
The earlier your Release Management works the more stable your Architecture
Address
Charles Edwards charles.edwards@processwave.co.uk
Charles Edwards - November 2002
Chances are, we have probably all experienced nightmare release procedures. Put it this way, you’d be very fortunate if you hadn’t! As projects mature, release procedures tend to get better, sometimes far too late in the life cycle of the project, though. The trick is to aim for getting the release management working as early as possible – ideally sometime in the Inception phase. The earlier the Release Management works, the more stable the architecture will tend to be. Let’s take a look at Release managing a “Hello World” candidate Architecture as an example of a starting point for the project Release management.
Chances are, we have probably all experienced nightmare release procedures. Put it this way, you’d be very fortunate if you hadn’t! As projects mature, release procedures tend to get better, sometimes far too late in the life cycle of the project, though. The trick is to aim for getting the release management working as early as possible – ideally sometime in the Inception phase. The earlier the Release Management works, the more stable the architecture will tend to be. Let’s take a look at Release managing a “Hello World” candidate Architecture as an example of a starting point for the project Release management.
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