Posted by Damon Young
Wed, 22 Oct 2008 16:48:00 GMT
3Back, LLC is one of our earliest partners as well as one of the most respected & sought-after firms for formal training in all aspects of Agile and Scrum development. If your team needs to build your Scrum competency from the ground up, find one of their classes nearest you on the widget below.
Tags 3Back, agile, best, development, practices, quality, scrum, software, training | no comments
Posted by Damon Young
Wed, 25 Jun 2008 15:25:00 GMT

It's no secret: we like Agile Software Development here at ProjectLocker.
We're not dogmatic about any one particular methodology over another. As a company, we've always focused on supporting the most efficient ways software developers can save time, save money, and build better software. But if you look at the Agile Manifesto, I think you'll see some things that we might agree with:
"Individuals and interactions over processes and tools
Working software over comprehensive documentation
Customer collaboration over contract negotiation
Responding to change over following a plan"
With that in mind, especially given that supporting Agile teams is the raison d'être for ProjectLocker Lite as well as our long-standing partnership with the Agile & Scrum experts at 3Back, we felt it was time to make it official:
ProjectLocker is now a corporate member of the Agile Alliance.
For all of our current users who are Agile practicioners: I'd encourage you to take a moment and see what resources the alliance can offer to enhance your current project.
And if you're an Agile practicioner or Alliance member who's not using ProjectLocker yet, I think you'll like what you see.
Tags 3Back, agile, alliance, development, hosted, Lite, manifesto, practices, ProjectLocker, scrum, subversion, SVN, trac | no comments
Posted by Damon Young
Thu, 10 Apr 2008 19:08:00 GMT
While we're very big proponents of Subversion here at ProjectLocker, we also recognize that even the best tools and, consequently, the teams that use them can be crippled by the wrong development processes. With that in mind, here is an excellent article by Henrik Kniberg, a Certified Scrum Master with Crisp, a Stockholm-based Agile consulting firm. In it, he proposes a methodology to most effectively make use of your version control tool when applying Agile best practices in an environment with multiple & distinct teams working from common code base. Notice that he never mentions a specific version control tool, just a set of procedures and team protocols to help optimize the process. More details at the link below:
"Version Control for Multiple Agile Teams"
Watch this blog for more posts in the future on best practices and other development resources we think will help you build better software.
Tags agile, best, development, hosted, lifecycle, practices, scrum, software, subversion, SVN | no comments