"... but what should I do about our sprints getting messed up when [executive] comes in and tells us to stop what we're doing and add [feature X] before the end of the following week so s/he can finalize the $13 Million deal with [new client Y, but only if the feature X is implemented by then]..."
This is where Scott Barber shares his thoughts, opinions, ideas and endorsements related to software testing in general, performance testing in specific, and improving the alignment of software development projects with business goals and risks.
Showing posts with label Taylor Barber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taylor Barber. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Agile Sprint Sanctity Valued at Over $13M?!?
During STPCon last week (which, BTW, was fabulous, but more on that in another post, 'cause I've got to get this off my chest) I was a panelist for The Hard Stuff: Questions About Agile. During the course of the discussion, someone asked a question that I heard as the following:
Monday, June 18, 2007
Software Testing Lessons from my Children
- My most recent column has just been posted on TechTarget in which I discuss some of the lessons I‘ve learned from my children about software testing.
I had planned an entirely different topic for this month, but I‘m sitting down to write this on Father‘s Day while my sons (Nicholas, age 8, and Taylor, age 4) are napping, and realizing that I‘ve never written about what I have learned about testing from my boys.
Before I share some of these lessons, let me first share a little about me and fatherhood. For all of the dedication, time, and passion I give to my career, it is not even comparable to the dedication, time. and passion I give to my boys. For example, I stopped consulting for a while so I could see my boys every day when they were young because I couldn‘t stand the thought of being on the road for their first steps, new words, and all of the other developmental wonders that occur on almost a daily basis during the first several years of life. When I went back to consulting, I started my own company—not because I wanted to run a company, but because I didn‘t want to have to answer to anyone else when I chose to not travel during baseball season so I could coach my son’s team. In the same spirit, when I work from home, I frequently do so in a room with my boys, who are naturally curious about what I‘m doing. Over the past few years of this, I’ve learned a lot of things about being a good tester from them. Some of the most significant are these:
Don‘t be afraid to ask "Why?"
Exploratory play is learning
Recording your testing is invaluable
"Intuitive" means different things to different people
Fast enough depends on the user
You can never tell what a user may try to do with your software
Sometimes the most valuable thing you can do is take a break
- See the column for more behind the lessons
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Scott Barber
Chief Technologist, PerfTestPlus, Inc.
About.me
Co-Author, Performance Testing Guidance for Web Applications
Author, Web Load Testing for Dummies
Contributing Author, Beautiful Testing, and How To Reduce the Cost of Testing
"If you can see it in your mind...
you will find it in your life."
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