viewing some Agile development groups, it seems to me that whenever there is a testing need, they prefer to go along with a Test Management tool and not one of the Agile Management solutions.
Does agile tools are only for the project management and developing management, leaving the testing needs outside the development circle?
What do you think about it? and what do you think the cause for it?
Is it because testing is still a separate process within the agile team? or misunderstanding on how to cope with the testing needs inside the agile process?
Web services can implement a service-oriented architecture. Web services make functional building-blocks accessible over standard Internet protocols independent of platforms and programming languages. These services can represent either new applications or just wrappers around existing legacy systems to make them network-enabled. Each SOA building block can play one or both of two roles
published by Anonymous on January 12, 2017 - 21:51
The Internet of Things, a term used to describe a vast web of everyday objects like refrigerators, cars and lamps with embedded IP connectivity, is one of the biggest tech trends today. For enterprise test management professionals, the IoT is potentially a huge growth opportunity, so long as they are aware of the trends in this arena and what they mean.
The IoT is often talked about as if it's only a far-off possibility, but nothing could be further from the truth. The IoT is already widely deployed. People and businesses spent over $930 billion on IoT hardware in 2014, and there were close to 5 billion connected endpoints in existence by the end of 2015, according to Gartner.
Repeated verification of the same areas, looking for tiniest inconsistencies is a pain, as everyone knows. Here are most common challenges UI regression testing brings:
published by Anonymous on February 9, 2017 - 16:59
If we talk about automating visual regression testing of web applications, there are some basic features which just cannot be absent in such a tool, that is:
emulate a click,
emulate a text input operation,
compare screenshots retrieved during different runs,
run the recorded test in another browser,
add a new test step etc.
But it's some unique, unusual options which make real difference. Something to do with radically facilitating the regression testing process itself.
Graphical User Interface (GUI) testing - GUI testing tools know how to grab the information on every object or window seen on screen, it can be a windows object or an html element, or other depend on the operating system information API.
Some tools can even set a virtual blocks on the screen and follow them as an object.
After recording the test scenario the tester can edit the script and add to it parameters, conditions, loops, etc., This might requires some scripting skills, but not necessary the traditional scripting language.
Recent comments