Developer-driven big-bang process transition from Scrum to Kanban
Proceedings of the 2011 International Conference on Software and Systems Process
What agile teams think of agile principles
Communications of the ACM
An investigation of approaches to set up a Kanban board, and of tools to manage it
SITE'12 Proceedings of the 11th international conference on Telecommunications and Informatics, Proceedings of the 11th international conference on Signal Processing
Analyzing the drivers of the combination of lean and agile in software development companies
PROFES'12 Proceedings of the 13th international conference on Product-Focused Software Process Improvement
Journal of Systems and Software
Crafting interaction: The epistemology of modern programming
Personal and Ubiquitous Computing
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Scrum and Kanban are two flavours of Agile software development - two deceptively simple but surprisingly powerful approaches to software development. So how do they relate to each other? The purpose of this book is to clear up the fog, so you can figure out how Kanban and Scrum might be useful in your environment.Part I illustrates the similarities and differences between Kanban and Scrum, comparing for understanding, not for judgement. There is no such thing as a good or bad tool - just good or bad decisions about when and how to use which tool.This book includes:- Kanban and Scrum in a nutshell- Comparison of Kanban and Scrum and other Agile methods- Practical examples and pitfalls- Cartoons and diagrams illustrating day-to-day work- Detailed case study of a Kanban implementation within a Scrum organizationPart II is a case study illustrating how a Scrum-based development organization implemented Kanban in their operations and support teams.