I look forward to the end of the hype. (not only for agile/scrum, but for all the new silver bullets that come out)
Since I can remember there was always some new thing that would save the software industry
- 2nd generation languages
- 3rd generation languages
- CASE tools
- UML
- OOP
- Java
- CMM (and CMMI)
- Generics
- Design patterns
- .NET
- Outsourcing/offshoring
- Agile/Scrum
- LINQ
- TDD
- and on and on
Please don't misunderstand me. Some of those things listed above are fantastic. I would not dream of going back to the times before I adopted a bunch of them. But they are not replacements for thoughtful work, nor are they sufficient in themselves to solve the problems of our work.
Software development is hard. (non-trivial development anyway) and we need to use all the tools and best practices we can find. No one process or technology is going to save the day - none of these are one-size-fits all. Each company and project team has to choose their own process and tools accordingly. Again, I look forward to getting past the hype again.
The bottom lime: There is no silver bullet. period. http://www.lips.utexas.edu/ee382c-15005/Readings/Readings1/05-Broo87.pdf
Any time you have such high expectations and claims of the kind CASE tools and Agile made, there is bound to be a backlash of similar proportions when those "promises" are not met. Whether the fault lies in bad implementations or unrealistic expectations it does not matter - the result is a backlash.
