Reducing S/W Development Cycle Time Through Lean Six SigmaAgile Ethos
If you are looking to best agile software development with scrum in USA, Ukraine and India? Agile Ethos recognized as one of the top agile software development company in USA. Contact us now! http://www.agileethos.com
Reducing S/W Development Cycle Time Through Lean Six SigmaAgile Ethos
If you are looking to best agile software development with scrum in USA, Ukraine and India? Agile Ethos recognized as one of the top agile software development company in USA. Contact us now! http://www.agileethos.com
Agile Project Management
What is Scrum?
History of Scrum
Functionality of Scrum
Components of Scrum
Scrum Roles
The Process
Scrum Artifacts
Scaling Scrum
Evolution of Scrum
Lessons Learned: Creating Software as a Service from ScratchSVPMA
Starting from Scratch? Lessons Learned From Trying to Create Software as a Service at SAP by Mike Tschudy at SVPMA Monthly Event February 2012
Go to link below for notes from this event http://svpma.org/2012/02/february-2012-event/
Using Atlassian with Agile project management: JIRA, GreenHopper and moreAtlassian
JIRA + Greenhopper might be Agile's best kept secret. Whether you're exploring Agile, already a blackbelt or just looking for a slick interface to JIRA, this session will help you understand how to use JIRA as your agile workbench.
Customer Speakers: Jim Morris of Buzzillions, Jean-Christophe Huet of Greenpepper
Key Takeaways:
* GreenHopper plugin overview
* How to use JIRA for agile project management
Bridging the gap between business and technology - BDD - Oslo, Norway, 2015marcin_pajdzik
Behaviour Driven Development is an agile technique based on Test Driven Development that promotes communication and close collaboration between everybody in the team and focuses on writing specifications of the system behaviour. BDD can be used together with agile methodologies such as Scrum or Kanban to facilitate communication between all individuals working on a software project.
This presentation will explain how BDD works and when it should be considered as a potential approach by businesses. The speaker will show the advantages of using this technique from the perspective of both business stakeholders and technical team members. Real life examples form the speaker’s experience will be also given.
Agile Project Management
What is Scrum?
History of Scrum
Functionality of Scrum
Components of Scrum
Scrum Roles
The Process
Scrum Artifacts
Scaling Scrum
Evolution of Scrum
Lessons Learned: Creating Software as a Service from ScratchSVPMA
Starting from Scratch? Lessons Learned From Trying to Create Software as a Service at SAP by Mike Tschudy at SVPMA Monthly Event February 2012
Go to link below for notes from this event http://svpma.org/2012/02/february-2012-event/
Using Atlassian with Agile project management: JIRA, GreenHopper and moreAtlassian
JIRA + Greenhopper might be Agile's best kept secret. Whether you're exploring Agile, already a blackbelt or just looking for a slick interface to JIRA, this session will help you understand how to use JIRA as your agile workbench.
Customer Speakers: Jim Morris of Buzzillions, Jean-Christophe Huet of Greenpepper
Key Takeaways:
* GreenHopper plugin overview
* How to use JIRA for agile project management
Bridging the gap between business and technology - BDD - Oslo, Norway, 2015marcin_pajdzik
Behaviour Driven Development is an agile technique based on Test Driven Development that promotes communication and close collaboration between everybody in the team and focuses on writing specifications of the system behaviour. BDD can be used together with agile methodologies such as Scrum or Kanban to facilitate communication between all individuals working on a software project.
This presentation will explain how BDD works and when it should be considered as a potential approach by businesses. The speaker will show the advantages of using this technique from the perspective of both business stakeholders and technical team members. Real life examples form the speaker’s experience will be also given.
A collection of user interface design patterns for workflow infor¬ma¬tion systems is presented that contains forty three resource patterns classified in seven categories. These categories and their corre¬sponding patterns have been logically identified from the task life cycle based on offering and allocation operations. Each Workflow User Interface Pattern (WUIP) is characterized by properties expressed in the PLML markup language for expressing patterns and augmented by additional attributes and models at¬tached to the pattern: the abstract user interface and the corresponding task model. These models are specified in a User Interface Description Langua¬ge. All WUIPs are stored in a library and can be retrieved within a workflow editor that links each workflow pattern to its corresponding WUIP, thus giving rise to a user interface for each workflow pattern
Everything You Need to Know about JIRA CoreAtlassian
JIRA Core is the latest product addition to the JIRA family - it's JIRA, optimized for business teams. In this session, you'll learn how JIRA Core can power business teams' workflows and keep everyone in the know. You'll also get a demo of how JIRA Core works hand-in-hand with JIRA Software, and learn how to get your company's back-office teams on board.
