Select the search type
  • Site
  • Web
Search

AI Tools for Scrum, Agile, and Software Delivery

Role-Based AI Prompt Library

Choose your role and get practical AI prompts you can use immediately in Scrum, product ownership, software delivery, testing, leadership, and training.

These prompts are designed for working professionals who want useful AI assistance without starting from a blank page. Select your role, copy a prompt, add your real context, and use it in your preferred AI tool.

  • Find prompts matched to your daily responsibilities.
  • Use AI for planning, refinement, testing, coaching, and decision support.
  • Copy prompts directly into ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Copilot, or your preferred AI assistant.
  • Learn how AI applies to your actual work, not generic examples.

Interactive Prompt Library

Choose your role. Copy a useful prompt.

Select the role closest to your work. The library will show prompts designed for that role. Copy the prompt, paste it into your AI tool, and add your real backlog item, meeting notes, risk, decision, or team situation.

Select your role

Start with the role that best matches the work you are doing right now.

Choose a prompt

Use the prompt title and use case to find the right starting point.

Add real context

Paste your backlog item, Sprint Goal, code issue, testing concern, or leadership problem after the prompt.

Select a role

The prompt cards below will update automatically. Scrum Master prompts are shown by default.

Selected: Scrum Master
How to get better results: Do not use these prompts by themselves. After copying a prompt, add your actual work context: the backlog item, Sprint Goal, meeting notes, decision options, customer concern, test results, code excerpt, risk, or organizational constraint.

Want the complete AI-Enhanced Scrum prompt system?

This free library gives you a practical starting point. AgileAIDev.com courses and Pro resources show you how to use AI systematically across Scrum, product ownership, software delivery, testing, leadership, and training.

Scheduled Classes, Private Training Avaiable

16 Apr 2025

Nvidia faces $5.5bn hit from Trump clampdown on AI chips

Nvidia faces $5.5bn hit from Trump clampdown on AI chips

Author: Rodney Claar  /  Categories: AI Finance  / 

Nvidia said it expects to take a $5.5 billion hit as President Trump clamps down on the sale of powerful artificial intelligence chips to China.

The US chip designer at the centre of the AI boom said the US government was introducing new restrictions on its chip exports over fears they could be used to help China build a supercomputer.

Supercomputers are the engines of a type of data centre created for the sole purpose of powering AI.

The US had already imposed export restrictions on more powerful Nvidia chips, including the Blackwell, to prevent them reaching China where they could be used for military applications and breakthroughs in AI.

However, Nvidia said the US government will now require licences for exports to China of its H20 chip, the most advanced Nvidia chip presently available in China.

Nvidia announced the $5.5 billion charge in a regulatory filing on Tuesday, sending shares in the company down almost 6 per cent in after-hours trading.

The latest government crackdown on chip exports comes after Chinese companies reportedly placed at least $16 billion in orders for Nvidia’s H20 chips in the first three months of the year.

ByteDance, Alibaba Group and Tencent Holdings are among companies that have been buying up the most advanced Nvidia artificial intelligence chips that are legally available in China under US export controls, The Information reported earlier this month.

The high demand for Nvidia’s H20 chips is believed to be driven by the Chinese start-up DeepSeek’s AI models.

Nvidia said the US government informed it on April 9 that the H20 chip would require a licence to be exported to China and on April 14 told Nvidia that those rules would be in place indefinitely.

Nvidia’s filing did not indicate how many of those licences the US government could grant.

The chipmaker said on Monday that it was planning to spend as much as $500 billion building supercomputers for artificial intelligence entirely in the US over the next four years.

 

Print

Number of views (2777)      Comments (0)

Rodney Claar Rodney Claar

Other posts by Rodney Claar
Contact author

Contact author

x