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In your opinion what is the best and most effective scrum opensource or freeware tool?
I am interested in your opinion and I look so forward to manage properly my backlog :-)
Trello
I currently use Trello for very simple projects. We also use it for all Stack Exchange planning, from snack to be bought this week to Trello cards with user stories.
Trello basically gives you cards and a virtual board. It's the basics of agile.
Rally
In the past I've been a very happy user of Rally which is totally free for up to 10 users - a good sized team.
Rally gives you stories, burndowns, tasks, sprints, quality and defect tracking.
Other tools
Online Plannning poker
Collaborative sticky notest for retrospectives
Related
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I am doing a source that can manage FOSS one of them is by Black Duck Software which is also known for ohloh.net.
I am wondering if anyone knows quite similar tools ?
Below are some of the alternatives:
Protecode
FOSSology
OSS Discovery (itself having GNU Affero Public License v3)
Palamida
Ninka (itself GNU GPL licensed)
Masterbranch but it seems sadly in standby (or dead?) since its main actors were hired by TalentBin around the beginning of 2013.
Coderwall more focused on developers and teams
Open Source Software Directory (only a search tool)
The Free Software Directory (wiki)
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I love to learn new and better ways to program from good opensource applications written in desired language/using such technology. Now I am digging into Grails and I didn't succeded in searching great and usable opensource application written in Grails. I tried googlecode, github and even the community page on grails documentation webpage. Find nothing really top quality application (missing documentation, too simple and so on). Maybe I missed some, but maybe users of grails have their loved famous app. Could someone recommend me any?
Thank you.
There is a list of open source projects based on Grails here: http://www.grails.org/OpenSource+Projects
One of the best is Graeme Rocher's Building Twitter in 40 minutes demo.
http://www.springsource.com/webinar/building-twitter-with-grails-40-minutes
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As a Microsoft .NET developer I have noticed a marked increase in the number of new Open Source frameworks and software tools that directly impact how your design a software solution. So much so that if you don't happen to be talking to the right person at the right time you may miss a whole major development. I started to wonder if there is anyone out there who is tracking and charting the "most active open source projects" over time. To be able to visualize what are the up and coming and most active open source projects appearing in any given space/category (e.g c#/web development space) would be incredibly useful. Searching around on the web I have only managed to find visualizations of specific projects (e.g. code_swarm and Gource) but nothing tracking Open Source projects over-all.
Do you know of any such sites?
http://www.ohloh.net/ is such a website - provides description, summaries and categorization for many open source projects; shows info about commit activities and lots of other useful info.
for an example check this out - http://www.ohloh.net/p/jQuery/analyses/latest
Hope this helps :o)
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I've seen some complex, enterprise tools for requirements like Rymatech's FeaturePlan -- is there something that enables collaboration and best practices for putting Business-Readable, Domain-Specific (or natural language) requirements and acceptance criteria in place?
Have a look http://sourceforge.net/projects/rth/. An open source tool for requirements management.
You may want to try www.tracecloud.com . Its free (up to 500 requirements) and I have seen some good reviews about it.
There's also GatherSpace - http://gatherspace.com/
I tried it a bit about a year ago. Didn't stick for me, but might work for you.
You could also take a look at SpiraTest which does requirements and test management, some people I know have had some success with it.
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I'm a Lotus Domino programmer who is in between consulting jobs - not by choice the consulting job market really sucks right now.
With some extra time on my hands I would like to receive some SQL training as a resume booster and to expand my skill set.
SQL is something I have used in the past, but I need a way to document my knowledge on my resume.
Can anyone recommend a source of low cost SQL or mySQL training?
Derek
I think the lowest cost training you can get is just reading books from your library or Amazon (links below) and practicing at home. Practice makes perfect!
There is:
Learning MySQL
MySQL 5.0 Certification Study Guide
MySQL in a Nutshell (In a Nutshell (O'Reilly))
If you are really looking for a cheap way, community colleges around my area are offering whole semester MSSQL (exam 70-431 outline) classes. Typical class would have 4 units (in California, community colleges charge $20/unit). Most of these classes are online, so flexibility and convenience are there schedule-wise.
You could go to 4-day bootcamps but those would usually cost $2-3K per class.