As an organization grows, it begins to develop a unique culture based on how its employees work together within small teams. And a huge part of how a team functions relies on its workflow, a repeatable process which allows people to work together at scale.
Software is eating the world. The figures to support this are quite compelling. In this presentation, we present 21 compelling facts, figures, and stats about the software development industry. These are focused on 4 categories: the software market, software developers, software problems and custom software. We provide answers to questions such as:
- What is the global IT spend?
- What is the global software spend?
- How fast is the software as a service (SaaS) market growing?
- What percentage of venture capital investments are in software companies?
- How many developers are there in the world? How many Java developers?
- What percentage of (large) software projects run over time and budget?
- What is the growth rate of software productivity?
- What percent of software spend is on custom software?
- What is the average annual custom software spend by large UK financial services companies?
- What percentage of companies spend more than half of their software budget on customer software?
- And more.
Updated version at https://www.slideshare.net/GiulioRoggero/kanban-board-82363781
Do you have a team that works on both project and maintenance? Do you need to organize your team activities? Do you have a lot of activities in parallel and the time to market it's a problem? With a Kanban board and an Agile approach you can solve your problems!
Take a look of the animation of the slides to discover how it works.
Presented at the 2nd BioVeL Workshop on taxonomic and phylogenetic workflows (http://www.biovel.eu/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=43:ms6-workshop&catid=22:biovel-meetings&Itemid=122)
This talk, given at the VA Smalltalk Forum Europe 2010 in Stuttgart, gives an overview of techniques and tools to get existing Smalltalk projects back to speed and productivity.
The talk included some demos of tools we created for some of our customers to make their project life much easier.
Agile Software Development in practice: Experience, Tips and Tools from the T...Valerie Puffet-Michel
In the Division of Student Affairs at the University of Connecticut, the Applications Development team has been developing and delivering custom software using agile methods for over four years. In this session, we'll share our experiences and give you a behind the scenes look at how agile software development really works by walking you through how we translate the unique business needs of our clients into deployed software.
An executive presentation of agile development, Scrum mechanics, myths, and practices tips. Was presented for several years to George Mason University\'s CS421 Software Engineering students.
The Agile Manifesto and the Agile Principles should provide guidance for projects. This talk is about my personal reflection of my last multi-team project with regards to this guidance.
Technical Excellence Doesn't Just Happen - AgileIndy 2016Allison Pollard
The ninth principle from the Agile Manifesto states that technical excellence enhances agility, but when the codebase is ugly and the deadlines are tight, most teams don’t choose to refactor mercilessly, adopt TDD, or evaluate automated testing tools—unless they have the proper support. In our experience working with multiple teams in a single codebase, developers can feel victim to a legacy codebase if only a few people are writing clean code or refactoring; guiding them on how to decrease technical debt while delivering their projects helps "unstuck" their other agile practices. We will talk about the challenges we’ve seen with Product Owners, Managers, and Scrum Masters interacting with teams at various stages of agile+technical excellence and how a focus on technical practices sparked a wider interest in craftsmanship. Learn how can you influence the team towards the right practices while fostering their sense of ownership. Getting serious about technical excellence requires support from technical and non-technical roles, and we’ll share how we partnered as coaches to help an organization through a technical turnaround with some tips for others who need to do the same.
Learn how Autodesk broke the 300,000 issues barrier without impacting performance, keeping excellent uptime, with more than 3000 registered users and average of 1800 concurrent users. In this session you will discover the hardware architecture, system settings and other interesting data from Autodesk experience in the field.
Similar to Stop Worrying! And love the workflow (20)
We aim to celebrate women every day, but we’re taking today to give special recognition to womxn at Atlassian continue who inspire and lead.
For #InternationalWomensDay, we asked Atlassians to nominate and recognize amazing womxn at Atlassian who inspire them, challenge them, and truly represent Atlassian values.
