InfoQ Homepage Agile Content on InfoQ
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Mastering Virtual Communication
Anne Ricketts focuses on how to take virtual meetings and presentations to the next level, emphasizing connection, brevity, and participation.
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A Love Letter to Clojure
Gene Kim discusses his endeavour as a developer through Clojure.
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Finding the “I” within Inclusion
Wade Davis and Karen Casella explore some of the history of I&D, its historical relationship with both over and underrepresented groups, and how to find yourself within I&D.
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Certainty in Uncertainty: Integrating Core Talents to Do What We Do Best
Christopher Bramley takes a look at using human learning, complexity theory, and contextual industry frameworks to manage uncertainty and learn from it.
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How I Became a Tester! Breaking Silos within Cross-Functional Teams
Almudena Rodriguez Pardo shows how spreading skills among Scrum team members nurtured a learning culture, broke the traditional silos of expertise, and increased the efficiency of the teams.
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User Stories: Re-Explained – You Think You Know until You Realise You Don't
Antony Marcano discusses using User Stories, tasks and features in disguise to release more value, sooner, with more flexibility and without dependencies.
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The More You Know: a Guide to Understanding Your Systems
Tyler Wells shares how Twilio developed a template that enables them to understand their systems better, identify critical metrics to watch, and how to use Chaos Engineering to verify it all.
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Let Devs Be Devs: Abstracting away Compliance and Reliability to Accelerate Modern Cloud Deployments
Rahul Arya shares how they built a platform to abstract away compliance, make reliability with Chaos Engineering completely self-serve, and enable developers to ship code faster.
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Lessons from Incident Management and Postmortems at Atlassian
Jim Severino shares what worked (and didn't work) in incident management and post-mortems for Atlassian.
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Identifying Hidden Dependencies
Liz Fong-Jones discusses some of the manual experiments they ran at Honeycomb, the bugs discovered in some automatic replacement tools, and what steps they took for continuously running experiments.
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Chaos Engineering: the Path to Reliability
Kolton Andrus shares examples of what works, what doesn’t, and what the future holds in using Chaos Engineering to build reliability in a system.
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Lead Times and Psychological Safety within the Five Ideals
Gene Kim shares the Five Ideals and how they relate to Chaos Engineering. He’ll also show how the Five Ideals help build stronger, better performing, and ultimately more reliable companies.