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"It was a wonderful experience interacting with you and appreciate the way you have planned and executed the whole publication process within the agreed timelines.”
Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalRobert Sabourin has more than 40 years of management experience, leading teams of software development professionals. A well-respected member of the software engineering community, Robert has managed, trained, mentored, and coached thousands of top professionals in the field. He frequently speaks at conferences and writes on software engineering, SQA, testing, management, and internationalization. The author of I am a Bug! the popular software testing children’s book, Robert is an adjunct professor of Software Engineering at McGill University. Robert is the principal consultant and presidentRead More...
Robert Sabourin has more than 40 years of management experience, leading teams of software development professionals. A well-respected member of the software engineering community, Robert has managed, trained, mentored, and coached thousands of top professionals in the field. He frequently speaks at conferences and writes on software engineering, SQA, testing, management, and internationalization. The author of I am a Bug! the popular software testing children’s book, Robert is an adjunct professor of Software Engineering at McGill University. Robert is the principal consultant and president/janitor of AmiBug.Com, Inc.
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"I am a Bug" is a picture book which explains some important aspects of software development using metaphors related to bugs! A parent working in the software business can read I am a Bug to a young child and explain what they do at work!
I am a Bug was written by Robert Sabourin and illustrated by his 12 year old daughter Catherine. It was written for parents to read with their young children (3 to 8) but it presents some important messages to software
"I am a Bug" is a picture book which explains some important aspects of software development using metaphors related to bugs! A parent working in the software business can read I am a Bug to a young child and explain what they do at work!
I am a Bug was written by Robert Sabourin and illustrated by his 12 year old daughter Catherine. It was written for parents to read with their young children (3 to 8) but it presents some important messages to software development professionals of all ages.
Each page of I am a Bug has large print text at the top which can be read by younger children, an illustration and text at the bottom of the page which the parent can read to the child.
Turbulent development projects experience daily changes in requirements. Keeping your testing efforts on track while reacting to rapidly shifting priorities, technologies, and user needs can often feel nearly insurmountable.
Charting the Course: Coming up with Great Test Ideas Just in Time equips you with effective techniques to implement software testing in chaotic environments. You will learn practical, dynamic test planning and scheduling, along with
Turbulent development projects experience daily changes in requirements. Keeping your testing efforts on track while reacting to rapidly shifting priorities, technologies, and user needs can often feel nearly insurmountable.
Charting the Course: Coming up with Great Test Ideas Just in Time equips you with effective techniques to implement software testing in chaotic environments. You will learn practical, dynamic test planning and scheduling, along with exploratory, scripted, automated, and performance testing, which can be successfully and systematically implemented in various contexts.
This book focuses on generating a wide variety of relevant and powerful testing ideas that can be applied to real projects using Agile, Iterative, Waterfall, or Hybrid development environments.
Readers will explore:
• The foundation for thousands of potentially relevant testing ideas
• Test ideas oriented toward software capabilities, based on expected functionality
• Test ideas based on usage scenarios, addressing user needs
• Test ideas based on failure modes, challenging software design and environment dependencies
• Numerous non-functional software attributes that pose a risk to software value
• Creative testing ideas that uncover significant bugs through lateral thinking
• Additional sources of important test ideas, including Business Rules, Combinations, States, Data, Environments, Unit Tests, Taxonomies, Test Oracles, Creative Ideas, Path Test Ideas, Boundary Test Ideas, Automation Test Ideas, and Regression Test Ideas
• Formulating charters to guide and direct software testing efforts
Enjoy Charting the Course and learn how to achieve exceptional testing outcomes even in the most challenging and chaotic contexts.
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