Ever wondered what Atlassian engineers do in their 20% time? Join Forge engineering lead Tim Pettersen on a lightning tour of how Forge is being used inside Atlassian. Attendees will get a rare view into some of the apps, tools, and tweaks we’ve built internally on top of Forge in the spirit of dogfooding and innovation. Come along and be inspired with some great ideas for improving and automating your own teams' workflows!
Let's Build an Editor Macro with Forge UIAtlassian
Race out of the gate with Forge UI: a new way of building UI extensions for Atlassian products. In this session, Forge UI Developer Experience lead Peter Gleeson will demonstrate how build an Editor macro from scratch! Attendees will learn about Forge foundational concepts such as the FaaS dev loop, Forge CLI, and how to construct UIs from Forge UI components.
This session provides a great introduction to the Forge platform for any developer looking to get productive with editor apps and Forge UI.
In the words of Jeff Atwood: “JavaScript is the lingua franca of the web”. It’s also the first language we’ve chosen to support in Forge. In this session, Forge engineer Shorya Raj will walk through the Node.js isolate based runtime you’ll be using to write apps for Forge.
Attendees will learn about the unique features of the Forge JavaScript Runtime, such as automatic authentication and tenant context management. Shorya will also cover the differences between the Runtime, conventional browser, and Node.js APIs.
Developers or attendees with some programming experience will get the most out of this session.
Forge UI: A New Way to Customize the Atlassian User ExperienceAtlassian
UI extensibility is an integral part of Atlassian's ecosystem story. In cloud, traditionally this has been accomplished with the humble iframe. In this session you will learn about Forge UI, an additional and innovative way to build visual apps for Atlassian products.
Join Product Manager Simon Kubica and Senior Developer Michael Oates from the Forge team in exploring the underlying concepts and technology powering Forge UI, and learn how it will unlock exciting new opportunities in our ecosystem.
The Forge platform contains some powerful primitives for binding functions to Atlassian events and webhooks emitted by third-party SaaS systems. Join Platform Services Engineer Tomek Sroka as he gets hands-on with Forge Product Triggers and Web Triggers to build a powerful integration with surprisingly little code.
Attendees will walk away with a good understanding of the Forge dev loop and some tips and tricks for improving their own team’s workflows.
Observability and Troubleshooting in ForgeAtlassian
Observability is a critical component of any Cloud development platform, and we have some exciting logging, monitoring, and debugging features planned for the Forge toolchain.
In this lightning talk, Senior Developer James Hazelwood from Forge infrastructure team will give an overview of Forge logging and tunnelling features, explain how different environment types effect observability, and share some expert tips and tricks for detecting and troubleshooting issues in your Forge apps.
Trusted by Default: The Forge Security & Privacy ModelAtlassian
Security and trust have become increasingly important requirements for our customers in Cloud. We’re working to make it easier for you to build and maintain secure apps for Atlassian products.
In this session, Engineering Team Lead Dugald Morrow and Principal Product Manager Joël Kalmanowicz will explain how security and trust have been baked into the Forge framework and the benefits the platform can offer you and your users. Learn how much less work it can be to build trusted apps customers will love on Forge by going deep on the safeguards we’re putting in place.
Developers or attendees with some software security experience will get the most out of this session.
Designing Forge UI: A Story of Designing an App UI SystemAtlassian
Creating apps with Forge and its UI frontend components is now easier than ever. Join Senior Designer Allard van Helbergen and Product Manager Josephine Lee as they walk through the story of designing Forge UI.
What is a declarative UI and why did we choose this paradigm? What are all the considerations that go into defining the set of components to build apps with? And how do you make ‘creating apps’ simple? Walk away understanding the foundations of Forge, how all the different components work together, and where Forge UI is headed in the future.
After a day of learning about the exciting features of Forge, get ready for a peek under the hood to discover how it’s all implemented. Join Forge Architect Patrick Streule as he goes deep on topics such as Forge FaaS infrastructure, the internal workings of tenant isolation, and automatic authentication.
Attendees will also get a glimpse of some features we’re looking at building into the future of Forge, such as a serverless data store for apps and more!
Access to User Activities - Activity Platform APIsAtlassian
How do you stay on top of your work when it is scattered across multiple Atlassian products?
"If only there was a single place where I could see all my activity..." - sounds familiar?
