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16. Team room pictures, courtesy of Bryan Nehl (Oct., 2006) |
(Click to see full-sized picture) |
"At the end of the open space we had a large
whiteboard, bulletin board and team calendar. The whiteboard was used
to sketch out ideas and arrange user stories/tasks that were initially
created by brainstorming with sticky pads. The bulletin board had the
teams 6 month goals, weekly goals, sample story card and cards in progress or
future cards. Also, you'll see some process diagrams, the "XP movers"
cartoon, a list of overall project priorities, and a list of releases to
production. The Calendar was used for planning and coordinating time off. We
also had a meeting table in the middle of the open space where we could all come
together for team meeting and collaborating."
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(Click to see full-sized picture) |
"At the
station pictured you'll see the dual monitor, dual mouse/keyboard set up.
The laptop off to the side was for email and other production account use.
Development machines were on a separate domain."
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(Click to see full-sized picture)
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"We also had a user
testing station in our area. After having switched the team from a
cubicle farm with silo'ed developers to XP with an open workspace all of the
developers have said they would never want to do it any other way again."
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15. Ternary Software (Oct., 2006) |
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(Click to see full-sized picture)
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A status board showing who plans to do what today, and where
people expect to be. |
(Click to see full-sized picture)
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A team room. About 6 people work in this area. On the left is a
pairing station with two monitors and two keyboards. |
(Click to see full-sized picture)
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A different team room. |
(Click to see full-sized picture)
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A progress chart. The part in the middle is from an old project
(and is just "background" at this time). The orange sticky notes show progress
(moving left as stories are done). The dots in the corners of the story cards
represent priority. |
(Click to see full-sized picture) |
A task board for the system administrator, showing stories and
priorities. The sticky notes on the cards show who will do the work and how long
they expect it to take. |
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14. Iteration progress chart.
(Click to see full-sized picture) |
Courtesy of Geoffrey Slinker, who says, "Items progress in the bottom boxes from right to left, then up into
'this iteration,' then progress across the top, then land in the
finished box. I use sticky notes, and I stack them and
keep them so that when performance review time comes along I can refresh
my mind on everything I have accomplished." (May, 2006) |
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13. Build toy at THI Insurance.
(Click to see full-sized picture) |
Jeff Morgan writes:
An XP team at THI Insurance has converted a trailer hitch into a build failure
notification. When the build breaks, the deer flaps its front legs.
See a video (2M, AVI). |
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12. Build light at http://www.touchclarity.com
 |
Courtesy of Chris Smith, who writes:
"This is a real, four foot high British traffic light, which is hooked
up to our build machine. It was a scoop at only £40 from ebay, but I
didn't envy my colleague who had to bring it into work on a crowded
London train.
The build machine also plays sounds when the build status changes:
Red: compilation failure; plays a submarine style siren sound
Amber: test failure; plays a 'wrong answer' sound from a game show
Green: build success; plays a 'Hallelujah!' sound
We also have a secret Friday night mode that plays disco music and
alternates combinations of lights to the beat, but we haven't shown
that to the Customer yet :-)
So, do we have the coolest build status lights?" |
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11. Cadenza team from disy Informationssysteme GmbH (www.disy.net).
January, 2006.
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Pictures provided by Ilja Preuß. There are more
on their egroup, at
http://de.groups.yahoo.com/group/agile-ka/ (German).
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10. More pictures from William Pietri (Sept.,
2005)
This is a small selection from his wonderful page at
http://www.scissor.com/resources/teamroom/ (Used with
permission) |
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The full story planning board. |
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The current stories. |
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9. Mountain Goat Software
(2005)
Here's Mike Cohn's generic taskboard, then a couple "live" ones. These
pictures are from
http://www.mountaingoatsoftware.com/taskboard.php; used with permission.

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Mike tracks by
story. The other cards represent tasks, and show what state they're in. |
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8. Emergys
(March, 2004) |
"What we do trying to expend
less money as possible, we set a wireless access point in the room and we
can move furniture all around whatever we like."
--Marco Marquez |
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7. Software team doing a fixed-price
conversion project |
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(December, 2003) The two columns show status for each test both
pre-conversion and post-conversion.
Green squares show tests that pass.
Red squares show tests that failed.
Blue squares show tests that failed for reasons outside the teams' control.
X's show tests not yet run.
Numbers in the squares correspond to those issue list at the lower left.
The graph in the lower right shows tests over time, and should move to
"all green." |
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6.
www.binaryessentials.com - An XP Workshop
An Indian organization for XP
coaching and consulting.
More photos from
this workshop are available. |
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| 5. Key Technology, Medford, OR |
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"Normally we pair at separate computers (side by side) using a shared VNC
session. It takes a bit of getting used to since everyone has a keyboard and
mouse. It's easy to click or type and mess up someone else. On the plus side,
it takes even less time to switch roles.
The monitor you can see in the
back corner does double duty for our build server and our Windows box." |
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| 4. An XP team coached by William. Pietri |
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Build state shown by an Ambient Orb (TM): "In the photo, the build is
broken." |

Story cards: "Each row is a week of effort. Cards with a big checkmark are
done; blue post-its contain customer-written outlines of tests cases; yellow
stickies contain unresolved questions for the customer. The cards are held
to the glass with little stick-on hooks. Down at the bottom right is a
little pouch with blank cards and a pencil." |
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3. Ken Boucher's team room (fairlygoodpractices.com)
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2. XPlayers Team (P. Bossi)

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Remote pairing in progress
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(Link to PowerPoint picture of
team room)
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1. An XP Team (eidogen.com)
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(September, 2003) |
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