Testing Blog
Google Developer Day 2011
Friday, August 19, 2011
By James Whittaker
Google Developer Day is gearing up for a fantastic fall season of tours that crawl the continents. And a surprise this year ...
yours truly
will be the keynote for the Developer Day in Sao Paulo Brazil and Buenos Aires Argentina in September.
Google Developer Day is a deep dive into the future of Web, Mobile and Cloud technologies crafted specifically for software engineering professionals. And this year we are adding the element of Social to tie it all together. Google+ is only the start.
If you are attending, please stop by and say hello!
Click
here
for more information about dates and agenda.
GTAC Speakers and Attendees Finalized
Thursday, August 18, 2011
We've completed the agenda for GTAC 2011 and are in the process of notifying accepted speakers and attendees. Once we have firm accepts we'll be publicizing the agenda.
Pretotyping: A Different Type of Testing
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Have you ever poured your heart and soul and blood, sweat and tears to help test and perfect a product that, after launch, flopped miserably? Not because it was not working right (you tested
the snot out of it
), but because it was not the right product.
Are you currently wasting your time testing a new product or feature that, in the end, nobody will use?
Testing typically revolves around making sure that we have built something right. Testing activities can be roughly described as “verifying that something works as intended, or as specified.” This is critical. However, before we take steps and invest time and effort to make sure that something built right, we should make sure that the thing we are testing, whether its a new feature or a whole new product, is the right thing to build in the first place.
Spending time, money and effort to test something that nobody ends up using is a waste of time.
For the past couple of years, I’ve been thinking about, and working on, a concept called pretotyping.
What is pretotyping? Here’s a somewhat formal definition – the dry and boring kind you’d find in a dictionary:
Pretotyping [pree-tuh-tahy-ping], verb: Testing the initial appeal and actual usage of a potential new product by simulating its core experience with the smallest possible investment of time and money.
Here’s a less formal definition:
Pretotyping is a way to test an idea quickly and inexpensively by creating extremely simplified, mocked or virtual versions of that product to help validate the premise that "If we build it, they will use it."
My favorite definition of pretotyping, however, is this:
Make sure – as quickly and as cheaply as you can – that you are building the right it before you build it right.
My thinking on pretotyping evolved from my positive experiences with Agile and Test Driven Development. Pretotyping applies some of the core ideas from these two models and applies them further
upstream
in the development cycle.
I’ve just finished writing the first draft of a booklet on pretotyping called “Pretotype It”.
You can download a PDF of the booklet from
Google Docs
or
Scribd
.
The "Pretotype It" booklet is itself a pretotype and test. I wrote this first-draft to test my (possibly optimistic) assumption that people would be interested in it, so please let me know what you think of it.
You can follow my pretotyping work on
my pretotyping blog
.
Post content
Posted by Alberto Savoia
Keynote Lineup for GTAC 2011
Monday, August 1, 2011
By James Whittaker
The call for proposals and participation is now closed. Over the next few weeks we will be announcing the full agenda and notifying accepted participants. In the meantime, the keynote lineup is now locked. It consists of two famous Googlers and two famous external speakers that I am very pleased to have join us.
Opening Keynote:
Test is Dead
by
Alberto Savoia
The way most software is designed, developed and launched has changed dramatically over the last decade – but what about testing? Alberto Savoia believes that software testing as we knew it is dead – or at least moribund – in which case we should stick a fork in it and proactively take it out of its misery for good. In this opening keynote of biblical scope, Alberto will cast stones at the old test-mentality and will try his darnedest to agitate you and convince you that these days most testers should follow a new test-mentality, one which includes shifting their focus and priority from “Are we building it right?” to “Are we building the right it?” The subtitle of this year’s GTAC is “cloudy with a chance of tests,” and if anyone can gather the clouds into a hurricane, it's Alberto – it might be wise to bring your umbrella.
Alberto Savoia is Director of Engineering and Innovation Agitator at Google. In addition to leading several major product development efforts (including the launch of Google AdWords), Alberto has been a lifelong believer, champion, innovator and entrepreneur in the area of developer testing and test automation tools. He is a frequent keynote speaker and the author of many articles on testing, including the classic booklet “The Way of Testivus” and “Beautiful Tests” in O’Reilly’s Beautiful Code. His work in software development tools has won him several awards including the 2005 Wall Street Journal Technical Innovator Award, InfoWorld’s Technology of the Year award, and no less than four Software Development Magazine Jolt Awards.
Day 1 Closer:
Redefining Security Vulnerabilities: How Attackers See Bugs
by
Herbert H. Thompson
Developers see features, testers see bugs, and attackers see “opportunities.” Those opportunities are expanding beyond buffer overflows, cross site scripting, etc. into logical bugs (and features) that allow attackers to use the information they find to exploit trusting users. For example, attackers can leverage a small information disclosure issue in an elaborate phishing attempt. When you add people in the mix, we need to reevaluate which “bugs” are actual security vulnerabilities. This talk is loaded with real world examples of how attackers are using software “features” and information tidbits (many of which come from bugs) to exploit the biggest weakness of all: trusting users.
Dr. Herbert H. Thompson is Chief Security Strategist at People Security and a world-renown expert in application security. He has co-authored four books on the topic including, How to Break Software Security: Effective Techniques for Security Testing (with Dr. James Whittaker) and The Software Vulnerability Guide (with Scott Chase). In 2006 he was named one of the “Top 5 Most Influential Thinkers in IT Security” by SC Magazine. Thompson continually lends his perspective and expertise on secure software development and has been interviewed by top news organizations including CNN, MSNBC, BusinessWeek, Forbes, Associated Press, and the Washington Post. He is also Program Committee Chair for RSA Conference, the world’s leading information security gathering. He holds a Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics from Florida Institute of Technology, and is an adjunct professor in the Computer Science department at Columbia University in New York.
Day 2 Opener:
Engineering Productivity: Accelerating Google Since 2006
by
Patrick Copeland
Patrick Copeland is the founder and architect of Google's testing and productivity strategy and in this "mini keynote" he tells the story and relates the pain of taking a company from ad hoc testing practices to the pinnacle of what can be accomplished with a well oiled test engineering discipline.
Conference Closer:
Secrets of World-Class Software Organizations
by
Steve McConnell
Construx consultants work with literally hundreds of software organizations each year. Among these organizations a few stand out as being truly world class. They are exceptional in their ability to meet their software development goals and exceptional in the contribution they make to their companies' overall business success. Do world class software organizations operate differently than average organizations? In Construx's experience, the answer is a resounding "YES." In this talk, award-winning author Steve McConnell reveals the technical, management, business, and cultural secrets that make a software organization world class.
Steve McConnell is CEO and Chief Software Engineer at Construx Software where he consults to a broad range of industries, teaches seminars, and oversees Construx’s software engineering practices. Steve is the author of Software Estimation: Demystifying the Black Art (2006), Code Complete (1993, 2004), Rapid Development (1996), Software Project Survival Guide (1998), and Professional Software Development (2004), as well as numerous technical articles. His books have won numerous awards for "Best Book of the Year," and readers of Software Development magazine named him one of the three most influential people in the software industry along with Bill Gates and Linus Torvalds.
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