Mik Kersten
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Mik Kersten

Mik Kersten började sin karriär som forskare på Xerox PARC där han skapade den första aspektorienterade utvecklingsmiljön. Han var sedan pionjär i integrationen av utvecklingsverktyg med Agile och DevOps som en del av sin doktorsexamen i datavetenskap vid University of British Columbia. Mik grundade Tasktop utifrån den forskningen och har skrivit över en miljon rader öppen källkod som fortfarande används idag, och han har tagit sju framgångsrika produkter med öppen källkod och kommersiella produkter till marknaden. Miks erfarenheter av att arbeta med några av de största digitala omvandlingarna i världen har fått honom att identifiera den kritiska bristen på kontakt mellan företagsledare och tekniker. Sedan dess har Mik arbetat med att skapa nya verktyg och ett nytt ramverk - Flow Framework™ - för att koppla samman nätverk för värdeskapande av programvara och möjliggöra övergången från projekt till produkt. Mik bor med sin familj i Vancouver, Kanada, och reser världen över för att dela med sig av sin vision om att förändra hur programvara byggs. Han är författare till Project To Product, en bok som hjälper IT-organisationer att överleva och blomstra i programvarans tidsålder.

Announcing ‘Project to Product’ book and the Flow Framework™

I’m delighted to announce that my book Project to Product will be released at the DevOps Enterprise Summit 2018 (Las Vegas), on Oct 22, 2018. As startups disrupt every market and tech giants pull further ahead of entrenched businesses, the majority of enterprise IT organizations are facing an existential crisis. Either they quickly become much...

How to Guarantee Failure in Your Agile DevOps Transformation

Many organizations make the same mistakes when it comes to scaling Agile and DevOps and then attempt to rectify those mistakes by formulating a new strategy—only to miss the real reasons why the initiative failed. As someone who helps companies through software delivery transformations, I’ve seen my share of ineffective behaviors. What I find most...

Announcing the Tasktop DevOps Integration Hub

Some of the most interesting problems in technology only surface at scale.  For the past few years, the majority of Tasktop’s customers have been using Sync to achieve scaled Agile. Without tool chain integration, it is impossible to get hundreds or thousands of IT staff adopting enterprise Agile methodologies such as SAFe, DAD, Scrum.org’s Nexus...

How the code in your car is paving the future of software delivery

“The future is already here — it’s just not very evenly distributed.” – William Gibson If you’re looking to predict how things should work in the future, start by looking in the right places in the present.  Innovations in technology, management and collaboration that will change the way we work are already up and running...

Tasktop 4.4 Released: Identity and Traceability across the DevOps Pipeline

At last week’s DevOps Enterprise Summit we got to hear how industry leaders are transforming the way that software is built.  Most speakers told stories of automating the build, release or continuous delivery pipeline, and the cultural transformation that followed. One talk stood out from all the others because it described a transformation that went...

Premium grade fuel for software lifecycle analytics engines

I’ve long taken inspiration from Peter Drucker’s caution that “if you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it.” Technological progress has been punctuated by advances in measurement, ranging from Galileo’s telescope to Intel’s obsession with nanometers. Our industry is starting to go through a profound transformation in measuring how software is built, but only after...

New Tasktop Data product launched with Tasktop 4.0, unlocks Agile, ALM and DevOps

From Galileo’s telescope to the scanning electron microscope, scientific progress has been punctuated by the technology that enabled new forms of measurement. Yet in the discipline of software delivery, robust measurement has been elusive. When I set out on a mission to double developer productivity, I ended up spending a good portion of my PhD...