We are going to provide you an insight into what lead to the creation of a new Activity API. Following last year’s Atlas Camp announcement from our CTO Sri Viswanath, Atlassian is moving onto GraphQL - new Activity API is one the first pieces of the GraphQL Atlassian Platform and is the technology behind start.atlassian.com.
Join Sergey Meshkov, Senior Developer, who will provide you a sneak peek of the new GraphQL Activity API as it will soon be available to our vendors.
Design Your Next App with the Atlassian Vendor Sketch PluginAtlassian
Our designers work 3x quicker with the Atlassian Vendor Sketch Plugin — and now we’re unleashing these superpowers to the Atlassian Ecosystem. If you mockup screens for code or marketing, we’ll help you drag and drop your way to an Atlaskit design in less than 10 minutes. And if you’re a designer, you’ll want to hear about our pixel-perfect component library and suite of seamless Sketch integrations.
Join Atlassian’s resident Sketch aficionado, Huw Evans, to learn about:
Sketch Components: If it’s in Atlaskit, it’s now in Sketch. And introducing the Symbol Palette, the quickest way to find the right component for the job.
Product Templates: Spark inspiration by building your designs inside realistic screens from Jira & Confluence — or craft hero images for your Marketplace listing!
Color and Text Styles: Heard of N75? H400? If those mean nothing to you, we’ll run through how to make your users feel at home by using Atlassian colors & typography, right inside Sketch.
Data Suppliers: Say goodbye to Lorem Ipsum. Learn how to use Sketch Data Suppliers to generate realistic copy using live data from Jira, Confluence and Bitbucket. Bonus: How we used AI to create people who don’t exist!
♀️ It's All Open Source: How we made it really easy to customise the Atlassian Vendor Sketch Plugin for your team's needs.
Tear Up Your Roadmap and Get Out of the BuildingAtlassian
You’d never knowingly ship something to your customers that didn’t deliver value, would you? Would you still stand your ground if you were under pressure to get a team of developers working on something?
You probably know that one of Atlassian’s most well-known values is “Don’t f*** the customer”, so learn what happened when a lean product team decided to tear up the roadmap because they were brave enough to admit they didn’t understand their customers well enough.
Join Janel Blattler, as she shares how her team used research to unveil a new plan in just a few weeks. You’ll be able to practice some techniques and walk away with a bucket load of inspiration.
Come along if you’d like to run research, but worry that you don’t have enough time or lack the skills to do so – you don’t need to be a researcher on your team. This session is for you if you’re looking for ways to drive customer empathy closer in the team, or you’d like to up your game and discover some new techniques for delivering lean research with actionable insights.
Nailing Measurement: a Framework for Measuring Metrics that MatterAtlassian
When it comes to designing apps and new features, we just can't get enough of metrics. In an age where we can collect data from almost anything, how can we cut through the noise and focus on the right metrics to measure the success and failures of the apps that we’re building?
Join Atlassian Product Manager Josephine Lee as she delves through what exactly makes a good metric. Throughout the talk, we’ll walk through real Atlassian examples of good and bad metrics. By exploring a framework for measurement, we’ll cover detailed features that showcase how best to measure and choose the right set of success, supportive, and counter metrics.
You'll walk away with tips and learnings from Atlassian’s approach to measuring success, and learn how to use data and metrics to inspire action in your apps.
Building Apps With Color Blind Users in MindAtlassian
Color-blind people are using your apps. 1 in 12 men is color blind. And for women, this is 1 in 200.
Building apps that work well for color blind people is not difficult. Some simple techniques help us with the design of our interface. And some tools help us see what color blind people see.
In this talk, Maarten Arts of Avisi will look at common varieties of color blindness. We will look at apps through the eyes of a color-blind person. And we will discover what color-blind people struggle with.
Regardless of whether you're a designer or developer, this talk will equip you with the skills and the tools you need to make sure that your app works for color-blind people.
Creating Inclusive Experiences: Balancing Personality and Accessibility in UX...Atlassian
The words we choose have the power to include or alienate our users. The reality is that for many, English is spoken as a second language. And unless you're going to localize your product for those major non-English speaking markets, you'll need to thoughtfully create content that is accessible to a larger audience.
But how do we create products that maintain a sense of personality without isolating a wide audience of non-native speakers?
