Agilt
Agilt is a term that often refers to agile methodologies, particularly in software development. These methodologies emphasize iterative and incremental development, where projects are broken down into smaller, manageable cycles called sprints or iterations. The core principles of agile include valuing individuals and interactions over processes and tools, working software over comprehensive documentation, customer collaboration over contract negotiation, and responding to change over following a plan. Agile frameworks such as Scrum and Kanban are widely adopted to facilitate these principles. Scrum, for instance, involves a product owner, a scrum master, and a development team, with regular meetings for planning, daily stand-ups, reviews, and retrospectives. Kanban focuses on visualizing workflow and limiting work in progress to improve efficiency. The adoption of agile practices aims to increase flexibility, speed up delivery, and improve the quality of products by incorporating feedback early and often. It is a departure from traditional, linear approaches like the Waterfall model. The term "agilt" itself is not a formal, universally defined term but is generally understood as a descriptor of these agile ways of working.