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I could give a long reply to several statements, but in short:
a) I can see how it could work, you did put some good arguments for solid use of the method.
b) You convinced me even more that our organization should never, ever (!) use this.
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V. wrote: You convinced me even more that our organization should never, ever (!) use this.
My job is done.
Marc
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Agile development - Think of it like a hot potato; no one wants to touch it, it just gets tossed about and the last one to have it takes the blame.
I say toss it back to your manager?
New version: WinHeist Version 2.2.2 Beta I told my psychiatrist that I was hearing voices in my head. He said you don't have a psychiatrist!
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Mike Hankey wrote: I say toss it back to your manager
sooner or later it will get tossed to the managers' manager
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Why not, as long as they are busy giving each other the fault and duke out their little rivalries, you are safe. You must only see to it that they never realize what's going on
The language is JavaScript. that of Mordor, which I will not utter here
This is Javascript. If you put big wheels and a racing stripe on a golf cart, it's still a f***ing golf cart.
"I don't know, extraterrestrial?"
"You mean like from space?"
"No, from Canada."
If software development were a circus, we would all be the clowns.
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The process involves new cover sheets on the TPS reports. BTW most pf the communication these days happens passive-aggressively.
modified 20-Oct-19 21:02pm.
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Call this issues "challenges" and deal with them professionally. Maybe it is time for a raise (or leave).
Press F1 for help or google it.
Greetings from Germany
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Well, even if one follows agile (let's not discuss if it's good or bad), if the requirements change all the time, that is if if the requirements giver declares his own words from last week wrong, he either has a latent case of split personality disorder or is plain stupid.
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In many organizations it's more important to do something rather than the right thing. With agile coding can start immediately, without a design. Since progress is measureed in lines of code, "something" is progressing well. After all, it's gonna be late anyway, put off the design till halfway through the project.
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My agency let's a woman with no technical skills run fake scrums. No substantial comments are allowed. If there is an issue (you can't say problem)follow up if any is a mob meeting where the A types dominate the floor blathering on about irrelevances.
I need a day off.
Leadership equals wrecked ship.
If you think you are leading my look behind you. You are alone.
If you think I am leading you, You are lost.
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There are lots of criticisms that you could make of agile and supporters would suggest that you are not doing it properly.
But from what you've posted, it seems more like you have a bad manager, but you know this already. I'm guessing you're dealing directly with your boss? Agile is just a smoke-screen for do it all as fast as you can; use weekends and evenings for all I care?
If you can, you need to educate your manager with the true costs of software development in terms of time that it takes to do the job properly. You need to try to establish that there is an overhead in constantly re-writing the same software when requirements change. Granted, this is a part of the natural evolution of software, but (for simplicity's sake) at the very least you should be able to confirm the version you've just released before you start working on the next version.
Changing team company or team culture won't happen overnight. It will be a process over a long period of time. Collect your data and facts before having that argument.
Hope this helps.
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As long as the majority thinks all you need to run projects is "people skills" (and little or no technical expertise), software development teams will continue to produce sh*t.
Eastern Europe and China are now cranking out all the (good) code ... because they are still a bit more hungry than the average Westerner and don't need the BS.
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In my experience, Agile/Scrum works best in consultant line of work where as long as the customer keep paying the hours, the team will keep coding, changing to the will of the changing requirement.
It rarely works with projects that have deadline and budget constraints. These type of projects required the full understanding of the scope to properly estimate budget. The requirement must be approved before any development can take place.
Unfortunately far too many managers are in place without really understand the technical difficulties of managing the unknown. Compounding to the problem is that some managers are having ego issue, not willing to listen to the team. When I have this kind of problem, I either go directly to the upper management (yes stepping on toes and risk getting fired) or if the manage is the upper management, find another job quick. There is no reason to be stressed out and stick with a moron.
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Point out to the person bringing the changing requirements that you make the same hourly wage whether he is wasting resources by changing requirements, or planning and executing effectively, and wouldn't it be better for the business if he did some planning and analysis. Or don't point it out, but just remember it yourself.
