Archives
An illustration of a dysfunction: fear of conflict
Submitted by Ainars Galvans on Wed, 05/11/2008 - 08:44.Schools of Testing… Here to Stay.
Submitted by james on Wed, 05/11/2008 - 15:37.Clean Code Talks - Unit Testing
Submitted by noreply@blogger.com (Misko) on Wed, 05/11/2008 - 18:19.Google Tech Talks October, 30 2008 ABSTRACT Clean Code Talks - Unit Testing Speaker: Misko Hevery
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Partial Automation: Keeping humans in the loop
Submitted by noreply@blogger.com (Patrick Copeland) on Wed, 05/11/2008 - 19:36.One of the challenges of automation is achieving complete automation. Ideally, complete or total automation would not require any human intervention or verification yet this is a difficult level to achieve. Investing Engineering time to completely automate tests is expensive and, many times, has diminishing returns. Rather than trying to achieve complete automation, investing in ways to make the most out of the automated test and the human time is time better spent.
Schools of testing are organisational, not always personal
Submitted by Erik Petersen on Thu, 06/11/2008 - 01:33. perspectivesPaul Gerrard and James Bach have recently blogged on testing schools, from two different viewpoints. I think both have relevant points though their views differ. Many testers learn their craft through osmosis, absorbing the testing culture of their organisations (or projects) and any external influences (mailing lists, conferences, user groups, training etc). In the absence of these external influences, the organisational culture can remain static and follow a certain orthodoxy (often aligning with a school of testing), sometimes with religious devotion. When I caught up with one of my initial testing mentors after 5 years, I asked her what she thought of exploratory testing and all the changes to the industry, but she had no idea of what I was talking about as she had stayed doing what she knew. So organisations can follow schools of testing, and so can the people within them if they have no interaction with external influences (or they choose to ignore them).
