The Agile Testing Days conferences are annual conferences that bring all software engineers and testing professionals together. Since 2009 we've been expanding our agile testing family in Germany and in 2017 we hosted our first Agile Testing Days in the U.S. We are also proud to have added our outdoor event - AgileTD Open Air - in 2022.
Our RU-vid channel is a platform that brings all agile and testing professionals together and helps you and your team to learn new methods and exchange ideas with like-minded people.
We upload videos about Scrum Excellence, Test Automation, Agile Testing & QA, IT project management, Leadership in Agile, Personal Improvement a whole lot more!
A fantastic whirlwind tour of applying eXtreme Programming across the last 25 years, pulling in great ideas from several books that are no longer in print.
Thank you both, Gitte and Pepe! You both have brought so much joy to me and really changed my life in good ways. I loved hearing these stories, even the difficult ones.
What a pity that there is no Agile Open Air TD next year.. Sad that I heard it over others and that you did not send an email.. But regarding your video - nothing to add ;)
Rubber chicken mutex, interesting. Also, on NIST and the AWS certification: the controls are supposed to be allocated as instances, so there are in practice sometimes more than the few hundred _types_ (or classes) mentioned for any non-trivial system. There may also be less; the parallel Canadian process is clear enough that only ones that apply to a given system (based on their governing instruments) are to apply (and there is a way to determine this). That said, I agree - the "we're regulated" is not an excuse. (I do hear it, still, alas.)
I loved this episode. It shows how connections start at ATD and continue for years later. How talks influence each of us in so many ways - not only "testing".
Great presentation Tolu, thank-you! I thought the points about avoiding placeholder text, and also placement of the language profile selector in the header, were both great points. I will certainly take not of these one which were new to me.
I love the emphasis on the manual. This is especially important as vendors ramp up their A.I toolsets and products and claims that might be hard to prove. I love automating as much of my remediation work as possible (and we have 8,000+ PDF) but a lot of it is manual.
... yeah project managers are really stupid and blindly trust estimations without counting in delays, team competency and project complexity, as well as other surrounding factors - great job we then would need #noestimation *roll-eyes*