Really the only thing that requires changing is the blaming you for his changing the requirements. Be a stickler any time you get blame. Ask for misunderstandings to be explained in writing, preferably with reference to a previous document, and keep the memos. If he won't document it, then you do, and send him an email recapping what he said was the issue. At the end, you'll have a complete list of requirements. And you may get lucky enough to catch the manager in a 360, where he first says, "go left", then says "go right", then says "go left" again, which you can call him on, with documentation. A reasonable person will "get it" when you show him such evidence of bad planning.
Requirements don't really change. What changes is the team's understanding of the requirements. Software development is knowledge acquisition, plus crystallizing that knowledge into executable form. You don't know what you don't know, until you try to build the thing.
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Wow, your boss sounds like he is clueless...
After listening to the overall goals of the project,
We start with a metaphor which frames the conceptual expectations:
- A Web Kiosk, A Public Web, A 3-tier Client, a 2-tier Client...
- Then we discuss this with the client to make sure they understand the limitations/abilities
(you probably don't want a remote interactive video editing tool)
Then we choose an even better metaphor
- Like Twitter, Like Facebook, Like....
- But NOT like, and will not
Now we have a framework concept. We still have not started any coding.
Then we meet and identify the various user "groups" (admins, managers, users, clients, etc)
Then we assign Points of Contact for each group that we can FREELY ACCESS as developers.
We start collecting the Use Cases (user stories) at a HIGH Level. Looking for exceptions.
And we mock up an presentation to demonstrate how interactions will work (no coding yet).
Now we have a PROJECT. We have wasted ZERO programming hours. We should have a general consensus.
We know the stake holders. Stake holders know where everything is going in general. They also know they are NOT the only users of the system.
Then we start the real work, which feels a lot more agile, because we are always delivering a usable system with high quality.
Did we specify EVERYTHING up front in detail? NOPE.
Did we leave everything until after the programming started? NEVER.
Will we prevent the programmer from talking to the user? (Not unless we have a to)
==
What you are describing meets my definition of death by a thousand cuts.
Your baby step is to be in the meeting with your boss so you can ask the detailed questions when required.
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So, tis the season to be jolly bloody miserable!
Youngest had a very good report this term including going from no experience to A in French in one term! My dear darling love MRs Wife said she can have whatever she wants [usual terms apply] for Christmas and my, otherwise apparently intelligent child, wants a bally iPad!
I have never owned an Apple device and not really wanted one since the days of the Apple ][. So, dear hive mind, it looks like I have to buy a Crimbo iPad. Which model is bestest for an 11yo? I only want wi-fi so mobile use doesn't come in to it.
veni bibi saltavi
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The cheapest one. Less painful (physically and financially) when it is dropped.
Doesn't matter if it's small because small fingers and good eyesight.
(and technically you still won't own an apple device )
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"[usual terms apply]" would exclude a nearly £400 iDevice in our household.
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Nagy Vilmos wrote: it looks like I have to buy a Crimbo iPad. Which model is bestest for an 11yo?
Anything that runs Android ...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Please, we have been down this route but it has to be an iPad. This is in no way influenced by Besty having an iPad, iPhone, Mac Book Air and iDon't know.
veni bibi saltavi
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You could sell her into slavery instead? Be a lot less painful...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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I have hinted that for her to get the iWant, I may need to do away with a few things. Children for starters
veni bibi saltavi
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Look on the bright side: You don't have to be IT support then!
The Missus just got herself a new work phone, an iPhone. She sat all night yesterday trying to port data from her old Android and every time she had a question and asked me about it, I took great pleasure in saying:
"I don't know Honey, I don't know the first thing about iPhones"
Oh the joy!
Anything that is unrelated to elephants is irrelephant Anonymous
- The problem with quotes on the internet is that you can never tell if they're genuine Winston Churchill, 1944
- I'd just like a chance to prove that money can't make me happy. Me, all the time
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Nah, I don't like sleeping on the sofa.
veni bibi saltavi
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That works in theory but I've found it is much different in practice.
But I do have an out, my adult daughter loves her Apple stuff so I point the wife that way.
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