@nmashton that's a good question. I was reminded recently that one of the core principles of #agile development is "people over processes". Like permaculture, it's not about imposing cookie-cutter templates, but designing for a context. is about teams and organizations collaboratively designing the process by which they collaborate, by reflecting on what they've tried, what worked, and what didn't (the clue is in the name - *agile*). All the agile methods are just tools to be used as appropriate
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Strypey (strypey@mastodon.nzoss.nz)'s status on Tuesday, 04-Sep-2018 16:10:51 UTC Strypey -
Strypey (strypey@mastodon.nzoss.nz)'s status on Tuesday, 04-Sep-2018 16:12:44 UTC Strypey @nmashton that said, I definitely see value in teams sharing experiences about what has worked and what hasn't with their peers in coop networks, talking about the ways they've tried to use agile methods (formal or improvised) and how they worked out, and so on. Learning about failed experiments is as important as learning about successful ones, if not more so.
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