1. www.Yourtechnicaldebt.info
Yourtechnicaldebt info SmartViper Statistics Mashups. Credit card, related posts, macbook pro related sites. Advanced keyword suggestions. Last updated on September 29 2010.
2. Refinance Your Technical Debt Just Like Your Mortgage
Technical debt always has the same 3 questions: How much is the technical debt really costing us? How much will it cost to pay down this
3. Coding Horror: Paying Down Your Technical Debt
Paying Down Your Technical Debt. Every software project I've ever worked on has accrued technical debt over time: Technical Debt is a wonderful metaphor developed by Ward ...
4. Start Paying your Technical Debt – The Mikado Method « Thoughts ...
Start Paying your Technical Debt – The Mikado Method. 28 Mar 2009 16 Comments. by danielbrolund in agile, debt, development, refactoring, software design Tags: agile, development, mikado ...
5. Assessing Your Technical Debt | Cutter Consortium
Helping organizations leverage technology for competitive advantage and business success through content, training, and consulting
6. Sonar » Evaluate your technical debt with Sonar
SONAR is an open source quality management platform, dedicated to continuously analyze and measure source code quality, from the portfolio to the method.
7. Do you have an Action Plan to Tackle your Technical Debt? - Derik ...
Agile .NET ALT.NET ... As a general rule all software development teams will create technical debt during the construction of their product.
8. codeartisan: What's the APR on your technical debt?
Today we're going to discuss technical debt--what it is, what its impact is, and what to do about it. One of the key tenets of scrum and other agile development methodologies is the ...
9. Download Sonar 2.3 for Linux - Put your technical debt under ...
Sonar Put your technical debt under control ... Sonar is an open platform to manage code quality. As such, it covers in its core version the 7 axes of code quality.
10. Avoid bankruptcy ! Manage your technical debt. | Fred Beringer
The term technical debt was first introduced by Ward Cunningham and is a metaphor to describe the consequences of quick and dirty software architecture and development.