Kent Beck who "doesn't care any more what people practice or do w.r.t to TDD" because he uses it as he sees the needs/fits.
Martin Fowler who tries to further his catalogue by incorporating newer patterns/methodologies/techniques (REST, NoSQL, NodeJS, MicroServices) that potentially sees "TDD" as "been there, catalogued that, time to see other patterns"
and last but not least, DHH, who just recently came out to the public and made an announcement that "I don't do TDD anymore!".
Missing from the group: Uncle Bob, someone who will potentially argue that TDD is useful.
Come on guys! We want Uncle Bob there! Let's make this happen.
You make Martin sound like some sort of crazed software lepidopterist, pinning dead patterns to a musty whiteboard. I am sure he'll represent what Thoughtworks does with regards to TDD. I doubt Kent will just lay still either.
I see this debate as more of a Services vs Product development techniques mindset, with TDD as the background track. Shipping vs Consultant is another way to see it.
Martin Fowler is some sort of Principal Engineer or Thought Leader or CTO or Architect or some sort (regardless Services vs Product vs Shipping vs Consultant) for Thoughtworks, an organization that does services and products (check their website :)).
Uncle Bob, on the other hand, is definitely more of a service/consultant person.
"Uncle Bob" goes by Uncle Bob. It's a nickname. He likes it. He's also pretty well respected in the software development world.
Kent Beck invented TDD, I think he's pretty qualified.
DHH is the one who started the recent discussion about the value of TDD; in his opinion, it doesn't have any. He's the reason that this conversation is even happening.
I know who Robert Martin is, and writing tests before implementing it was described I think back in the 60's, though I don't want to disrespect Kent, DHH is trying really hard to make himself a name by sensational titles. Calling yourself as an uncle for unknown people is a dick move though, very pretentious.
Just to sum it up, this whole new pseudohollywars is just Random noise, just like my comment.
Just to be clear, the name "Uncle Bob" was given to me by a coworker in 1989. It was in my email and uunet signature for years. (There are kids out there who don't know what uunet was). The name stuck, and I eventually adopted it as a brand.
Metacomment: Thanks to Thoughtworks (no affiliation) for putting this together, and let's do this more often when this sort of discussion breaks out, it's a fantastic idea. Blog missives have their place in the world, but real debate does too.
Maybe we can have a TDD person with from the rails community if you do another hangout? I have a feeling you'll end up talking past each other because you work on different kinds of things.
This looks interesting, but am I looking at Google Plus correctly and really not seeing an 'Add to calendar' option to put this event on my gmail calendar? I could have sworn Google was really good about making it easy to put stuff on their calendar. Yeesh.
There's a big "are you going to watch?" pane underneath the main header with Yes, Maybe or No options. That seems to do the trick to add it to my calendar.
Kent Beck who "doesn't care any more what people practice or do w.r.t to TDD" because he uses it as he sees the needs/fits.
Martin Fowler who tries to further his catalogue by incorporating newer patterns/methodologies/techniques (REST, NoSQL, NodeJS, MicroServices) that potentially sees "TDD" as "been there, catalogued that, time to see other patterns"
and last but not least, DHH, who just recently came out to the public and made an announcement that "I don't do TDD anymore!".
Missing from the group: Uncle Bob, someone who will potentially argue that TDD is useful.
Come on guys! We want Uncle Bob there! Let's make this happen.