HackerNoon publishes curated “Learn” lists that aggregate some of the most engaging articles on Agile software development. Two featured collections compile 98 and 173 posts, respectively, and present them as free resources for readers who want practical guidance on how Agile teams work. Across the lists, Agile is consistently described as an iterative and incremental delivery approach that emphasizes flexibility, collaboration, and frequent delivery of working software. Many of the included posts focus on execution practices and planning within common Agile frameworks such as Scrum and Kanban, including topics like sprint planning, user story writing, prioritization methods, sprint reviews, and retrospectives.

Other recurring themes address software delivery quality and supporting engineering practices, including continuous integration and continuous testing, code quality, refactoring, and managing technical debt. Several posts also cover roles and responsibilities (such as Product Owners) and team dynamics (including daily standups, estimation, remote work, and pair programming). The lists also include critical or cautionary perspectives, such as arguments that Agile is misapplied in practice or that some claims about Agile performance or evidence are overstated, alongside comparisons to related methods like Lean and DevOps.