Team software process

In combination with the personal software process (PSP), the team software process (TSP) provides a defined operational process framework that is designed to help teams of managers and engineers organize projects and produce software for products that range in size from small projects of several thousand lines of code (KLOC) to very large projects greater than half a million lines of code. The TSP is intended to improve the levels of quality and productivity of a team's software development project, in order to help them better meet the cost and schedule commitments of developing a software system.[1][2][3][4]

The initial version of the TSP was developed and piloted by Watts Humphrey in the late 1990s[5] and the Technical Report[6] for TSP sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense was published in November 2000. The book by Watts Humphrey,[7] Introduction to the Team Software Process, presents a view of the TSP intended for use in academic settings, that focuses on the process of building a software production team, establishing team goals, distributing team roles, and other teamwork-related activities.

  1. ^ Jones, Capers (2009). Software Engineering Best Practices. McGraw-Hill. p. 11. ISBN 9780071621618.
  2. ^ Kindler, Nosh B; Krishnakanthan, Vasantha; Tinaikar, Ranjit. Applying Lean to Application Development. McKinsey Quarterly, May 2007
  3. ^ "Agile Capital Consulting". Archived from the original on February 3, 2018. Retrieved July 3, 2017.
  4. ^ Ker, J. I., Wang, Y., Hajli, M. N., Song, J., & Ker, C. W. (2014). "Deploying lean in healthcare: Evaluating information technology effectiveness in US hospital pharmacies". International Journal of Information Management, 34(4), 556–560.
  5. ^ McAndrews, Donald (1998). "The Team Software ProcessSM (TSPSM): An Overview and Preliminary Results of Using Disciplined Practices". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ Humphrey, Watts. "The Team Software Process" (PDF). Software Engineering Institute.
  7. ^ Humphrey, Watts (1999). Introduction to the Team Software Process. Addison Wesley.

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