Gerald M. Weinberg, as quoted in Craig Larman, Victor R. Basili: Iterative and Incremental Development: A Brief History. In: IEEE Computer. 36. Jahrgang, Nr.3, Juni 2003, S.47–56, doi:10.1109/MC.2003.1204375 (englisch, acm.org): “Although many view iterative and incremental development as a modern practice, its application dates as far back as the mid-1950s.” "We were doing incremental development as early as 1957 in Los Angeles, under the direction of Bernie Dimsdale at IBM's Service Bureau Corporation. He was a colleague of John von Neumann, so perhaps he learned it there, or assumed it as totally natural. I do remember Herb Jacobs (primarily, though we all participated) developing a large simulation for Motorola, where the technique used was, as far as I can tell ... All of us, as far as I can remember, thought waterfalling of a huge project was rather stupid, or at least ignorant of the realities. I think what the waterfall description did for us was make us realize that we were doing something else, something unnamed except for 'software development.'"
Gerald M. Weinberg, as quoted in Craig Larman, Victor R. Basili: Iterative and Incremental Development: A Brief History. In: IEEE Computer. 36. Jahrgang, Nr.3, Juni 2003, S.47–56, doi:10.1109/MC.2003.1204375 (englisch, acm.org): “Although many view iterative and incremental development as a modern practice, its application dates as far back as the mid-1950s.” "We were doing incremental development as early as 1957 in Los Angeles, under the direction of Bernie Dimsdale at IBM's Service Bureau Corporation. He was a colleague of John von Neumann, so perhaps he learned it there, or assumed it as totally natural. I do remember Herb Jacobs (primarily, though we all participated) developing a large simulation for Motorola, where the technique used was, as far as I can tell ... All of us, as far as I can remember, thought waterfalling of a huge project was rather stupid, or at least ignorant of the realities. I think what the waterfall description did for us was make us realize that we were doing something else, something unnamed except for 'software development.'"
Tom Gilb: Evolutionary development. In: ACM SIGSOFT Software Engineering Notes. 6. Jahrgang, Nr.2, 1. April 1981, S.17, doi:10.1145/1010865.1010868 (englisch).
Julio Cesar Pereira, Rosaria de F.S.M. Russo: Design Thinking Integrated in Agile Software Development: A Systematic Literature Review. In: Procedia Computer Science. Band138, 2018, S.775–782, doi:10.1016/j.procs.2018.10.101 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 22. Juli 2022]).
Subhajit Datta: Agility Measurement Index: A Metric for the Crossroads of Software Development Methodologies. ACM, New York NY 2006, ISBN 1-59593-315-8, S.271–273, doi:10.1145/1185448.1185509.
elsevier.com
linkinghub.elsevier.com
Julio Cesar Pereira, Rosaria de F.S.M. Russo: Design Thinking Integrated in Agile Software Development: A Systematic Literature Review. In: Procedia Computer Science. Band138, 2018, S.775–782, doi:10.1016/j.procs.2018.10.101 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 22. Juli 2022]).