[Bradford] Agile Yorkshire - Retrospectives on next Tuesday, April 12 at OBH
Robert Burrell Donkin
robertburrelldonkin at gmail.com
Tue Apr 5 07:17:17 UTC 2011
I'll be co-hosting the next Agile Yorkshire meeting with Mark van
Harmelen. From 18:00-19:00 (as well as the usual networking) Lightning
Talks will be happening. If you'd like to present for 5 minutes on an
Agile topic, bring along your slides.
Hope to see you at Old Broadcasting House, Leeds on Tuesday April 12.
Robert
An Evening On Retrospectives
---------------------------------
Mark and Robert invite you to an evening on retrospectives. Fresh from
fun at XP Manchester, they promise to host a programme with little bit
of something for everybody. Or your money back! (Easy for a free
event.)
Between 6pm and 7pm early birds network and catch a variety of
Lightning Talks including short introductions to agile development,
facilitation and (of course) retrospectives. The main event opens at
7pm and features a participatory mix of talks and exercises, including
a Park Bench forum to share experiences of retrospectives and a
session focussing on "Running Your First Retrospective".
As always, Agile Yorkshire is free and open with a friendly welcome to
one and all.
Why Retrospect?
---------------
Iterative development methods are powered by a strong, positive
feedback loop. This makes retrospectives an essential tool. Like any
good tool, they can be used in a wide variety of ways - for example to
bond teams, collect knowledge, generate insights or continuously
improve process. But without good technique, these meetings can
produce negative feedback - reinforcing failure and enculturising
blame.
But Who Are Mark And Robert?
----------------------------
Mark van Harmelen has worked in a whole slew of different areas in
Computer Science, including, in the dim and distant past, staring down
oscilloscopes and logic analysers looking for lost nanoseconds. Mark
spent several years specialising in user interface and interactive
system design, and, in part based on work at National Panasonic’s
Tokyo Research Centre, produced Object Modelling and User Interface
Design: Designing Interactive Systems together with a bunch of
collaborators. In 2002 he led the team that formulated the
establishment of the Meraka Institute in South Africa. Mark now runs
Hedtek, a small software house that specialises the production of
social software to support educational processes and other high tech
topics; for example
recently putting 1.3T linked data triples on the web. Mark teaches an
annual software engineering course module in the University of
Manchester’s School of Computer Science, most recently on agile
methods. He has a PhD in
Computer Science.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Object-Modeling-Interface-Design-Technology/dp/0201657899/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1301587951&sr=8-1
http://www.meraka.org.za/
http://hedtek.com/
http://www.cs.man.ac.uk/~mark/
Robert Burrell Donkin is agile developer by day, open sourceror by
night. Old enough to have experienced DSDM and Extreme Programming
when they were shiny, he remembers well the dark days before test
first. Open source highlights include micro-libraries in the Apache
Commons, community building in the Apache Incubator and email protocol
implementation in Apache James. Had fun helping Mark with last year's
Agile course module. Elected a Member of the Apache Software
Foundation in 2005.
@itstechupnorth
http://itstechupnorth.me.uk
http://robertburrelldonkin.name
http://www.jroller.com/robertburrelldonkin/
https://www.ohloh.net/accounts/robertburrelldonkin
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