Live Demos vs Recorded Demos
Developers should use live demos during agile development cycles, such as sprint reviews or client meetings, to provide tangible evidence of work and facilitate immediate feedback meets developers should learn to create recorded demos when they need to document complex features, onboard new team members, or provide user support without live demonstrations. Here's our take.
Live Demos
Developers should use live demos during agile development cycles, such as sprint reviews or client meetings, to provide tangible evidence of work and facilitate immediate feedback
Live Demos
Nice PickDevelopers should use live demos during agile development cycles, such as sprint reviews or client meetings, to provide tangible evidence of work and facilitate immediate feedback
Pros
- +They are crucial for aligning expectations, identifying issues early, and demonstrating value in contexts like sales pitches, user testing, or team collaborations, helping to reduce misunderstandings and accelerate iteration
- +Related to: agile-development, presentation-skills
Cons
- -Specific tradeoffs depend on your use case
Recorded Demos
Developers should learn to create recorded demos when they need to document complex features, onboard new team members, or provide user support without live demonstrations
Pros
- +This is particularly useful in agile development cycles for sprint reviews, in open-source projects for contributor guidance, or in enterprise settings for training materials and reducing repetitive explanations
- +Related to: screen-capture-software, video-editing
Cons
- -Specific tradeoffs depend on your use case
The Verdict
Use Live Demos if: You want they are crucial for aligning expectations, identifying issues early, and demonstrating value in contexts like sales pitches, user testing, or team collaborations, helping to reduce misunderstandings and accelerate iteration and can live with specific tradeoffs depend on your use case.
Use Recorded Demos if: You prioritize this is particularly useful in agile development cycles for sprint reviews, in open-source projects for contributor guidance, or in enterprise settings for training materials and reducing repetitive explanations over what Live Demos offers.
Developers should use live demos during agile development cycles, such as sprint reviews or client meetings, to provide tangible evidence of work and facilitate immediate feedback
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