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FreeComputerBooks.com
Free Computer, Mathematics, Technical Books and Lecture Notes, etc.
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Kanban for Skeptics: Answers to Kanban in Software Development
This book answers the questions: What is Kanban? Why would I want to use Kanban? How do I go about implementing Kanban? How do I recognize improvement opportunities and what should I do about them?
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Real Life Scrum ©2012 (Jesper Boeg)
This book contains the most typical problems teams and organizations encounter when adopting Agile and Scrum.
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The Scrum Primer ©2012 (Pete Deemer, et al)
This minibook is a lightweight guide to the theory and practice of Scrum - it's for those who are impatient :-)
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Agile Transition: What you Need to Know Before Starting ©2012
Shares fundamental knowledge to support many of the observations and conclusions that organizations that have transitioned to a more agile approach to work.
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The Culture Game: Tools for the Agile Manager ©2012 (Daniel Mezick)
This book is your tutorial and reference guide for creating lasting business agility in your organization. This is the handbook for managers who want to rapidly develop a culture of learning inside their teams.
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An Agile Adoption and Transformation Survival Guide ©2012
This book provides a set of essential thinking tools for understanding Agile adoption and transformation: how they differ and what you need to know to know to avoid being another statistic in the widespread adoption failure.
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The 3 Pillars of Personal Effectiveness ©2012 (Troels Richter)
This book is for everyone who is struggling with a high daily workload and often juggling with a lot of projects at once.
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Priming Kanban: A 10 Step Guide to Optimizing Flow in Your Software
This mini-book offers an easy to follow 10 step guide to taking the initial plunge and start using Lean principles to optimizing value and flow in your system.
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Do It Yourself Agile, 2nd Edition ©2009 (Damon B. Poole)
This book is for pragmatic software professionals who want real answers to the most difficult challenges they face in implementing agile.
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Your Scrum Checklist: Scrum Hard Facts ©2010 (von Boris Gloger)
Scrum Checklists enable you to create an enjoyable and productive work environment with your Scrum-Team.
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Kanban and Scrum - Making The Most Of Both ©2009 (H. Kniberg)
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.
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Extreme Programming: A Gentle Introduction ©2009 (Don Wells)
This book covers XP assumptions, principles, events, artifacts, roles, and resources, and more. It concisely explains the relationships between the XP practices.
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O'Reilly® The Art of Agile Development: With Extreme Programming
This book contains practical guidance for anyone considering or applying agile development for building valuable software.
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Patterns of Agile Practice Adoption: The Technical Cluster ©2007
This book answers these questions by guiding the reader on crafting their own adoption strategy focused on their business values and environment.
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Scrum and XP from the Trenches ©2007 (Henrik Kniberg)
This book aims to give you a head start by providing a detailed down-to-earth account of how one Swedish company implemented Scrum and XP with a team of approximately 40 people and how they continuously improved their process over a year's time.
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Agile Principles, Patterns, and Practices in C# ©2006 (R. Martin)
This book presents a series of case studies illustrating the fundamentals of Agile development and Agile design, and moves quickly from UML models to real C# code.
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Scrum Checklists ©2006 (The SPRiNT-iT)
The book is not intended to teach the details of Scrum. Instead, this book was created to give trained teams confidence in accomplishing their first Sprints.
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O'Reilly® Extreme Programming with Perl ©2005 (Robert Nagler)
This is a book about Extreme Programming using the programming language Perl. It contains many practical tips.
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Essential Skills for Agile Development ©2004 (Ka Iok Tong)
This book is a comprehensive, pragmatic tutorial on Agile Development and eXtreme programming, written by a software developer for software developers.
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