Everyone - thanks for all the responses. Great discussion. I just wanted to follow up and (for what it's worth) let everyone know that my team has decided not...
I'm looking for a Web Developer/Designer to join an exciting new startup/skunkworks opportunity on my team at Corbis in Seattle. This greenfield project will...
[Apologies for any duplication] Greetings, I am visiting San Francisco, visiting with several clients and enjoying the Bay Area with friends while my kids are...
Hi I've been following discussions on this list with interest in the belief that agile software development methods are the way forward. I regularly provide...
Richard, If you haven't yet visited Jeff Patton's site at agileproductdesign.com, I strongly recommend it as a good first stop. His presentations there very ...
My apologies then to Jeff Patton. I've recently joined the list, and have been on a tear absorbing all I can find on design and Agile, so I have lots of names...
Welcome Faith! If you ever get those names and sites extracted from short term memory, I'd love to see a list of what you've turned up. Also - what's the drama...
... agileproductdesign.com, I ... <blush> Thank you Faith for the kind words. I've been slower than I'd like at getting ideas and techniques published - and...
... It's a two day course that many in the Agile community don't feel deserves the prefix "certified." It'll give your people a quick dip in Scrum - and a...
I wanted to do a quick opinion poll... but to answer my question, I'll have to supply some context. Lately I've been working hard to explain to people the...
This podcast is a few years old but very easy to digest and interesting company on the bus: http://agiletoolkit.libsyn.com/index.php?post_id=15584 User Centerd...
Hi, Jeff, I think it is difficult to draw a clear line in reality between iterating and incrementing, since those two co-occur and complement each other...
On 7 Aug 2007, at 23:17, Richard Collins-Bye wrote: [snip] ... [snip] I'll second the recommendation of Jeff's blog & web site - great stuff. You might also...
... That's not to say that they're not good courses. Most folk I know who have been on one say they were most useful. They're just the start of the journey -...
We have a Web-based enterprise digital asset management and workflow management system. Our release plans are incremental models. Within the increments, the...
Sorry Jeff, but I re-read your post twice and I still don't get the distinction. Can you provide a concrete example of a particular story and what it might...
Most designers are used to both iterating and incrementing. We have been doing it for decades and is what Constantine so elegantly called 'trial and error' I...
I took it to mean this: say you know upfront some product you're working on will have 5 features. Those 5 features could be built incrementally - 1 sprint for...
... In other words: incremental = one complete and finished feature at a time iterative = start with version 0.1 of a set of features, and improve them as a...
... have been on one say they were most useful. They're just the start of the journey - not the end. < I agree. I'm trying to go through the rigor to get...
Clearly I've asked the wrong group. You're all too smart to simply do one or the other – or to be unaware of which you're doing. I hear everyone saying...
Oh, is that *really* so much better than "Scrum Alliance-authorized training for people who want to facilitate Scrum projects"? ... -- Faith Peterson ...
... Actually, this mantra was originally coined in the context of code, not UI. But I think it applies to both. Note that the mantra does not say to "Stop...
... That's _exactly_ what I mean by iterative development. And you'd be surprised at how often in agile environments I've observed people considering that a...
<sorry - clicked send to soon....> ... step for ... The question for me - from an agile interaction design perspective is /where/ does the iteration occur?...
... I'm quite puzzled by that. I would think that a team that a team that opted for an Agile approach would consider reworking a story as a normal and...