Difference between revisions of "Large-Scale Scrum"

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In the distant past i used to do knowledge/expert systems development, and related AI programming. In AI, which matured the field of object-oriented concepts, when one wanted to refer to a class, it might be called '''Tree.''' When one wanted to refer to ''instances'' of a class, they might be called Tree-1, '''Tree-7''', and so forth. Similarly, Scrum-7 is not a method or a class of method, it is one of the infinite number of ''instances'' of the Scrum method--a collection of tips for scaling Scrum to large, multisite, or offshore development. One can't adopt Scrum-7, as each group must take the basic rules of Scrum, and then use inspect and adapt cycles to creatively and thoughtfully create a new process experiment every 4 weeks. i.e., empirical versus defined process.
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'''Large-Scale Scrum''' (LSS) is not a method per se, it is one of the infinite number of ''instances'' of the Scrum method--a collection of tips for scaling Scrum to large, multisite, or offshore development. One can't adopt LSS per se, as each group must take the basic rules of Scrum, and then use inspect and adapt cycles to creatively and thoughtfully create a new process experiment every 4 weeks. i.e., empirical versus defined process.

Revision as of 00:18, 3 November 2007

Large-Scale Scrum (LSS) is not a method per se, it is one of the infinite number of instances of the Scrum method--a collection of tips for scaling Scrum to large, multisite, or offshore development. One can't adopt LSS per se, as each group must take the basic rules of Scrum, and then use inspect and adapt cycles to creatively and thoughtfully create a new process experiment every 4 weeks. i.e., empirical versus defined process.