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{{TextBoxWithTitle | Interesting science fact of the month |
 
{{TextBoxWithTitle | Interesting science fact of the month |
 
This [http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002421 research] could be a profound milestone in science; it hints at the real core, subtle mechanism of memory encoding. it involves interaction of calcium-calmodulin dependent kinase complex II and tubulin protein compounds, which occupy the interiors of brain neurons. [[Interesting Things|More at the Interesting Things Blog... ]]
 
This [http://www.ploscompbiol.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002421 research] could be a profound milestone in science; it hints at the real core, subtle mechanism of memory encoding. it involves interaction of calcium-calmodulin dependent kinase complex II and tubulin protein compounds, which occupy the interiors of brain neurons. [[Interesting Things|More at the Interesting Things Blog... ]]
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{{TextBoxIcon1 | [http://www.craiglarman.com/wiki/downloads/applying_uml/larman-ch6-applying-evolutionary-use-cases.pdf Use Case Primer]
 
{{TextBoxIcon1 | [http://www.craiglarman.com/wiki/downloads/applying_uml/larman-ch6-applying-evolutionary-use-cases.pdf Use Case Primer]
 
40 pages on skillful modeling with use cases. Some extremists incorrectly declare that applying use cases is a bad practice. Nonsense! Applied skillfully, with agility, and in an evolutionary lightweight approach, use cases can be of great value.   
 
40 pages on skillful modeling with use cases. Some extremists incorrectly declare that applying use cases is a bad practice. Nonsense! Applied skillfully, with agility, and in an evolutionary lightweight approach, use cases can be of great value.   

Revision as of 20:38, 11 August 2012

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Usually consulting; sometimes do interesting public events...

Date Event Location Register
Oct 9-12 Agile Design and Modeling for Advanced Object Design with Patterns                     Oslo, NO here








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Craig Larman

Management consultant, and author of some popular texts on agile methods and on software analysis & design:


My current focus is scaling lean and agile methods for a single product group of 200 to 2000 people (Asia, Europe & NA—usually multisite including offshore), and large (10,000+ people) enterprise transformations to lean and agile methods. Collecting these as Large-Scale Scrum. Much of my work is in large embedded systems (telecomm, control systems, printers, ...), investment banking, and energy and exploration industries.



What's New




  • After my QCon keynote in London, wrote a short InfoQ article on practices for scaling agile design, that includes a free download of the Design & Architecture chapter from our Practices for Scaling book




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some of my books...

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