Create knowledge
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(rate this)
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Yes
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8
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3
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No
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Vic Williams
| Argues in support of
"Yes"
| 2 years ago
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Agile wants team members sharing space and pairing and tacitly sharing what's going on. It aims for ongoing OODA/PDCA type loops to inspect and adapt for improvements. It very deliberately values people over tech or rules (per the manifesto). ...
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Chirag Sehgal
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| 3 years ago
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For me and my team it has created more challenges and it has not helped us in any way, and there was no impact as such by applying this practice.
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Tathagat Varma
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"Yes"
| 3 years ago
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If you read my article, I have taken the position that adoption of Agile practices indeed addressed most of the team dysfunctions as identified by Patrick Lencioni. Of course, there are many most team dysfunctions that Patrick might not have...
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Debate: "How Agile practices address team dysfunctions" deleted from your view.
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Release Management is the relatively new but rapidly growing discipline within software engineering of managing software releases. As software systems, software development processes, and resources become more distributed, they invariably become more specialized and complex. Furthermore, software products (especially web applications) are typically in an ongoing cycle of development, testing, and release. Add to this an evolution and growing complexity of the platforms on which these systems run, and it becomes clear there are a lot of moving pieces that must fit together seamlessly to guarantee the success and long-term value of a product or project. Basic Flow of Release Management Ther...
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Madhukar Bhat
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| 2 years ago
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Assuming that a team to carry out release management is already in place, there are two major parts to managing release cycles. (a) Laying down the vision and the associated policies and guidelines, etc (b) The actual process setup and the...
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Kshirod Kumar Dash
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| 3 years ago
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nice presentation chirag, what i would like to add - the best practices may sound intuitive, but the challenge for most application development professionals is not so much in understanding them as in putting them in place.
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Insight: "Release Management" deleted from your view.
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I believe data warehousing is here to stay. It is the only place where you can keep track of your history and changes that has happened. I further believe that we are on the verge of building data warehouses that will outlast several ERP changes. Why? Well, for many it still comes as a nasty surprise that you will have to rebuild your warehouse every time you change one of the surrounding systems. Only in the last few years have we found methods to model our warehouses with the flexibility necessary to cope with changes like these. In the present situation what we have to do is get best practices for data warehouse development..while developing data warehouses we have to keep in mind these...
Insight: "Best Practices for Data Warehouse Database Developers" deleted from your view.




