The document discusses the history and evolution of Extreme Programming (XP), an agile software development framework. It describes how XP emerged in the 1990s as an alternative to failed waterfall software projects. While initially popular, XP lost emphasis on technical practices as agile became more focused on business practices. However, the document argues that XP is seeing a resurgence by addressing its "last mile" of improving productivity and delivering more features through practices like test-driven development and refactoring code for improved quality.
3. 1) Start with Humor
2) Professional looking PowerPoint slides
3) Include cute kitten photo at a surprising point
Good presentation Practices
4. 1) Start with a Humor
2) Professional looking PowerPoint slides
3) Include cute kitten photo at a surprising point
Good presentation Practices
It 4¥
.
:B.
It.
II. I
:I. Is.
:b.
5. 1) Start with a Humor
2) Professional looking PowerPoint slides
3) Include cute kitten photo at a surprising point
Good presentation Practices
To
6. Bill the Kitten ?
A¥oki÷¥€EEFI⇐ii
:
gf¥¥⇐ieE.
'
o÷AI÷¥¥hE
.
.
In
kin .
10. Complete failure when deployed
Department Of Defense
REQ
ZM
ANALYSIS
ZM1997
3M
rnont
'ts¥¥¥¥t¥¥¥Y
I:3'Eym
### TEST
IM
$12
minor
###L#
¥¥%)) |z more
Months CRUNCH -
TIME
3 SHIFTS
$48m¥oEDI a¥o
38. What I did not foresee was the loss of the technical
emphasis that rapidly followed. The Agile conference has
become a conference for project managers, not for
programmers
The Scrum-ification of Agile
Focus ON BuisnessPRACTICES
LOSS of TECHNICAL EMPHASIS
BOB Martin :