PM frameworks
- Requirements – what do you need to be able to do to complete the project
- Planning – outlining the needs and requirements on how to complete the project
- Design – how you are going to complete the project
- Implementation – how will the skills needed be used to complete the project
- Test – testing what you have done to see if it works
- Evaluation – how well did the project go, where it went right and wrong
- Maintenance – how will what you made continue to work afterwards
Raspberry pie
Sensors - sonar/ultrasound, camera, temp sensor, IR sensor
Agile methodology
Agile methodology is a style of project management that is adaptable
scrum
Scrum methodology is based on a set of specific procedures and roles that must be thoroughly followed through the development process, its a flexible methodology that rewards productive team members
Kanban
a basic framework for project managers, allowing them to efficiently manage and track their projects. it is very adaptable within an existing organisation setting, so can be very useful
Lean
lean management ensures all activities go though the process monthly and promptly, it is about speeding up processes and lowering costs by doing things such as finding people in the team who can help, instead of hiring experts
Sprint
in Scrum, a sprint (also known as "iterations") is a set of tasks, milestones, or deliverables that a team works on for a set amount of time, it divides the project plan into manageable chunks in which smaller targets can be achieved
Waterfall methodology
waterfall methodology is a linear approach to development, emphasising step by step process
Spiral model
spiral model has 4 repeating phases, Planning, Risk analysis, Engineering, and evaluation
Rapid application development
RAD is an agile software development process that emphasises prototype releases and revisions as quickly as possible, unlike waterfall, it priorities feedback over precise planning
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