The Agile Bazaar
Event
- Title:
- Ken Schwaber on "Flaccid Scrum - A New Pandemic?"
- When:
- Jun 18 - Jun 18 06:00 PM - 09:00 PM
- Where:
- MIT Building 26, Room 100, Cambridge, MA - Cambridge
- Category:
- Monthly Meetings
Description
Agile Bazaar June Meeting
Ken Schwaber on "Flaccid Scrum - A New Pandemic?"
Registration is closed for tonight's meeting...
Location: MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts (parking info below)

Scrum has been a very widely adopted Agile process, used for managing such complex work as systems development and development of product releases. When waterfall is no longer in place, however, a lot of long standing habits and dysfunctions have come to light. This is particularly true with Scrum, because transparency is emphasized in Scrum projects.
Some of the dysfunctions include poor quality product and completely inadequate development practices and infrastructure. These arose because the effects of them couldn’t be seen very clearly in a waterfall project. In a Scrum project, the impact of poor quality caused by inadequate practices and tooling are seen in every Sprint.
The primary habits that hinder us are flaccid developers and flaccid customers who believe in magic, as in:
- Unskilled developers - most developers working in a team are unable to build an increment of product within an iteration. They are unfamiliar with modern engineering and quality practices, and they don’t have an infrastructure supportive of these practices.
- Ignorant customer - most customers are still used to throwing a book of requirements over the wall to development and wait for the slips to start occurring, all the time adding the inevitable and unavoidable changes.
- Belief in magic - most customers and managers still believe that if they want something badly enough and pressure developers enough to do it, that it will happen. They don’t understand that the pressure valve is quality and long term product sustainability and viability.
Have you seen these problems? Is your company "tailoring" Scrum to death? Let Ken respond to your issues and questions!
Ken will describe how Scrum addresses these problems and will give us a preview of plans for the future of the Scrum certification efforts.
The map [click here for map] shows both building 26 (not highlighted) and the Hayward Street Lot (highlighted in orange).
MIT parking lots that are NOT gated and that permit visitors are free to the public starting at 4:00 pm. There is a list of all MIT parking lots at http://web.mit.edu/facilities/transportation/parking/locations.html
Just look at the columns marked "Gated" and "Visitor" to pick one that you can use.
[ Click Here ]to see a picture of the building.
Venue
- Venue:
- MIT Building 26, Room 100, Cambridge, MA - Website
- Street:
- MIT, Building 26, Room 100
- City:
- Cambridge
- State:
- MA
- Country:
-
Description
Parking Details:
The map shows both building 26 (not highlighted) and the Hayward Street Lot (highlighted in orange).
MIT parking lots that are NOT gated and that permit visitors are free to the public starting at 4:00 pm. There is a list of all MIT parking lots at http://web.mit.edu/facilities/transportation/parking/locations.html
Just look at the columns marked "Gated" and "Visitor" to pick one that you can use.
[ Click Here ]to see a picture of the building.
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