This document is a summary of Scrum principles from 2003 and 2010. It discusses the Scrum Primer from 2003 and the Scrum Guide from 2010, both of which describe Scrum practices. The document also includes links to Flickr photos as illustrations.
This document is a summary of Scrum principles from 2003 and 2010. It discusses the Scrum Primer from 2003 and the Scrum Guide from 2010, both of which describe Scrum practices. The document also includes links to Flickr photos as illustrations.
This document appears to be notes from a ScrumDo event on July 11, 2011. It includes an agenda with time blocks for presentations and discussions. There are photos included throughout presumably related to the topics. The notes end with thanks to all participants.
This document appears to be a log or diary of an individual discussing agile development practices and principles over multiple dates in July 2011. It includes references to scrum, lean, XP, goals, retrospectives, research findings on agile adoption, and links to photos on Flickr related to agile topics. The document contains numerous photos and links spanning several dates in July 2011.
The document appears to be a log or journal consisting of numerous entries dated July 2, 2011. Each entry includes text, hashtags, Twitter handles, and photo credits to Flickr users. There is no other connecting information between the entries.
This document appears to be a log or diary containing numerous entries with dates from 2011 and various images. Each entry consists of text, links, hashtags, and photo credits related to topics like agile development, scrum, and software engineering.
First and important thing in agile 2011.06.17Naoto Nishimura
This document appears to be a collection of images and text posts from Twitter and other social media sites posted on June 17, 2011. There are over 80 images and text snippets discussing topics like agile development practices, scrum, lean, XP, software goals and fixes. The document shares images and discussions from various social media accounts from that date.
Clear and Present Scrum on Devlopers Summit 2011Naoto Nishimura
This document appears to be notes from a presentation or seminar about agile development methodologies like Scrum. It includes definitions and descriptions of agile roles like Agile Coach and discussions of surveys about the use of agile practices in industry. Diagrams and statistics are referenced from other sources and there are recommendations to check additional resources on Scrum and agile methods. Contact information is provided at the end for following up.
This document outlines the key aspects of Scrum, an agile software development framework. It discusses Scrum roles like Product Owner and Scrum Master, events like the Sprint and Daily Scrum meeting, artifacts like Product Backlog and Sprint Backlog, and values like self-organization and cross-functional collaboration. Diagrams and statistics are provided on the mainstream adoption of agile practices in software development organizations.
This document appears to be notes from an Agile training session. It includes timestamps for each slide, URLs linked to images, and bullet point notes. Various Agile topics are discussed over the course of 70 slides, including Scrum, iterations, goals, and figures/diagrams related to Agile principles and practices.
This document appears to be notes from a ScrumDo event on July 11, 2011. It includes an agenda with time blocks for presentations and discussions. There are photos included throughout presumably related to the topics. The notes end with thanks to all participants.
This document appears to be a log or diary of an individual discussing agile development practices and principles over multiple dates in July 2011. It includes references to scrum, lean, XP, goals, retrospectives, research findings on agile adoption, and links to photos on Flickr related to agile topics. The document contains numerous photos and links spanning several dates in July 2011.
The document appears to be a log or journal consisting of numerous entries dated July 2, 2011. Each entry includes text, hashtags, Twitter handles, and photo credits to Flickr users. There is no other connecting information between the entries.
This document appears to be a log or diary containing numerous entries with dates from 2011 and various images. Each entry consists of text, links, hashtags, and photo credits related to topics like agile development, scrum, and software engineering.
First and important thing in agile 2011.06.17Naoto Nishimura
This document appears to be a collection of images and text posts from Twitter and other social media sites posted on June 17, 2011. There are over 80 images and text snippets discussing topics like agile development practices, scrum, lean, XP, software goals and fixes. The document shares images and discussions from various social media accounts from that date.
Clear and Present Scrum on Devlopers Summit 2011Naoto Nishimura
This document appears to be notes from a presentation or seminar about agile development methodologies like Scrum. It includes definitions and descriptions of agile roles like Agile Coach and discussions of surveys about the use of agile practices in industry. Diagrams and statistics are referenced from other sources and there are recommendations to check additional resources on Scrum and agile methods. Contact information is provided at the end for following up.
This document outlines the key aspects of Scrum, an agile software development framework. It discusses Scrum roles like Product Owner and Scrum Master, events like the Sprint and Daily Scrum meeting, artifacts like Product Backlog and Sprint Backlog, and values like self-organization and cross-functional collaboration. Diagrams and statistics are provided on the mainstream adoption of agile practices in software development organizations.
This document appears to be notes from an Agile training session. It includes timestamps for each slide, URLs linked to images, and bullet point notes. Various Agile topics are discussed over the course of 70 slides, including Scrum, iterations, goals, and figures/diagrams related to Agile principles and practices.