When a sprint review should be held? [closed] - scrum

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Generally a sprint is 2-4 weeks longer. A sprint review meting is required, but I went to know - which time We will arrange Sprint Review ; at the end of a sprint ? or , in the middle of a sprint ?

The Sprint Review is performed every time a Sprint ends, during this meeting the team analyzes what went right and wrong during the Sprint with a view to the next Sprint is carried in a better way. But during the Sprint you can not make a review that is still not over.

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Firebase cloud scheduler function cost [closed]

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Firebase indicates the cost for cloud scheduler jobs as $0.10 here: https://firebase.google.com/docs/functions/schedule-functions
Does that mean you would be charged $864 dollars per month if you had a job that ran every 5 minutes???
Updated: Even though answered, just to clarify the reason I asked the question is because the docs referenced did not distinguish between a "job" and as Doug mentioned, the invocation. If you are going to down-vote, it would be helpful to understand why. Thanks.
No, the cost is per job definition, not per job invocation. If you define 3 jobs, it's $0.30 per month, no matter how many times they execute.

How to calculate velocity if sprint backlog has tasks which are not directly related with stories in product backlog? [closed]

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I have a product backlog with some features and a sprint backlog which includes tasks for these features, and also such tasks which are not directly related with stories in product backlog (for example, testing, "to connect to db", "to do interface design" and so on). How can I calculate the velocity then?
You have two options:
Estimate them and treat them as planned work. Not ideal, since these "tasks" don't yield direct value ot the product backlog, but it sounds like work and the product backlog contains all the work that could be done to deliver the product...
Ignore them and treat them as overhead, your velocity will be lower, but that's ok, the velocity then tells you how much work you've been able to deliver that adds value. These other tasks are just "overhead". Or they'd be part of what's commonly called Refinement.
Of course the better solution would be to slice your work in such a way that these tasks are part of delivering the value for that sprint.

ELO ranking system: what's a good start rank? [closed]

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I'm looking to implement an ELO ranking system. I've read the wikipedia articles and I'm confused about the start rank for players who enter the system at a later point. The common solution is to use a provisional ranking system but I'm curious if anyone can point me to specific numeric details:
what K value do new players get?
how long does a player stay in provisional mode?
how does K value change as rank changes?
I'm sure there are many variations, I'd just like to know actual numbers for a system that someone has implemented successfully.
Thanks for your time.

Track increase effort in Sprint Backlog [closed]

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We are following Agile development methodology. As a SCRUM master, I am maintaining the Sprint BackLog. I want to know what is the best practice to accommodate any increase in effort for a particular task in the middle of a project.
For example, I am doing ABC task and in the starting of the sprint I have estimated that it requires 10 hrs to complete it, but on the second day I realized that it requires 20 hrs, so how will i update the Sprint Backlog.
You change the remaining work to 20 hours. Scrum is concerned with the actual work remaining, not whether the original estimate was right. That's important, but it's not explicitly part of Scrum.
If this threatens your ability to deliver on your commitment, then you need to discuss solutions with your team and possibly also the product owner. Perhaps:
A teammate might have a simpler solution.
Other tasks were overestimated and you can still deliver everything.
The product owner might decide it's not worth the effort.
Sprint planning was rushed and the sprint should be declared a failure and restarted.

How many candles are in the box? [closed]

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For the holiday currently described as [ck]?hann?ukk?ah? or thereabouts, 1 candle is lit on the first day, increasing up to a final 8 candles on day 8. However, there is an extra candle each day that is used to light the others.
So, when you buy that box in the store, how many candles do you get?
According to this your menorah needs to have 8 candles plus the extra one you use to light the other candles with. Most of the sites I found had packs of 45 Chanukah candles. (MAN! Am I bored while working on Christmas Eve or WHAT?)

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