Fault Tolerance
The capability of a system to continue operating properly in the event of the failure of some of its components, ensuring that user experience is not significantly affected by errors or issues, similar to Postel's Law.
The capability of a system to continue operating properly in the event of the failure of some of its components, ensuring that user experience is not significantly affected by errors or issues, similar to Postel's Law.
Large-Scale Scrum (LeSS) is a framework for scaling agile product development to multiple teams working on a single product.
Information provided by users about their experience with a product, used to inform improvements and adjustments.
Artificially generated data that mimics real data, used for training machine learning models.
A design principle that suggests a pattern for how people read a webpage, dividing it into four quadrants and emphasizing the importance of the top-left and bottom-right areas.
Minimum Viable Feature (MVF) is the smallest possible version of a feature that delivers value to users and allows for meaningful feedback collection.
The study of complex systems and how interactions within these systems give rise to collective behaviors.
The extent to which consumers can identify a brand by its attributes such as logo, tagline, or packaging.
A key aspect of Gestalt psychology where complex patterns arise out of relatively simple interactions.