About Me
I'm a technical architect with Headspring in Austin, TX. I focus on DDD, distributed systems, and any other acronym-centric design/architecture/methodology. I created AutoMapper and am a co-author of the ASP.NET MVC in Action books.
Upcoming Talks
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Recent Posts
Recent Comments
- Scott Banwart's Blog › Distributed Weekly 207 on Saga patterns: wrap up
- Scott Banwart's Blog › Distributed Weekly 207 on Eventual consistency in REST APIs
- AquaBirdConsult on Eventual consistency in REST APIs
- Jalpesh Vadgama on Building forms for deep View Model graphs in ASP.NET MVC
- The Morning Brew - Chris Alcock » The Morning Brew #1357 on Eventual consistency in REST APIs
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Meta
Category Archives: Agile
Elaborating on “it depends”
On the discussion on “When should I test?”, I followed up with a conversation: When it provides value. When is that? It depends. And it truly does depend. But upon what? That’s trickier to answer – and there is no … Continue reading
Also posted in TDD
5 Comments
Build Metrics with Distributed Teams & Large Organizations
With some recent changes at work and I am looking at the quality of software development teams across a very large software organization. I am currently looking at getting the teams back to the basics in terms of software quality. … Continue reading
Also posted in BDD, Legacy Code, PabloTV, Refactoring, TDD
12 Comments
Estimation scoping
Read any book about estimation and you’ll probably see a picture of this: This is the cone of uncertainty, a measure of the accuracy of our estimation of effort as we get closer to finishing work. Very close to finishing, … Continue reading
Don’t forget your users
Some time ago, we at Headspring were brought in to help replace an existing legacy system based on Excel with a new web application built using the latest and greatest architectural patterns and practices. During the initial discovery phase, we … Continue reading
Feature branches and toggles
I’m a huge Martin Fowler fan, but one bit of advice I still can’t understand is the recommendation to eschew feature branches for feature toggles. The argument against feature branches are not just merge problems, but semantic merge problems, such … Continue reading
Also posted in Continuous Integration
13 Comments
Why I’m done with Scrum
My first foray into Agile was with a product team back in 2004-2005. It was my first “real” job out of college, and my first experience with a death march. During the death march, I was struck on how bad … Continue reading
Our Post-Agile World
It’s been a looooong time since I’ve posted anything about Agile, and today I sat down to try and figure out why. It’s not that I don’t care about the values in the Agile Manifesto, nor that I’ve gone completely … Continue reading
Constraints, expectations and real estate
One of my favorite shows on TV these days is (don’t laugh) the show Property Virgins on HGTV. In it, an experienced Realtor walks first-time home buyers through the house selection and offer process. A lot of times the “let’s … Continue reading
Continuous Integration: Early indicators mean inexpensive fixes
Earlier this year, I bought a car—my first new car. Although it fills me with sanctimonious hybrid glee (it really does), it’s making me neurotic with instrument panel indicator lights. The low-tire-pressure indicator after the weather turned cold. The insistent … Continue reading
Disruptive versus iterative change
Scrum is a rather interesting phenomena. As a process, the feedback system it incorporates encourages incremental and iterative improvements not only in the software, but the process itself. Once scrum is in place, things can go rather smoothly, although I … Continue reading
