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Archive for the ‘Automated Testing’ Category

The Return of Investment of PC and how it compares to a bus

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From HP:

Steve Feloney is the face of HP’s Performance Centre. I met Stephen a year ago as he was doing a world tour to endorse Performance Centre. Stephen is passionate about Performance Centre. He does his work well, and you can’t avoid agreeing with him about Performance Centre and its value.

Now Stephen has written an article about PC and how you can get a great Return of Investment (ROI) even though PC is itself very dear to buy.

It goes something like this……If you were to travel from London to Rome, a car would be a very nice idea. To get a car, it will price you a lot of cash to buy one, but it is much easier than doing the journey by foot. It would take two months to walk, and as a extremely well paid IT worker, the overall cost of the voyage in terms of lost income would without difficulty cover the price of a car.

To my mind, there are other forms of transport like public transport. It is a much less expensive option, however, the voyage is longer and a lot less comfortable. That is the same with PC, you don’t necessarily have to obtain the best possible option, you can look downmarket and that will pretty much facilitate you to achieve the same ends.

You can make up your own mind.

Cloud-bursting – getting first-rate performance form the cloud

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From Computer World:

Cloud computing normally describes implementation of dynamically and often virtualised resources as a service across the Internet . Cloudbursting is one of the terms connected with cloud computing at the moment.
Using cloud computing models for any application and associated traffic could be costly, and using it for handling the spikes in a company’s usage patterns might also be laden with issues because of the time required to get the system set-up and seeded with the data. Ramping up in the cloud is difficult since it might take minutes to fire up more hosts but a company’s peak requirement may perhaps last less time than that.

Your Application Testing services is an asset not an expense

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Application code ought to normally be considered by any company to be an asset. Implementing application code has fiscal implications. The cost is recovered after a period of time of using the system. In a lot of cases, the data captured, processed and stored by the system has a value as well.

Application code testing is time consuming and needs outlay in funds and time and frequently results in documentation, procedures, test data, test environments as well as a working software. There is an attraction to skimp on testing as it is an costly business. Application code testing is indispensable.

If the application is unusable when it goes into production, it will cost much more to fix those issues then than it would have if testing had been undertaken before implementation. Fixing defects in live is an expensive matter, it makes pre-production testing look cheap.

How much testing must be done? There is no right or wrong answer to this. The longer that testing carries on, the better the implementation might be. The cost of finding defects increases as testing continues.

While perfection with testing is theoretically possible, it is seldom achieved, the expenditure is simply too great.

Testing assets are not usually thought of as an asset. Financially, testers are seen as a negative not a positive on the balance sheet. Test environments are expensive and are not seen as obligatory and valuable. A server has a definite base cost, a server installed with an application to be tested complete with test data may cost 10X. With many test scripts the testware is worth a good deal more than the hardware asset itself that is listed on the balance sheet.

While this does seem like a cost, it’s not, it’s an asset. The test pack can sustain the implementation of future business requirements going forward.

Generally, much effort is spent executing testing cycles. Now with the introduction of automation and when used in tandem with a test management tool, much of the testing exertion is spent installing code drops, tracking faults and fixing them. There is a financial bottom line value to testcases and the ability to execute them. Good well written testcases supported by a good test management tool and a well configured supported test environment are valuable.

Test automation can increase the worth of the testpack. The setup costs for test automation are high, but the benefits to the testing process are also high. One of the key benefits is that the time to test is greatly reduced. While automated testing itself is much quicker, sometimes just taking a few hours, it can also be run overnight. If the code was ready for testing late on a Tuesday, the test execution could be completed by first thing on the Wednesday.
Generation of an automated test pack is a specialised task using software licenses that can run into the thousands for a single license.The planning stage is considerable with much thought going into determining the keying steps. Test automation uses a substantial amount of logic so that it can adapt to diverse situations when executing against the system frontend.
A test automation specialist will ideally make sure that test automation code does not need to be updated every time the application under test is changed, although sometimes, changes are required if new objects are added to the software screens.

Certainly test automation built with little thought can become a genuine expense to a company, not an asset.

Steps to help ensure your automated testing methodology is a success.

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Using automated test tools offers some great advantages that can help improve the testing process. However, it should only be under taken when the requirement is necessary. The automated testing process and the methods used in automated testing need to be measurable, repeatable and effective.

Effective test automation resolves each of these issues, allowing management to:

* A reduction in quality assurance resource – thereby making testing cheaper
* Quicker testing and bug resolution cycles
* Better visibility of test results

What can be done to make the automated quality assurance process more effective?

The method is driven by an effective methodology. Without an effective the automated testing practice can quickly turn into an expensive waste of time. Methodology is critical. The entire process should be driven by Methodology- from tool selection to the way in which the tool is applied.. It also helps to drive the approach to off shoring the “appropriate” pieces of the quality assurance process.

The following offers a check list for a Test Manager to follow when applying an automated quality assurance methodology

10 Essentials for Effective Test Automation:

1. Know the steps of the software development process and how they relate to each other.
2. Clearly document the corporation requirements, hardware requirements and software requirements that are necessary to support your automated quality assurance process.
3. Understand that Quality assurance is a strategic effort.
4. Commit to giving software testing its own budget and funding.
5. Choose the right enabling technologies to support the quality assurance process.
6. Be very careful to ensure that the people used to build the automated testing framework are experienced and or trained.
7. Separate test design from test automation so that automation does not dominate test design.
8. Be very careful when considering to lower costs by using less expensive labor than a local team.
9. Document the goals within a test strategy and best practices for test design in a test plan.
10. Use a company or a person with the appropriate skills to build the baseline foundations of your automated testing framework