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Scrum Development History on Timeline 1995 - 2003
from deck Scrum Know-How Presentation Visuals (PPT diagrams)

History

Slide Content

The slide provides a timeline of the history of Agile and Scrum developments from 1995 to 2003. In 1995, the OOPSLA conference took place, which is likely significant to the development of Agile methods. 2001 marks the creation of the Agile Manifesto, a defining moment in the history of software development. By 2001, the book "Agile Software Development with Scrum" was published, disseminating Scrum methodologies. In 2002, the first Scrum Master education began, implying the formalization of Scrum training. Finally, in 2003, the Scrum Alliance was founded, institutionalizing Scrum as a widespread methodology.

Graphical Look

  • The slide has a clean, professional design with a light background.
  • At the top, there is a large, bold title "History" centered on the page.
  • Below the title, there is a horizontal timeline with dates and milestones.
  • Five rectangular banners with diagonal stripe pattern backgrounds represent the milestones on the timeline.
  • Each banner contains a short description of a key event or publication.
  • The timeline landmarks are connected by a thick, grey line with circular nodes that have year labels (1995, 2001, 2002, 2003).
  • The design includes a subtle shadow effect behind the banners, giving a slight 3D appearance.
  • On the top right, there is an icon of a book with an orange bookmark to represent the publication of a book.

The overall look of the slide is clear and focused, using visual elements to effectively convey the historical milestones. The timeline is easy to follow and provides an at-a-glance understanding of the sequence of events.

Use Cases

  • To provide a historical overview of key events and milestones during a presentation on Agile methodologies.
  • As part of a training or educational session on the history and evolution of Scrum and Agile practices.
  • In a corporate or organizational setting when introducing the concept of Scrum to stakeholders unfamiliar with its background.
  • To set the stage in a workshop or seminar before delving into deeper aspects of Agile and Scrum frameworks.

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