tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7818481111016883658.post5407757516562320075..comments2024-02-10T17:32:20.193+05:30Comments on Enjoy testing: Challenge of dimensions of quality : BWT 8 : Experience ReportAjay Balamurugadashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/18002265306717617426noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7818481111016883658.post-46364825309451318472009-09-22T19:10:57.717+05:302009-09-22T19:10:57.717+05:30@Venkat:
Thanks for the comment.
Yes, some testers...@Venkat:<br />Thanks for the comment.<br />Yes, some testers do not concentrate on varied quality criteria and hence face a lot of field defects.<br /><br />@Bharath:<br />Thanks for the comment.<br />It would be great if you participate in the testing session too and enjoy it.<br /><br />@Michael:<br /><br />Thanks for the comment. It would be a great honor to interact with you in the conference. <br />The beauty of such sessions is that every tester takes home their share of learning plus the learning from other testers due to compulsory discussion session. Every tester learns from every other tester.<br /><br />Regards,<br />Ajay BalamurugadasAjay Balamurugadashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18002265306717617426noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7818481111016883658.post-6608789667610576712009-09-22T18:50:41.689+05:302009-09-22T18:50:41.689+05:30When I last visited India in 2007, I was privilege...When I last visited India in 2007, I was privileged to be speak at a meeting of testers in Bangalore that had been organized by Pradeep Soundararajan and some people at NDS (I'm sure I'm leaving someone out. My apologies; it's been almost three years.) Back then, there was already a seeded field of skilled testers who seemed interested in building the community. I'm delighted that, with BWST, this movement seems now to have started up in earnest.<br /><br /><i>The individual tester’s experience of the BWT 8 session was the icing on the cake.</i><br /><br />I'd suggest that the individual tester's experience is <i>the cake.</i> :)<br /><br />My point is that the most substantial parts of learning come from experience. Experience <i>reports</i> are very valuable, but except for the person who lived through it, the experience is mediated, rather than immediate. The thing that makes BWST most significant to me is that testers are <i>practising</i> testing as well as just discussing it.<br /><br />All the best to the community. I'll see you in November!<br /><br />---Michael B.Michael Bolton http://www.developsense.comhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09027725699187903416noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7818481111016883658.post-23867672037881236962009-09-22T11:01:36.552+05:302009-09-22T11:01:36.552+05:30i enjoyed the session too as getting to know how e...i enjoyed the session too as getting to know how each tester test ideas on testing the performance w/o using any major perf tool was interesting <br /><br />~ Bharath<br /><br />ticketnumber.wordpress.comBharath Shttp://ticketnumber.wordpress.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7818481111016883658.post-38305428866220529892009-09-22T00:27:13.900+05:302009-09-22T00:27:13.900+05:30@ Ajay,
The mission is excellent. It talked about...@ Ajay,<br /><br />The mission is excellent. It talked about most of the required needs for customers but some how over looked by the implementation teams. The software projects drive through the functional topics most of the time. <br /><br />Venkat.Venkat Reddy Chintalapudihttp://venkatreddy.innoreply@blogger.com