Specification by Example workshops
I’m speaking here:
- Testing and Finance, London, 17 May
- NDC, June 6-8 Oslo
- Agile Testing Days, November 19-22, Potsdam, Germany
Archive for January, 2010
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Hands-on agile acceptance testing with FitNesse, Berlin, April 19-21
Posted on January 31, 2010 | No CommentsI will run a three day hands-on workshop on agile acceptance testing and specification by example in Berlin, Germany on April 19-21. This three day workshop immerses the participants into a project driven by Specification by Example and Agile Acceptance Testing. Through facilitated exercises and discussion, you will learn how... -
Designing applications for cloud deployment
Posted on January 25, 2010 | 2 CommentsDuring the last two years, I was involved in several projects deployed on the Amazon cloud. Being a relatively early adopter was a fantastic experience that provided lots of opportunities to burn my fingers and learn from mistakes. It also seriously challenged my view of scalable software architectures. I spoke... -
Building software that matters: two books you absolutely have to read
Posted on January 18, 2010 | 1 CommentI recently came across two books that fit the Building software that matters theme perfectly, and deserve to be read by anyone managing a software project, running a development team or generally serious about delivering software. Both books tackle topics so difficult that development teams often just push the responsibility... -
Next agile testing UG in London: Cucumber on February 4th
Posted on January 8, 2010 | No CommentsNext agile testing user group evening in London will be on the 4th February, at the new Skills Matter offices. I’ll be presenting Cucumber a tool for behaviour-driven development and agile acceptance testing. I will demonstrate how to use Cucumber for Java, .NET and Ruby applications, talk about new Cucumber... -
How to effectively define a sufficient set of BDD scenarios/Acceptance tests?
Posted on January 6, 2010 | No CommentsI got this question from a reader today: How would you effectively define a sufficient set of If-When-Then scenarios to test for correctness what is potentially an extremely large set of transformations?

