All it does is let leadership not define what they actually want, and make changes on the fly, which leads to longer dev times and worse code. Fuck agile, bring back waterfall.

  • yesterdayshero@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    11 months ago

    I disagree. I’m currently working in agile and it’s the best team I’ve worked in/with. It can easily go wrong, but it can also work really effectively. Implementing agile in an “ok” way, is still better than waterfall in most instances. Of course it depends on the business context.

    Take all of OPs complaints for example. Sure, they can be an issue if agile is implemented poorly (or not at all in OPs case), but all of them are inherent issues with waterfall. Developing something only to find out days before launch the business has something else in mind. There would be much less chance of that happening in an agile environment over something like waterfall.

    There’s a big problem with people saying they work in agile, when they’re really not. Like in OPs instance. And that leads to the negative sentiment about agile never working. I get it, I’ve been there and had to work in agile teams that weren’t really agile. That doesn’t mean it can never work.

    • ttmrichter@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      11 months ago

      Take all of <anti-communist>'s complaints for example. Sure, they can be an issue if <communism> is implemented poorly (or not at all in <anti-communist>'s case), but all of them are inherent issues with <capitalism>.

      If you’re making constant excuses bout “implemented poorly” and the majority (I’d argue all) instances of your approach are “implemented poorly” and thus fail, then the issue is your approach.

      • yesterdayshero@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        11 months ago

        So if all approaches are poor, then anarchy? I think you need to move on from the communism comparison, and the idea that unless something is perfect it’s not worth doing.

        Believe it or not, there are people working in successful agile teams right now. Just because you haven’t, that doesn’t mean it isn’t tenable.

        • ttmrichter@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          1
          arrow-down
          1
          ·
          11 months ago

          Please point where I said we should just do what we want (anarchy). (Hint: this is not possible.)

          Let me quote what I actually said , K?

          If you’re making constant excuses about “implemented poorly” and the majority of (I’d argue all) instances of your approach are “implemented poorly” and thus fail, then the issue is your approach.

          (I corrected a couple of minor typos.)

          Now let me take this apart.

          If you’re …

          The conditional is very important here.

          … making constant excuses …

          So is the word “constant”.

          … about “implemented poorly” …

          This is the crux of the argument. If your argument in support of a system is that its failures are all “implemented poorly”…

          … and the majority of (I’d argue all) instances of your approach are “implemented poorly” …

          … and if most of the attempts to use your approach are mysteriously “implemented poorly” …

          and thus fail, then the issue is your approach.

          … then the problem is your approach, not the implementation of it. Good systems fail safe. Good systems do not require perfection in implementation to see benefits. Good systems, if imperfectly applied, should at the very least not be worse than the alternatives.

          In most cases (and again I’d actually argue all, but that’s a personal bias) of “agile” the system fails and turns into a clusterfuck worse than the approaches it tries to replace. It does not fail safe. And whenever this is pointed out, invariably someone comes out of the scrum to point accusing fingers at where it was “implemented poorly”.

          But you know what? There are engineering processes that even when people fail at elements of them you still see actual improvement in outcomes from trying to apply them. I don’t see this in agile. Ever. It, like communism, requires people to be perfect little robots doing every piece of the system perfectly to achieve the purported grand benefits.

          And I ain’t buyin’.


          Incidentally, would you mind sharing with me what you think ‘waterfall’ is? I have a suspicion what picture you’re going to share and if you do, I’m afraid I will laugh at you.

          • yesterdayshero@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            arrow-up
            1
            ·
            11 months ago

            Agile isn’t meant to replace anything. You need to use the right method for your context. No one said the purpose of agile is to replace all other methods.

            Agile doesn’t have to be implemented perfectly to work. You seem to be holding agile to some higher standard than anything else.

            You have to get over the communism comparisons. They aren’t relevant.

            Just because you haven’t worked in an agile environment you enjoyed, that doesn’t mean it can’t work. It can and does work. Just like any other method. And it can and does fail. Just like any other method.

            OP didn’t work in agile. They were told that they were working in agile but it was just an excuse for the business to not have requirements and continually change their mind. Every one of the issues they raised could have happened in any other methodology. It’s poor management.