The Agile Method Idea

General discussion about eValid, its characteristis and applications.

The Agile Method Idea

Postby psmm » Fri Mar 12, 2010 12:45 pm

Hey eValid! How do you think eValid fits into the agile method idea?
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Re: The Agile Method Idea

Postby eValid » Wed Mar 17, 2010 12:52 pm

psmm wrote:Hey eValid! How do you think eValid fits into the agile method idea?

The "agile manifesto" was published in 2001, a creation of a team of some 17 authors who were on a ski vacation in Utah. [Check out the Wikipedia entry for "agile manifesto" for a good read.]

A basic tenant of what from that start has come to be called the "agile methodololgy" is that it is more important to have a working solution than it is to have a lot of fancy planning documentation, detailed design specifications, and all of the other paperwork associated with conventional software development. In a way, the working software is its OWN specification pf what it actually does.

But, where does eValid fit into this picture?

The answer is that eValid is a pretty natural fit to an agile development method for a web application, because eValid makes it very easy to record and edit a functional test, to lift the functional test into a substantial load of activity, and even to scan a website in real time.

We wouldn't say the fit is 100%...but we think that 99% might be a good guess.

The eValid Team
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Re: The Agile Method Idea

Postby johnb62 » Wed Sep 22, 2010 6:00 am

eValid wrote:
psmm wrote:Hey eValid! How do you think eValid fits into the agile method idea?

The "agile manifesto" was published in 2001, a creation of a team of some 17 authors who were on a ski vacation in Utah. [Check out the Wikipedia entry for "agile manifesto" for a good read.]

A basic tenant of what from that start has come to be called the "agile methodololgy" is that it is more important to have a working solution than it is to have a lot of fancy planning documentation, detailed design specifications, and all of the other paperwork associated with conventional software development. In a way, the working software is its OWN specification pf what it actually does.

But, where does eValid fit into this picture?

The answer is that eValid is a pretty natural fit to an agile development method for a web application, because eValid makes it very easy to record and edit a functional test, to lift the functional test into a substantial load of activity, and even to scan a website in real time.

We wouldn't say the fit is 100%...but we think that 99% might be a good guess.

The eValid Team


Thank you for the information. I also needed to know this so I'm very thankful.
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Location: Bellevue, WA


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