflows.
We believe integration and automation are essential to user experience and the promise of efficient work through technology. Automation is the critical ingredient to realizing that full vision. We develop integration products and services for Bonterra Case Management software to support the deployment of automations for a variety of use cases.
This video focuses on the notifications, alerts, and approval requests using Slack for Bonterra Impact Management. The solutions covered in this webinar can also be deployed for Microsoft Teams.
Interested in deploying notification automations for Bonterra Impact Management? Contact us at sales@sidekicksolutionsllc.com to discuss next steps.
Kubernetes & AI - Beauty and the Beast !?! @KCD Istanbul 2024Tobias Schneck
As AI technology is pushing into IT I was wondering myself, as an “infrastructure container kubernetes guy”, how get this fancy AI technology get managed from an infrastructure operational view? Is it possible to apply our lovely cloud native principals as well? What benefit’s both technologies could bring to each other?
Let me take this questions and provide you a short journey through existing deployment models and use cases for AI software. On practical examples, we discuss what cloud/on-premise strategy we may need for applying it to our own infrastructure to get it to work from an enterprise perspective. I want to give an overview about infrastructure requirements and technologies, what could be beneficial or limiting your AI use cases in an enterprise environment. An interactive Demo will give you some insides, what approaches I got already working for real.
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered QualityInflectra
In this insightful webinar, Inflectra explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming software development and testing. Discover how AI-powered tools are revolutionizing every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from design and prototyping to testing, deployment, and monitoring.
Learn about:
• The Future of Testing: How AI is shifting testing towards verification, analysis, and higher-level skills, while reducing repetitive tasks.
• Test Automation: How AI-powered test case generation, optimization, and self-healing tests are making testing more efficient and effective.
• Visual Testing: Explore the emerging capabilities of AI in visual testing and how it's set to revolutionize UI verification.
• Inflectra's AI Solutions: See demonstrations of Inflectra's cutting-edge AI tools like the ChatGPT plugin and Azure Open AI platform, designed to streamline your testing process.
Whether you're a developer, tester, or QA professional, this webinar will give you valuable insights into how AI is shaping the future of software delivery.