Selected Product: | Agile Software Development with SCRUM Paperback Author: Ken Schwaber Publisher: Prentice Hall Release Date: 2001-10-21 ISBN-10: 0130676349 ISBN-13: 9780130676344 List Price: $43.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Agile Project Management with Scrum (Microsoft Professional) ISBN-10: 073561993X ISBN-13: 9780735619937 List Price:$39.99 User Stories Applied: For Agile Software Development (The Addison-Wesley Signature Series) ISBN-10: 0321205685 ISBN-13: 0785342205688 List Price:$44.99 User Stories Applied: For Agile Software Development (Addison-Wesley Signature Series) ISBN-10: 0321205685 ISBN-13: 9780321205681 List Price:$49.99 Agile Estimating and Planning (Robert C. Martin Series) ISBN-10: 0131479415 ISBN-13: 9780131479418 List Price:$49.99 Agile and Iterative Development: A Manager's Guide ISBN-10: 0131111558 ISBN-13: 0076092021711 List Price:$44.99 Agile and Iterative Development: A Manager's Guide (Agile Software Development Series) ISBN-10: 0131111558 ISBN-13: 9780131111554 List Price:$46.99 The Enterprise and Scrum ISBN-10: 0735623376 ISBN-13: 9780735623378 List Price:$39.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Agile Software Development with SCRUM by Ken Schwaber (ISBN-10: 0130676349, ISBN-13: 9780130676344). At this time we have not yet written a review for Agile Software Development with SCRUM by Ken Schwaber (ISBN-10: 0130676349, ISBN-13: 9780130676344). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Arguably the most important book about managing technology and systems development efforts, this book describes building systems using the deceptively simple process, Scrum. Readers will come to understand a new approach to systems development projects that cuts through the complexity and ambiguity of complex, emergent requirements and unstable technology to iteratively and quickly produce quality software. My husband likes it so far | Customer Rating: | | Little weird to review a book before actually reading it. My husband is learning English with it. I observed that it has an accessible language for those who are first exploring SCRUM. | Good but not great | Customer Rating: | This is a good book with lots of valuable information around the empirical nature of Scrum. For someone who was central to creating Scrum, the book doesn't offer much more.
It's broken up into three parts: Overview of Scrum / Why it works / Case studies.
The overview of Scrum is poor at best. There are much simpler ways to communicate it. If you don't know anything about Scrum then this book probably won't help get you started.
The "Why it works" chapters were much more interesting and valuable. It takes you through the epirical nature of scrum and why previous methodologies have failed. The most interesting part is the brief exposition around the psychological, anthropological and systematical viewpoints around Scrum. Like much of the book, this could have been written better and with more indepth information, but still meets a basic need.
The case studies and ancillary information in the last few chapters feel hasty and are of little value. Many of the examples (although based on actual events) feel contrived and are simplified so much that they aren't highly illuminating.
Overall the book wasn't the greatest but it did provide me with some value. The editing is quite poor and there are numerous mistakes throughout. The general layout of the page is also problematic and makes it difficult to read.
Most laughable however are the images and graphics. They look like they were made in MSPaint and screen capped into the book. | Good, but Probably Not the Best for You | Customer Rating: | | ASDS is a very good book, but only for the few who want to be Scrum experts. The material is thorough, and not necessarily easy to get through, in part because the Schwaber and Beedle walk through every part of Scrum in detail, as well as cover situations that likely don't apply to most, and they even go through philosophical views that some may care little about. To be sure, there are gems in the book, and I learned a few important points, but I have been to ScrumMaster certification training, read two other agile books, and been mentored by a CSM/PMP. I feel the book only moved me from 80% comfort level with Scrum to 85%. If you are a consultant managing projects, or you want to teach, coach or train in this area, read the book. If you a internal project manager,product manager, or IT manager, I recommend you get Agile and Iterative Development: A Manager's Guide (The Agile Software Development Series)and read the section on Scrum. It's simpler, cleaner, and the rest of the book gives good background to agile and options you may want to consider. If you are a team or development lead, or the senior developer, get Agile Project Management with Scrum (Microsoft Professional). It's an even easier read, focussed solely on Scrum and gives lots of enjoyable stories of real situations the author went through, good and bad. | The SCRUM bible | Customer Rating: | This is the one book you buy everyone on your team and tell them to read as the first step to implementing scrum. It's well written, clear, and consise. Most people only need to read chapters 2-4, 5-7 are on control theory, etc that is interesting but not required.
This is good stuff 'straight from the horses mouth'. | Great Book! | Customer Rating: | | I'm the resident 'Scrum Lord' at my company and I purchased this book early on in my 'Scrum' travels. It's been a handy quick read resource for our entire company. We bought a 1/2 dozen to pass around when we got new hires so they could read up a bit before they went to our in-house training in Scrum/Agile. For folks with just a little time, we suggested they read chapters 2 and 3 to get the gist of it. If they had more time...we suggested the read the whole book. Our in house training was inspired by some of the concepts used in this book. Its a great one! All of my 'loaner copies' are checked out somewhere here at work! |
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