Join Atlassian Content Designer, Roana Bilia, as she walks you through why thoughtful, inclusive content, is key to creating well-designed user experiences. You'll walk away with foundational principles for good UX copy when optimizing your product UI, a few quick wins that you as creators and developers can incorporate into your next products, as well as a set of mistakes to avoid that companies—including Atlassian—have made, which prioritized native speakers but isolated non-native speakers.
Beyond Diversity: A Guide to Building Balanced TeamsAtlassian
We hear it all the time, and we get it. Diversity and inclusion are important! But isn't it an HR problem? HR may be able to help with diversity but inclusion or creating an inclusive environment is everyone's responsibility. So how do we create an inclusive environment that celebrates diversity and engages and supports everyone? Isabel Nyo will be sharing best practices and lessons she has learned along the way. She will also be sharing her experience as a minority, a female technical leader, in the technology industry.
The Road(map) to Las Vegas - The Story of an Emerging Self-Managed TeamAtlassian
In September 2018, K15t took its mission to go self-managed to the next-level when the entire company worked together to decide on the Next Big Thing™ to build for Atlassian users and present it at Summit in Las Vegas.
In this session, Anshuman Dash, an intern turned software engineer, turned product manager, shares his journey of professional self-discovery. In under five months, he joins a freshly assembled, self-managed team in building a new Atlassian Marketplace app.
Dash will give a quick intro to what it means for a team to be self-managed. Then, he'll share his observations and experiences on the team, as well as the best-practices, patterns, and processes K15t has discovered along the way.
Whether you are a new team with a kick-ass product idea or a big company figuring out ways to scale, this talk will provide you with practical tips and ideas your team can try out!
Designing for the enterprise comes with a unique set of challenges; ensuring readability and accessibility at scale, meeting the needs of multi-layered organizations, and building a trust when your software - used by dozens of thousands of employees - is considered mission-critical.
At Atlassian, we've spent countless hours digging deep into our enterprise customer's needs and we've gathered a vast repository of insights.
In this talk, Pawel Wodkowski, a senior designer on Jira Server, will share all that we've learned from our research (while not being shy about busting some of those wild admin myths!). You'll get a crash course in what it means to design for scale the Atlassian way.
4. Agenda
• Overview of the problem project
• Pain points
• Setting up a workflow
• Approach
• How we used the workflow and JIRA to take the pain away
4
5. The Project - Micro Videos
• A library of training videos
• Hundreds of videos
• Focusing on specific tasks
• Very short
• Several stages in production
5
31. Planning
• Learn JIRA Admin Concepts
• Try out example workflows
• Make your plans on paper
• Convert plans into something you can share
• Improve with feedback, iteratively
• Build
31
48. How to keep on top of your tickets
• What information will you need to find quickly?
• Make custom fields to suit
keeping content fresh
find tickets for specific software version
48
66. JIRA Text-Based Editor
GOOD BAD
• Better than XML • No Visual Representation
• Part of Core JIRA • Requires Lots of Planning
• Not Very Intuitive
• Frustrating
66
69. SysBliss Workflow Designer
GOOD BAD
• Prettier than text • Looks Different than JIRA
• Visualizes Workflows • Takes Over Entire Interface
• Lots of Right-Clicking
• Does Basically what JIRA Does
69
72. JIRA 4.4 Workflow Designer
• Built Into JIRA
• Clean UI matches JIRA
• No Right-Clicks
• Functions Not Possible in Core Editor
• UX Enhancements = SPEED
• View Workflow From Any Issue
• 120+ Issues/Features Resolved
72
74. Up-Front Workflow Design
• Workflow Creator is not the Consumer
• Back and Forth - “Can you see it now?”
• Paper / White Boarding
• Gliffy *nod*
• Never catch everything
• Consumers Have No View into Problem Areas
• Difficult to Revise Once Implemented 74
75. Iterative Workflow Design
• Easy Creation: The Diagram IS the Workflow
• Consumer View Enables Collaboration
• Easy Revision: The Diagram IS the Workflow
• PNG Export Enables Workflow Diffs
• Donʼt Feel Like You Have To “Get It Right”
• Ongoing Collaboration = More Beer!
75
81. Summary
• Collaborate on Initial Design in Workflow Designer
• Super Fast Edits
• Immediate Feedback
• Test Workflow in JIRA
• Donʼt Worry About Breaking Stuff
• Easy to Change
• Freedom to Grow Workflow Over Time 81