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'''Adaptive
The word ''speculate'' refers to the [[paradox]] of planning – it is more likely to assume that all [[Project stakeholder|stakeholder]]s are comparably wrong for certain aspects of the project’s mission, while trying to define it. During speculation, the project is initiated and adaptive cycle planning is conducted.
▲ASD replaces the traditional [[waterfall model|waterfall]] cycle with a repeating series of ''speculate'', ''collaborate'', and ''learn'' cycles. This dynamic cycle provides for continuous learning and adaptation to the emergent state of the project. The characteristics of an ASD life cycle are that it is mission focused, feature based, iterative, timeboxed, risk driven, and change tolerant.
Adaptive cycle planning uses project initiation information—the customer’s
mission statement, project constraints (e.g., delivery dates or user descriptions), and
basic requirements—to define the set of release cycles (software increments) that
will be required for the project.
''Collaboration'' refers to the efforts for balancing the work based on predictable parts of the environment (planning and guiding them) and adapting to the uncertain surrounding mix of changes caused by various factors, such as technology, requirements, stakeholders, software vendors. The ''learning'' cycles, challenging all stakeholders, are based on the short iterations with design, build and testing. During these iterations the knowledge is gathered by making small mistakes based on false assumptions and correcting those mistakes, thus leading to greater experience and eventually mastery in the problem ___domain.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.adaptivesd.com/articles/messy.htm|title=Messy, Exciting, and Anxiety-Ridden: Adaptive Software Development|access-date=2007-05-18|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171004140236/http://www.adaptivesd.com/articles/messy.htm|archive-date=2017-10-04|url-status=dead}}</ref>
==References==
{{reflist}}
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*{{cite book | author = Lev Virine & Michael Trumper | year = 2007 | title = Project Decisions: The Art and Science | publisher = Management Concepts | isbn = 978-1-56726-217-9}}
*''Software Engineering: A Practitioner's Approach, Roger Pressman, Bruce Maxim.'' {{ISBN|978-0078022128}}
▲[[Category:Software development]]
[[Category:Software development process]]
[[Category:Agile software development]]
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