Agile Glossary

Information Radiators

What is Information Radiators?

“Information radiator” is the generic term for any of a number of handwritten, drawn, printed, or electronic displays that a team places in a highly visible location, so that all team members, as well as passers-by, can see the latest information at a glance: count of automated tests, velocity, incident reports, continuous integration status, and so on.

Also Known As

  • a related term, nearly synonymous, is “Big Visible Chart”
  • more generally, one speaks of “informative workspaces

Expected Benefits

Intensive use of information radiators conveys two messages in addition to the information itself:

  • the team has nothing to hide from its visitors (customers, stakeholders…)
  • the team has nothing to hide from itself: it acknowledges and confronts problems

The main benefit of the practice is therefore to promote responsibility among the team members. A secondary benefit is that information radiators tend to provoke conversation when outsiders visit, which can yield useful ideas.

Origins

  • 1980s: the notion of “visual control” originating in the Toyota Production System is in anticipation of “information radiators”
  • 1999: the term “Big Visible Chart” is coined by Kent Beck in “Extreme Programming Explained”, though later attributed by Beck to Martin Fowler
  • 2001: the term “information radiator” is coined by Alistair Cockburn, part of an extended metaphor that equates the movement of information with the dispersion of heat and gas

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Additional Agile Glossary Terms

Refactoring consists of improving the internal structure of an existing program's source code, while preserving its external behavior.
A sprint backlog is the subset of product backlog that a team targets to deliver during a sprint to accomplish the sprint goal and progress toward an outcome.
The acronym INVEST stands for a set of criteria used to assess the quality of a user story. If the story fails to meet one of these criteria, the team may want to reword it.
"Integration" (or "integrating") refers to any efforts still required for a project team to deliver a product suitable for release as a functional whole.
In an Agile context, Incremental Development is when each successive version of a product is usable, and each builds upon the previous version by adding user-visible functionality.

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