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  • Revisiting the Iterative Incremental Mona Lisa
    To illustrate what Iterative Incremental means I’ve taken Jeff’s Mona Lisa illustrations and added a third showing a combined Iterative Incremental approach I’ll start with recapping Jeff’s explanation On Incremental development Jeff says…
  • The Mona Lisa: An Agile Metaphor - LinkedIn
    In my search for metaphors, I found several examples of people using works of art – like the Mona Lisa – to elaborate on how iterations differ from, and enhance, incremental delivery
  • Don’t Know What I Want, But I Know How to Get It
    If you’d just like the Mona Lisa slides, you can grab those here The general ideas here are written in a StickyMinds com article with a little less ranting You might share that version with your boss
  • Incremental or iterative? - Scrum Kanban
    Many of you will be familiar with Jeff Patton’s explanation of iterative and incremental using the Mona Lisa I’ve used it many time to explain the difference between iterative and incremental But I’ve always thought there’s a better analogy out there
  • Iterations vs Increments (Mona Lisa and Mrs Fox)
    The Mona Lisa, which is hidden behind glass in a very crowded room in The Louvre, Paris is actually one of two paintings The second, far less famous version can be found in an uncrowded room in the Museo del Prada with nothing separating you from the oil on canvas
  • What do iterative and incremental mean in Agile?
    The following Mona Lisa painting figure from Jeff Patton is also a well know one The bottom row shows a correct example of a staged or incremental delivery The top row shows on the one hand five iterations of the Mona Lisa painting and on the other hand you could stop after step 2 or 3, so, it’s also an incremental approach
  • 8 Incremental Delivery and Continuous Improvement - Springer
    For a Mona Lisa painting, it would mean a pencil draft, then a few basic shades, then the colors, then finishing – each of those steps requires work on all the painting, just at a different level of detail
  • Andy Warhol explains Incremental and Iterative Development - Agile Canon
    You will paint the top 5cm of your work, Mona Lisa, in the first increment, which takes a week, the next 5cm in the second increment, etc until you finally finish the Mona Lisa After 10 increments, you might be able to try it out on your patron
  • Agile Manifesto | Principle 1 - Gladwell Academy
    The following picture trilogy demonstrates the difference between an incremental painting of Mona Lisa, an iterative one and a combined one In the incremental approach, the Mona Lisa is painted step by step, as if put together by puzzle pieces, started off at an arbitrary corner
  • More Scrum basics — what’s the point anyway? | by Agile_Ed - Medium
    Oil Painting Jeff Patton’s Mona Lisa diagram is pretty well known: I think this illustrates the point pretty well, but you could argue it’s a bit simplistic and doesn’t represent a practical





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