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Announcing the 45th Eastern Primitive Rendezvous

The 45th Eastern Primitive Rendezvous takes place September 23-October 1, 2022.   For more information, visit the official EPR website and Facebook group . We will be hosting the 45th Eastern Primitive Rendezvous on our family farm, near East Smithfield, PA. The dates are September 23 - October 1, 2022.  This is a living-history event depicting 18th-century activities. Visitors can tour the camp each day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.  Tuesday, September 27 is School Tours Day, during which we welcome classes from all of the area schools. Campers need to preregister ( nrlhf.org/pdf/pre-reg.pdf ), and period-correct clothing and gear are required.  For the exact location and more details, visit the  official EPR website  and Facebook group . For those of you who attended the 2017 EPR, this is the same location.
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45th Eastern Primitive Rendezvous: Nearby Museums and Historical Sites

The 45th Eastern Primitive Rendezvous takes place September 23-October 1, 2022.   For more information, visit the official EPR website and Facebook group . The following is a list of museums and historical sites within an hour or so's driving distance from the 45th EPR campsite. Other places of interest will be added to this list as time goes on. This information also will be included in the event's Gate Book, which campers will receive upon arrival. Bradford County Farm Museum Alparon Community Park RR 14; Troy, PA Distance from EPR Camp: 14 miles Call for Hours: (570) 297-3410 theheritagevillage.org Bradford County Historical Society 109 Pine Street; Towanda, PA Distance from EPR Camp: 14.5 miles Call for Hours: (570) 265-2240 bradfordhistory.com Chemung Valley Historical Society and Museum 415 E Water St, Elmira, NY 14901 Distance from EPR Camp: 19.3 miles Call for Hours: (607) 734-4167 chemungvalleymuseum.org Corning Museum of Glass 1 Mu

get it done with trello, part ii

Everyone likes to think that the meeting they're sitting in is productive and staying on track. One of the best things about using a Kanban system is that it provides a highly visual representation of your team's progress. I've found that Trello works great for conducting meetings, work sessions, and other group activities. After all, what is a meeting but a short-duration collaborative project? If you go into every meeting with an agenda — as you should — then you have a predefined set of items for the To Do column. Then it is a matter of simply moving them through the steps required to bring them to conclusion. Furthermore, you can use Trello features such as commenting and voting to capture all sorts of information during the session. Here are a couple of the meetings and work sessions we handle using Trello: Agile Iteration Planning The main part of our Iteration Planning is done by the entire team. Once that is completed, the Scrum Master takes care of a

get it done with trello - part i

Trello  is a highly visual, easy-to-use collaboration tool that lets you organize projects using  Kanban boards. Trello makes it simple to break down projects into components and components into checklists. You can track progress on each component, comment, even vote on tasks or ideas. Fog Creek Software, the maker of Trello, says it will be offered for free, forever. Here are a couple of the ways that our team uses this tool: Project Ideas These are ideas we pitch to our sponsors and stakeholders.  The columns: New Ideas: This is where the idea lives until it grows some legs. Documented Ideas: We've done technical research and requirements gathering. Proposed Ideas: We've pitched the idea. Approved Ideas: Sponsors and stakeholders like the idea. It can now be moved to the Project Backlog. Project Backlog Our Agile team keeps a Trello board for tracking the state of each project. The columns: Accepted: All have agreed that this is a project we will

is your team using fake agile?

So, your team has been practicing Agile for a while, but it's not making a whole lot of difference. Excessive planning sucks up weeks of time before the work even starts. Releases still take forever to accomplish, and you are not delivering value to the customer but once every few months. Iterations don't stay inside their time box but straggle all over the place. Has anything really changed? Maybe not. Because maybe you are using Fake Agile. In the big and overlapping world of The Agiles and their ilk, teams can adopt and fine tune a combination methods — team roles from Scrum, user stories from Lean, project boards from Kanban, pair programming from Extreme. But that does not mean you can borrow one or two techniques and call yourself Agile. You absolutely need to put in place the following: An iterative process in which the customer is an integral part of the team. Base changes and enhancements on customer feedback. Then do it again. And again.  A team environme

Plone Advocate Andreas Mantke to Lead Site-Administration Workshop at 2012 LibreOffice Conference

I just published this article at plone.org on Andreas Mantke, a deputy member of the Board of Directors of the Document Foundation for LibreOffice . Mantke led a workshop for new Plone site administrators in the LibreOffice community during its annual conference last week. See the full article at plone.org/news/andreas-mantke-to-lead-site-administration-workshop .