Eurostar software testing community


















I have seen other posts as well and I am looking forward for more from you. Post a Comment. Sunday, October 15, A testing puzzle that asks you identify the problem. Hi Reader, Last week I discovered a problem I was facing at office and framed it as a puzzle that can help testers in thinking and encourage them to refine their approach to solve any such problems in testing.

There were a couple of Indian testers who took part in it and now would like to share it with you too, for a reason which I have listed below. In order to know what the puzzle is : Testing Puzzle at office!

Not applicable. This one day event is your chance to catch a glimpse of what to expect at this year's conference in November. We'll put these approaches in context by describing emergent behaviours, strategies and diversity, wicked problems and the temptations of confirmation. Participants with laptops can download and work through some of the exercises. Biography James Lyndsay has publicly championed and taught exploratory testing for more than ten years, and has guided exploratory teams towards interesting risks for rather longer.

During my presentation I will share some of my best and worst moments. How to save the situation and how to make it worse. Biography Anna Hoff has worked as a consultant within the software testing business for more than ten years.

That's true whether you are testing a minor feature, an entire application or an integrated suite of applications. A test strategy is the set of big-picture ideas that embody the direction or design of a test effort. It's not a detailed plan. It's the thinking you've done about how to make the best use of time and all the other resources available to you, to find important bugs and provide your stakeholders with information that really matters to them about the software.

Most testers are not taught to think strategically about testing. Instead, we're given document templates derived from a standard, and told to go off and populate the sections with tedious and repetitious detail that rarely has much to do with how we're actually going to test the software. It's time to question the common belief that a test strategy has to be a big prose document that's expensive and time-consuming to produce, yet delivers little value to our stakeholders. It's time to start thinking strategically about how to test effectively.

In this presentation, Fiona Charles focuses on what's essential in a test strategy and outlines some simple yet powerful techniques to develop it quickly, asking questions that will help you learn to think strategically.

Biography Fiona Charles teaches testers project skills "beyond process"- skills essential to thrive and excel on any kind of software project. Throughout her career, Fiona has advocated, designed, implemented and taught pragmatic and humane practices to deliver software worth having. Fiona's articles appear frequently, and she conducts experiential workshops at international conferences and in-house for clients.

Shouldn't we want to have confidence in our products? Isn't it a good thing to have confidence in our testing? In this talk, Keith outlines the dangers of making confidence the mission of testing and why we should be skeptical of claims to the contrary. Drawing from personal experience with senior IT and business management and examples from marketing materials, Keith will discuss bias, goal displacement, and why testers should be comfortable in state of uncertainty.

Biography Keith Klain is the head of Barclays Capital Global Test Centre, which provides functional and non-functional testing services to the investment banking and wealth management businesses. Twitter: saucelabs Web: saucecon. SauceCon is Sauce Labs' annual event for the testing software vendor's global community. It also attracts many pros who don't use Sauce Labs products but are otherwise involved with automated testing. The multi-track virtual conference brings together the global testing community to learn from each other and explore best practices for ensuring digital confidence.

Who should attend: Test automation professionals, users of Sauce Labs products, and anyone doing testing with a cloud service. StarEast will feature over 75 talks, including keynotes, tutorials, and sessions, all presented in an interactive format. Twitter: AgileTD Web: openair. Parallel to that will be workshops and other interactive sessions and activities for hands-on learning. Twitter: nordictestdays Web: nordictestingdays. This regional conference attracts testers largely from the Baltics and other Northern European countries, and the event has something to offer both seasoned and new-to-testing professionals.

The forum's organizers say it's a good conference for "anyone who is interested in dipping their toes into testing and contributing to smoother software development cycle and quality.

Who should attend: Originally for testing professionals only, the conference now attracts everyone from programmers and UX specialists to project managers and designers.

This conference is aimed at all software engineers and testing professionals. According to the conference organizers, the forum offers "a fun platform" to connect and network with the agile community through tutorials, workshops, keynotes, talks, and social events.

EuroStar was started in to bring the European testing community together, "to connect, collaborate, and evolve," organizers say. At the event, attendees will learn straight from the world's leading software testing experts via keynotes, interactive tutorials, and track talks.

Who should attend: Software testers and test managers, test consultants, test analysts, senior IT managers, and software developers. Twitter: TechWell Web: agiledevopswest. Who should attend: Agile teams and leadership; digital transformation teams; automation, development, test, and release staff; product owners; and managers.

Twitter: RomaniaTesting Web: romaniatesting. Billed as the biggest testing conference in Central Eastern Europe, this forum attracts quality assurance and software testers from all over the world.

The conference workshops are especially useful for entry- and mid-level testers. ISSTA is a research symposium on software testing and analysis, bringing together academics, industrial researchers, and practitioners to exchange new ideas, talk about their testing problems, and share experiences on how to analyze and test software systems. Who should attend: Academics, industrial researchers, and practitioners interested or involved in software testing and analysis. Twitter: SoftwareTestPro Web: milehightesting.

The Mile High Testing Conference is billed as a new way to experience learning in a community and environment that "encourages attendees to personalize their experiences. Who should attend: Software testing and quality assurance practitioners, and developers.



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