Agile's History: From Early Foundations to the Agile Manifesto and Beyond
Read More…
Tags: #AgileDevelopment, #ScrumFramework, Hirotaka Takeuchi, Agile History Infographic, Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe), Dean Leffingwell and Drew Jemilo, Patrick Debois, John Allspaw and Paul Hammond, DevOps, story mapping, Jeff Patton, backlog grooming, Backlog refinement, Kane Mar, Planning Poker, Mike Cohn, Lean, Mary Poppendieck, Manifesto for Agile Software Development, burndown chart, Agile Manifesto, continuous integration, Martin Fowler, pair programming, Extreme Programming (XP), Alistair Cockburn, Scrum, Ken Schwaber, Jeff Sutherland, John Scumniotales, and Jeff McKenna at Easel Corporation, stand-up meeting, Jim Coplien, iterations, timeboxing, James Martin, Agile software development, refactoring, Bill Opdyke, DuPont’s Rapid Iterative Production Prototyping, timebox approach, Ikujiro Nonaka, "The New New Product Development Game", Tom Gilb introduced the Evolutionary Delivery Model, #DevOps, Leo Brodie, Agile’s information radiators, Toyota introduced visual control, IBM’s Harlan Mills, Project Mercury, Agile's History - Visualized, Exceptional Agility, Exceptional Agility AI, #ExceptionalAgility, #ExceptionalAgilityAI, #ProjectManagement, #SoftwareEngineering, #ContinuousIntegration, #AgileManifesto, #ScaledAgile, #LeanSoftware, #ExtremeProgramming