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Avoid the gotchas of Agile planning (4 messages)
- Posted by: Frank Charles
- Posted on: April 16 2009 09:53 EDT
Are you part of a team that wants to get on board the agile planning bandwagon? Are you using iterative development and still stuck doing "waterations"? This article answers the question, "How do I start developing releases with agile planning?". It shows what worked, as well as the mistakes made, to illustrate a coherent and realistic understanding of the basics of agile planning.Threaded Messages (4)
- Avoid the gotchas of Agile planning ... by Ethan Allen on April 17 2009 14:34 EDT
- Re: Avoid the gotchas of Agile planning ... by Casual Visitor on April 19 2009 07:47 EDT
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Re: Avoid the gotchas of Agile planning ... by Anthony Rivera on April 20 2009 01:09 EDT
- Re: Avoid the gotchas of Agile planning ... by Richard Youngkin on April 22 2009 01:07 EDT
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Re: Avoid the gotchas of Agile planning ... by Anthony Rivera on April 20 2009 01:09 EDT
- Re: Avoid the gotchas of Agile planning ... by Casual Visitor on April 19 2009 07:47 EDT
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Avoid the gotchas of Agile planning ...[ Go to top ]
- Posted by: Ethan Allen
- Posted on: April 17 2009 14:34 EDT
- in response to Frank Charles
... don't do it. -
Re: Avoid the gotchas of Agile planning ...[ Go to top ]
- Posted by: Casual Visitor
- Posted on: April 19 2009 07:47 EDT
- in response to Ethan Allen
Agile planning
an oxymoron. -
Re: Avoid the gotchas of Agile planning ...[ Go to top ]
- Posted by: Anthony Rivera
- Posted on: April 20 2009 01:09 EDT
- in response to Casual Visitor
I'm just wondering what aspect/s of Agile makes you think that Agile planning is an oxymoron.Agile planning
an oxymoron. -
Re: Avoid the gotchas of Agile planning ...[ Go to top ]
- Posted by: Richard Youngkin
- Posted on: April 22 2009 13:07 EDT
- in response to Anthony Rivera
Not an oxymoron :> Agile is about making *and* meeting commitments That requires planning, no way around it. The key to effective planning, and what agile does well, is that the planning is not bloated. I thought the article outlined acknowledged best practices. Cheers, RichAgile planning
an oxymoron.