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Testing When There Are No Testers More and more companies are shifting toward having their developers responsible for product quality. But how do you conduct good testing when there are no testers? The key is to optimize efforts. Here are some of the fundamentals of testing that your developers should understand, as well as some skills they'll need. |
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Testers as Disciplinarians As testers, are we disciplinarians? We shouldn't fall into the trap of controlling quality or becoming quality police. Instead, we should be true facilitators of quality, enabling the product team to own it in their own right at every stage. Isn’t this what teachers do, too, in the learning process? What is our role? |
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The Present and Future of AI: A Slack Takeover with Raj Subramanian Thought leaders from the software community are taking over the TechWell Hub to answer questions and engage in conversations. Raj Subramanian, who works with self-healing, AI-based test automation, hosted this Slack takeover to discuss all aspects of AI: testing it, its biases, where it is now, and where it's going. |
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Continuous Testing, Shifting Left, and Test Automation: Getting It Straight Continuous testing can help you achieve the optimal balance between speed and risk and deliver high-quality products faster. But what exactly does continuous testing entail? Is it just shifting testing left in a DevOps environment? And where does automation fit in? Here's a breakdown of all these testing concepts. |
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Is Everything Code? As modern software processes become automated, one might argue that nearly everything in software development is code. Obviously, our software applications are comprised of code, but that’s only the start of it. Our tests, delivery orchestration, and someday even our software production could be automated. |
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The Agile Culture You Need for Faster Pull Requests Is your process for pull requests compromising your team's agility? You can structure your changes in a way that facilitates more rapid feedback, but even then it is still possible to have a slow integration time if people don’t review pull requests promptly. Mechanics are part of it, but culture also matters. |
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It’s 10 p.m. Do You Know Where Your Defect Fix Is? Have you ever had to ask whether your defect fix was deployed to a particular environment? You shouldn’t need to, because the answer should always be readily available. Having to request information on the status of your defect fix indicates inefficiencies and a lack of maturity within your organization’s process. |
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5 Ways Test Management Tools Help in Agile Environments Test management tools help improve the efficiency of development and testing teams by prioritizing test cases, so it makes sense that they would appeal to companies that have adopted an agile methodology to enable quicker release cycles. Here are five ways test management tools make a difference in agile environments. |