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Abid Quereshi on No Such Thing as the Agile Manifesto

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Manage episode 522488203 series 2582224
Content provided by The Mob Mentality Show. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Mob Mentality Show or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this Mob Mentality Show episode, we sit down with Abid Qureshi for a candid and eye-opening look at what Agile Software Development was meant to be versus what the industry turned it into. If you’ve ever wondered why “Agile” feels bloated today, why teams still struggle to adapt quickly, or why universities are still teaching outdated models like Waterfall, this conversation will hit home.
Abid shares his perspective on why the original movement focused on lightweight methods, experimentation, and uncovering better ways of developing software. He explains how the software industry drifted toward heavyweight processes and off-the-shelf frameworks, and what gets lost when organizations treat Agile as a set of fixed best practices (independent of a code context) instead of an ever evolving software craft. He also challenges long-held assumptions about technical excellence, design, and the true sources of agility in modern software development.
We dig into:
- The contrast between early agile software development and what “Agile” represents today.
- Why the title “Agile Manifesto” is misleading and what the document was actually about.
- How advances in technology, object-oriented programming, automated testing, and continuous integration made genuine agility possible.
- Why real adaptability comes from reducing the cost of change, not adding more process.
- The danger of scaling up bureaucracy instead of scaling down and improving engineering practices.
- How non-technical contributors sometimes unlock unconventional, high-value ideas that technical experts overlook.
- Why many higher education programs still teach waterfall-style thinking and how that hurts new developers entering the industry.
- The missed opportunity for universities to lead innovation in software development instead of echoing outdated industry norms.
If you care about XP, Lean thinking, software craftsmanship, technical excellence, or getting back to the heart of agility, this episode offers a practical and refreshing reset. Abid’s stories and insights challenge the assumptions that hold teams back and point toward a more grounded, engineering-driven approach to modern software development.
Video and Show Notes: https://youtu.be/nJI-veSJdkQ

  continue reading

128 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 522488203 series 2582224
Content provided by The Mob Mentality Show. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Mob Mentality Show or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this Mob Mentality Show episode, we sit down with Abid Qureshi for a candid and eye-opening look at what Agile Software Development was meant to be versus what the industry turned it into. If you’ve ever wondered why “Agile” feels bloated today, why teams still struggle to adapt quickly, or why universities are still teaching outdated models like Waterfall, this conversation will hit home.
Abid shares his perspective on why the original movement focused on lightweight methods, experimentation, and uncovering better ways of developing software. He explains how the software industry drifted toward heavyweight processes and off-the-shelf frameworks, and what gets lost when organizations treat Agile as a set of fixed best practices (independent of a code context) instead of an ever evolving software craft. He also challenges long-held assumptions about technical excellence, design, and the true sources of agility in modern software development.
We dig into:
- The contrast between early agile software development and what “Agile” represents today.
- Why the title “Agile Manifesto” is misleading and what the document was actually about.
- How advances in technology, object-oriented programming, automated testing, and continuous integration made genuine agility possible.
- Why real adaptability comes from reducing the cost of change, not adding more process.
- The danger of scaling up bureaucracy instead of scaling down and improving engineering practices.
- How non-technical contributors sometimes unlock unconventional, high-value ideas that technical experts overlook.
- Why many higher education programs still teach waterfall-style thinking and how that hurts new developers entering the industry.
- The missed opportunity for universities to lead innovation in software development instead of echoing outdated industry norms.
If you care about XP, Lean thinking, software craftsmanship, technical excellence, or getting back to the heart of agility, this episode offers a practical and refreshing reset. Abid’s stories and insights challenge the assumptions that hold teams back and point toward a more grounded, engineering-driven approach to modern software development.
Video and Show Notes: https://youtu.be/nJI-veSJdkQ

  continue reading

128 episodes

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