The sixty eight words in the Agile Manifesto written in 2001 had revolutionised software development and also business in general. Almost every business sector is "doing Agile" in some form or another. But there also has been criticism of the approach and some have struggled and failed. Twenty years on, recent survey shows a high level of Agile immaturity as it appears that the simple principles are hard to do well. One reason could be the uncertainty in the current work world, so organisations need to shift the Agile ways of working, and investigate how they adopt and use agile practices. They should examine how others have done so and what practical value they found – adapt agile-based, practices suited to their particular needs over technical practices and defined methodologies.
The term DevOps is about eight years old but it continues to gain momentum as big organisations have made validating investments in it. This isn't exactly new. Many industry watchers believe it's no longer a question of if your organization will adopt these practices, but when. And yet DevOps is still evolving, as are the tools and technologies that support it. There are, now, a number of technologies that weren't initially considered, but are now have become quite essential. Industry analyst Gartner says of this evolving discipline now "demands a linked tools chain of technologies to facilitate collaborative change". So the question to you is what you'll be adopting.
Testers have always been at the coal face of ensuring that "stuff works as it should". Is there anything different in the actual testing of new digital products, new interfaces with clients which must always provide the optimum user experience? How are testers coping? What are the stories coming in? What is working well and what can be done better?
TOPICS TO BE COVERED
Date and time
March 18
-
March 19
Ended
Price
55 GBR - 95 GBR
Location
Online
United Kingdom