Desert Southwest Software Symposium - July 28 - 30, 2006 - No Fluff Just Stuff

Jared Richardson

Desert Southwest Software Symposium

Phoenix · July 28 - 30, 2006

You are viewing details from a past event
Jared Richardson

Agile coach and co-author of Ship It

Jared Richardson, co-author of Ship It! A Practical Guide to Successful

Software Projects
, is a speaker, consultant, and mentor with NFJS One. Jared has been in the industry for more than fifteen years as a consultant, developer, tester, and manager.



Jared can be found online at Agile Artisans.

Presentations

Software Tools That Make Life Easier: Part One

a.. Do you spend more time fighting your tools than writing code?
b.. Do you avoid merging your code with your teammates because of “Integration Hell”?
c.. Do the same bugs keep sneaking back into your product?
d.. Do your builds depend on the roll of the dice?

A good set of infrastructure tools can go a long way toward smoothing out these and other problems. Come see how to make your toolset work seamlessly in the background so you can Just Work. We'll cover source code management (SCM), build scripts, automated test harnesses, automatic builds, feature tracking and issue tracking.

Software Tools That Make Life Easier: Part Two

This talk is a continuation of Part One of the Tools talk. During Part Two we'll cover Continuous Integration, automated testing, bug tracking, and feature tracking.

Pragmatic Tracer Bullets

Are your product designs hit or miss? Do you have trouble building a loosely coupled system? Is your code incestuous? Refactoring not an option with your code base? Tracer Bullets help keep your project out of the fire.

Tracer Bullet Development:

* helps you create great software
* lends itself to an iterative cycle
* can be used for demos early and often
* is easily refactored
* allows your teams to work in parallel
* makes a very testable system 

Software Development Techniques

Throughout our software careers we learn habits from our coworkers, from books we've read, and occasionally, from conferences we attend. Much of our competence comes from the tips and tricks we pick up as we go.