Kodsnack 141 - We end up with everybody being better
Kodsnack - Podcast tekijän mukaan Kristoffer, Fredrik, Tobias - Tiistaisin
Fredrik talks to Sallyann Freudenberg - “Agile/Lean coach and practitioner, psychology of software development researcher, neuro-diversity advocate, ageing punk-rocker.” - about her research into pair programming, offices for everyone and how people actually (do not) split work when pair programming.
We also discuss what makes an expert an expert? What are lists and verbalization really good for? Research versus practise and how and what each side can learn from the other. And why the rift is there in the first place. The goals and methods of the two groups are pretty different.
We talked ina surprisingly noisy hotel lobby, so apologies for all the background noise. The conversation is clear enough that further filtering mostly made everything sound worse.
This episode was recorded during the developer conference Øredev 2015, where Sallyann gave a keynote presentation.
Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS!
Comments, questions or tips? We are @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @isallmaroon och @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed on [email protected] if you want to write something longer. We read everything you send.
If you like Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes!
Links
- Understanding and supporting neurodiversity in software development- Sallyann’s keynote at Øredev 2015
- Sallyann’s research
- Etnographic studies
- Legitimate peripheral participation
- Laura Plonka
- Neurodiversity
- The art of thought - Graham Wallas in 1926 on the four stages of creativity
- Daniel Friedman
- Ivan Moore - tea-driven development
- Micki Chi
- Verbal overshadowing
- Cognitive offload
- Laurent Bossavit - The leprechauns of software engineering
Titles
- More about everything
- Commercial pair programmers
- The softer, broader stuff
- The benefits of pair programming
- We end up with everybody being better
- Knocking down all the offices with sledge hammers
- What I’d like to see is a blended environment
- 14500 pieces of pair programmer dialogue
- We want to think we’re so structured
- Everybody needs a quiet space from time to time
- My sample size of one