Agile and Lean Development for Hardware
Contents
Overview
1 day
This practical, information-packed seminar summarizes practices, organizational design ideas, and experiences related to applying agile and lean principles and practices in hardware or hardware and embedded software development, including related FPGAs. It primarily draws on experience from PCB development done with elements of Scrum, agile principlies practices, Kanban method, and lean principles and practices.
Methods of Education
Discussion, presentation, Q&A.
Audience
Managers and hands-on engineers in the development of hardware (PCBs, ...), FPGAs, board-level software, and drivers.
Level
Introductory: This course introduces concepts and techniques that the attendee will not apply during the session.
Prerequisites
course Agile, Lean, and Iterative Development: Management Overview or equivalent
Participants must read (available online), before the course:
- The Scrum Guide
- Scrum Primer or from Chapter 12 of Scaling Lean & Agile Development
- Feature Teams or the equivalent chapter Feature Teams in Scaling Lean & Agile Development
And these chapters, available in paper print or online at Safari. These following chapters are from Scaling Lean & Agile Development: Thinking and Organizational Tools for Scrum (Larman & Vodde).
- Chapter 2: Systems Thinking
- Chapter 4: Queuing Theory
- Chapter 8: Teams
NOTE! Your company may have an online Safari account that you can use to read the book chapters online free. Please ask your colleagues if you have a Safari account.
Topics
- team organization: from thermal design to layout to mechanical
- multilearning
- release planning in agile hardware development
- practices that do and do not apply from Scrum and other agile methods
- WIP management
- Kanban method
- obeya
- lean development: principles and practices
- stop and fix culture
- reduction of special-cause and common-cause variability
- kaizen
- set-based concurrent development
- decomposing hardware development into smaller steps: PCB example
- splitting large hardware requirements
- expressing requirements with 'stories'
- adaptive iterative planning
- "definition of done" in hardware Sprints
- Product Owner and ScrumMaster
- Product Backlog in hardware development: PCB example
- burndown charts and visual management
- test-driven development
- "continuous" integration
- and more!
Maximum Participants
35
Environment - Room, Tools, Texts
Read this: Course Environment - Presentation Oriented