Remove Continuous Integration Remove Handbook Remove Organization Remove Training
article thumbnail

Scaled Agile – Why? When? How?

Modus Create

Scaled Agile is a way for organizations with many teams to plan, coordinate, and track work on large initiatives. In this blog post, we’ll review why, when, and how organizations should consider adopting Scaled Agile. Why are so many organizations considering the move to Scaled Agile? When and who should implement Scaled Agile?

Agile 134
article thumbnail

Our Engineering Apprentice Journey

Tandem

Organizing your developer workflow. You’ll learn our Git workflow, commit early and often with descriptive messages, open and merge pull requests, review your teammates’ code, deploy to staging and production environments, configure hosting platforms, manage our continuous integration services, and build a lot of software.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

AoAD2 Practice: Build for Operation

James Shore

For smaller teams and organizations, a clear policy and limited access to production environments can be enough. The types of alerts your monitoring tool sends will depend on your organization, but they typically fall into four categories: Emergency: Something’s on fire, or about to be, and a human needs to wake up and fix it now.

article thumbnail

What Is Hyperautomation?

O'Reilly Media - Ideas

HR processes have effects throughout the organization. These changes sound like something that we’ve often talked about in software development: continuous integration and continuous delivery. Was it trained using biased, unfair data? Is special-purpose training to fine-tune a model’s behavior an option?

Trends 128
article thumbnail

Grown-Up Lean

LeanEssays

This working paper was submitted as a chapter in The International Handbook of Lean Organization , Cambridge University Press, Forthcoming. Open source was (and is) known to be a brutal but effective training ground for software engineers. Lean was introduced to software a couple of decades ago. How are they getting along?