ASD
Adaptive Software Development (ASD) is a software development methodology that focuses on continuous adaptation to changing requirements and environments.
Adaptive Software Development (ASD) is a software development methodology that focuses on continuous adaptation to changing requirements and environments.
The risk that the product cannot be built as envisioned due to technical limitations, resource constraints, or other practical challenges.
A detailed strategy outlining the timeline, milestones, and deliverables for a product release, ensuring that all activities are aligned and completed on schedule.
A document that defines the functionality, behavior, and features of a system or component.
An analysis comparing the costs and benefits of a decision or project to determine its feasibility and value.
A meeting where the Agile team discusses and decides what tasks will be completed in the upcoming sprint, establishing a clear plan for the sprint's duration.
A meeting at the end of a sprint where the development team presents their completed work to stakeholders.
Also known as Parkinson's Law of Triviality, is the tendency to spend excessive time on trivial details while neglecting more important issues.
A short, daily meeting (separate from Standup) for the development team to sync on progress and plan for the day, part of the Scrum agile framework.