There is, of course, no shortage of management tools for Agile software development. But none of them seem to be targeted at developers, small teams, or first-level managers. They seem to attempt to implement in software everything in any particular Agile methodology (for example Scrum and XP). They attempt to manage across the entire organization, especially highlighting managing above the project to the program and enterprise levels and in doing so become mostly an effort tracking system where developers become resources and are simply required to enter time spent on tasks. They also attempt to track all aspects of development by integrating testing (test tasks and test results) and defect tracking. By being all things to all people, the eventual interface become useless for a developer in their day-to-day development. By trying to provide a "complete" picture of a project's status, their interfaces become a mass of "percent complete" statistics where any particular stat one is looking for is not quickly identifiable.
S. Thomas Steiner. Proceedings of the 1st International Workshop on Knowledge Extraction & Consolidation from Social Media in conjunction with the 11th International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC 2012), volume 895 of CEUR Workshop Proceedings, page 7-12. Boston, USA, CEUR-WS.org, (12 November 2012)
Y. Dangor, S. Miller, H. Koornhof, and R. Ballard. European Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases: Official Publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology, 11 (10):
930--934(October 1992)PMID: 1486890.
G. Biegel, and V. Cahill. Proceedings of the Second IEEE International Conference on Pervasive Computing and Communications (PerCom'04), page 361--. Washington, DC, USA, IEEE Computer Society, (2004)
R. Mansell, U. Wehn, and N. Unidas. Oxford University Press for the United Nations, New York, (1998)Robin Mansell and Uta Wehn, editors ; for the United Nations Commission on Science and Technology for Development; :grà f; Bibliografia. Ãndex; BibliografÃa. Ãndice.
M. Sharma. (1001 1990)NT: Keynote address delivered at the International Conference on Educational Technology: The Future (New Delhi, India, October 31-November 3, 1990).; LV: Available online; EM: 1991.