IceScrum is an J2EE application for using Scrum while keeping the spirit of a collaborative workspace. It also offers virtual boards with post-its for sprint backlog, product backlog and others.
The tool offers everything that is in Scrum :
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The role management: Product Owner, ScrumMaster, Team member and StakeHolder
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The product backlog management with advanced features for prioritizing stories
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Scrum lifecycle including a roadmap view
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Release planning
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Sprint backlog, as a task board facilitating the Scrum ceremonial
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Management of impediments
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Chart production such as burndown charts, velocity charts, cumulative flow diagram
Icescrum offers others agile practices like :
* Roadmap
* Vision
* Features
* User stories
* Acceptance tests associated to stories
* User roles
* Planning poker
Nuxeo 5 is an innovative, standards-based, open source framework for ECM applications. Its component-based and service-oriented architecture makes it easy to customize and extend, making developers more efficient and ultimately, happier.
Build. Test. Release.
Maestro - the powerful, open source-based solution stack from Mergere, brings best practices to build automation, eliminating most tedious interaction at runtime.
Based on the Apache Software Foundation's Maven, the Mergere's build platform frees developers to focus on writing applications, instead of writing build scripts. Maestro gives development teams the tools to automate, track, audit and analyze their application life cycle, to ensure that builds run from start to finish without issues -- shortening release time-lines, enhancing code quality, and enabling organizations to capture, maintain and reuse project knowledge.
Studies (eg Standish, 1995 et al) show that poor requirements are a prime cause of project failure or insufficiency, yet commercial requirements tools are very expensive. There exists no full-featured Open Source Requirements Architecture tool. This project intends to fill that gap, integrating with other Open Source CASE tools to provide a complete Open Source CASE environment.
Very interesting article, seems to be an extract of the author's book on rapid sw development from 1996 (sic). Many points (especially #4 e.g.) look quite familiar to me.