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Steve Barnett | Naga
https://naga.co.za/author/steve
Author Archives: Steve Barnett. Larr; Older posts. User-Centered Design Process (again). August 22, 2016. Every now and then I go back to my scribbled picture of my UCD process and I think about wobbling it a bit. I spent some time looking at it recently. I added a bunch of stuff, I deleted a bunch of stuff, and I ended up with a slightly adjusted version. Here’s a quick list of why we need each step. Research: for gathering data on the problem. Personas: for clarity on who our users are. August 1, 2016.
scrumcoaching.wordpress.com
Test Plans in Agile | Coaching teams to do better scrum
https://scrumcoaching.wordpress.com/2012/01/17/test-plans-in-agile
Test Plans in Agile. By Growing Agile on January 17, 2012. Talking to a test manager recently he mentioned that he often gets asked, “When do you do test plans in agile, if ever”. Since it is a common question I thought a blog post would be useful. First let me clear up a common misconception. Agile does not mean NO documentation, the agile manifesto. I think test plans are exactly that, they are the plan of what you are going to test and how. The process of coming up with the plan is probably the mo...
scrumcoaching.wordpress.com
Train your teams in Scrum | Coaching teams to do better scrum
https://scrumcoaching.wordpress.com/2013/09/02/train-your-teams-in-scrum
Train your teams in Scrum. By Growing Agile on September 2, 2013. Often companies get someone to train their team when they adopt Scrum, but a few months or years later, new staff have joined, others have left, and very few people remain who have received formal Scrum training. As a result companies suffer because people understand the mechanics of Scrum but not the principles and values behind it. This prevents them from effectively inspecting and adapting. Larr; I have moved. Leave a Reply Cancel reply.
scrumcoaching.wordpress.com
Why Scrum Masters can’t be responsible for delivery | Coaching teams to do better scrum
https://scrumcoaching.wordpress.com/2011/12/17/why-scrum-masters-cant-be-responsible-for-delivery
Why Scrum Masters can’t be responsible for delivery. By Growing Agile on December 17, 2011. Someone recently asked me if I could point them to some reading about whether Scrum Masters should be responsible for delivery or not. I strongly believe Scrum Masters should not be directly responsible for delivery, but after hunting online I can’t really find anything that talks specifically to this point. So I thought a blog post was in order. If the client wants an urgent patch for some issues, usually the Scr...
scrumcoaching.wordpress.com
I have moved | Coaching teams to do better scrum
https://scrumcoaching.wordpress.com/2012/10/31/i-have-moved
By Growing Agile on October 31, 2012. Okay so it’s been 6 months since my last blog post here. It’s time to admit that I can no longer keep this blog up to date. The good news is that I’m still blogging about Scrum and Agile, I’m just doing it on a different site. As mentioned in a previous post, I started Growing Agile with my good friend Sam Laing in January 2012. I now blog on the Growing Agile blog. Larr; Scrum Masters in Black. Train your teams in Scrum. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Join 50 other fol...
scrumcoaching.wordpress.com
Fixing Bugs in Scrum | Coaching teams to do better scrum
https://scrumcoaching.wordpress.com/2011/11/10/fixing-bugs-in-scrum
Fixing Bugs in Scrum. By Growing Agile on November 10, 2011. The following post is inspired by an email I sent to our teams recently due to some confusion about when to fix bugs in Scrum. It generated 2 responses:. 1) Complete support from some (senior developer, architect and CTO) and. 2) Debate and disagreement from others (Product Owners). I will leave it to you to decide what you think. Keen to hear comments from either side. Warning: no one has swayed me in the other direction yet! Context switching...
marknilsen.wordpress.com
Contact me |
https://marknilsen.wordpress.com/30-2
Please feel free to contact me. I’d love to hear from you.🙂. Email: mark.nilsen@gmail.com. If you liked it, share it:. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Google account. ( Log Out. June 4, 2013.
naga.co.za
The CSS bits of Progressive Enhancement | Naga
https://naga.co.za/2015/06/29/the-css-bits-of-progressive-enhancement
The CSS bits of Progressive Enhancement. June 29, 2015. At work the other day we were talking about Progressive Enhancement and feature phones, particularly in terms of CSS. The feature phones part of the chat led me to write up a short Dos and Don’ts of Feature phone design. Written for designers more than developers). The PE part of the chat made me scribble up the following pictures. Practically speaking, we chop things up a bit more than this, though. The basic CSS is loaded like this:. Since it̵...
naga.co.za
Webmaker at Brothers For All | Naga
https://naga.co.za/2015/06/29/webmaker-at-brothers-for-all
Webmaker at Brothers For All. June 29, 2015. This Saturday past, 28th June, myself and a bunch of volunteers headed out to Brothers For All. In Langa to run another Webmaker event. Thank you Gavin, Andrew, De Wet, Jeremy, Simon, Trevor, and Nathan for all your hard work, and a huge thank you to Sihle ( @sihletshaba on Twitter. Of Brothers For All @brothersforall on Twitter. We ran this event with a very similar agenda. To our previous one. The activities between the computer stuff. We closed the day with...
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