GTAC!
April 30th, 2010 | Published in Google Testing
By James A. Whittaker
Yes I know, I've been quiet. Seriously heads down shipping products and developing what I think are some pretty cool new testing ideas and tools. Perhaps GTAC will be the chance for you to judge that for yourselves. Perhaps it will be worth the wait.
I hope I am invited to speak at GTAC. (Is this an appropriate forum for such lobbying? Should I open it up to a vote on whether I should or should not be there? I am happy not going as India is a long trip, but this is GTAC we are talking about!) There are a number of things that will be ready to either debut or, if I am lucky, open source by then.
Would you like to see a Chrome extension to display bug, test case, coverage and other information as an overlay on top of your web app UI? Imagine being able to see bugs at their exact location on the UI, report bugs by simply right-clicking the errant part of the web page, see footprints where test cases (automated and manual and across multiple testers) have been and lots more useful information. Are you tired of querying databases to see these things and just want your test data as a cellophane wrapper around your web app UI? If you were at STAR this week, you got a preview. But that presentation is already out of date.
Would you like to be able to write automated test cases that can control your web app, your browser and the operating system they are running on? Well if that stack contains Chrome and Chrome OS, you can do it with a new web test framework we are developing. Would you like to do all of this with Java Script? Sound like magic? Well I think the Web Test Framework is appropriately named: WTF.
Would you like to see a record and playback facility that records directly to Java Script and is actually built-in to your browser? A R/P tool that handles AJAX and won't get confused by self-updating web pages? That stores recordings directly into a test case management system that is accessible to the world?
Would you like to hear about the extensive library of testing tours we have developed and how our manual testing strategy across the web-app/Chrome/Chrome-OS stack is shaping up?
These are some of the things that have kept me from this blog. Forgive me. I will report on them here and, with a little pressure directed toward Sujay The Decider perhaps demo them at GTAC.
Yes I know, I've been quiet. Seriously heads down shipping products and developing what I think are some pretty cool new testing ideas and tools. Perhaps GTAC will be the chance for you to judge that for yourselves. Perhaps it will be worth the wait.
I hope I am invited to speak at GTAC. (Is this an appropriate forum for such lobbying? Should I open it up to a vote on whether I should or should not be there? I am happy not going as India is a long trip, but this is GTAC we are talking about!) There are a number of things that will be ready to either debut or, if I am lucky, open source by then.
Would you like to see a Chrome extension to display bug, test case, coverage and other information as an overlay on top of your web app UI? Imagine being able to see bugs at their exact location on the UI, report bugs by simply right-clicking the errant part of the web page, see footprints where test cases (automated and manual and across multiple testers) have been and lots more useful information. Are you tired of querying databases to see these things and just want your test data as a cellophane wrapper around your web app UI? If you were at STAR this week, you got a preview. But that presentation is already out of date.
Would you like to be able to write automated test cases that can control your web app, your browser and the operating system they are running on? Well if that stack contains Chrome and Chrome OS, you can do it with a new web test framework we are developing. Would you like to do all of this with Java Script? Sound like magic? Well I think the Web Test Framework is appropriately named: WTF.
Would you like to see a record and playback facility that records directly to Java Script and is actually built-in to your browser? A R/P tool that handles AJAX and won't get confused by self-updating web pages? That stores recordings directly into a test case management system that is accessible to the world?
Would you like to hear about the extensive library of testing tours we have developed and how our manual testing strategy across the web-app/Chrome/Chrome-OS stack is shaping up?
These are some of the things that have kept me from this blog. Forgive me. I will report on them here and, with a little pressure directed toward Sujay The Decider perhaps demo them at GTAC.