Product development: resources
This list has entries in two categories, (1) Product development standards, and (2) Product development methods. Please leave a comment to suggest additional resources or provide more information.
Product development standards
ANSI/ASQC D1160-1995: Formal Design Review. Link current May 2005.
ANSI/ASQC D1160-1995: Formal Design Review - E-Standard. Link current May 2005.
ISO 10007:2003 e-standard: Quality Management Systems - Guidelines for Configuration Management (E-Standard). Link current May 2005.
ANSI/ISO/ASQC Q10007-1995: Quality Management - Guidelines for Configuration Management. Link current May 2005.
ANSI/ISO/ASQC Q10007-1995: Quality Management - Guidelines for Configuration Management - E-Standard. Link current May 2005.
Product development methods
Agile software development (defined). Link current August 2005.
Scott W. Ambler. “Agile documentation” article. Link current August 2005.
Sanjiv Augustine. Agile Projects: Managing with a Light Touch. Prentice Hall PTR. 2005?. Review. Link current August 2005.
Mike Cohn. User Stories Applied for Agile Software Development (book). Pearson Education (paper), 2004. Added August 2005.
Patrick Emery. “The dangers of extreme programming” (paper). 2002. Link current August 2005.
Jim McCarthy. Dynamics of Software Development (book). Microsoft Press, 1995. Added August 2005.
Mary Poppendieck and Tom Poppendieck. Lean Software Development - An Agile Toolkit (book). Addison Wesley, 2003. Added August 2005.
SCRUM method (after a term in rugby): Control Chaos, Mountain Goat Software, Jeff Sutherland. Links current June 2005.
Ken Schwaber and Mike Beedle. Agile Software Development with Scrum (book). Microsoft Press?, 2002. Added August 2005.
Ken Schwaber. Agile Project Management with Scrum (book). Microsoft Press, 2004. Added August 2005.
June 24th, 2006 at 5:22 am
Participatory design can be thought of as a variation of user-centered design in which practitioners are actively involved in design and decision making, often over a period of time. Andrew Clement, who is on the faculty in Information Studies at the University of Toronto, has published on the topic and is active in the Participatory Design conferences. A brief overview is found at http://www.kmdi.org/kmd1001F/clement.ppt
June 15th, 2007 at 4:04 pm
Two resources address User Centered Design in the agile method:
http://www.agilemodeling.com/essays/agileUsability.htm
http://agileproductdesign.com