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Thursday, September 23, 2010

GQueues -Is a Google-Oriented Task Manager !

GQueues 




By itself, task manager GQueues is pretty handy—a list-oriented task manager with sub-tasks, due dates, assignments, tagging, and other neat features. But its integration with Google sign-in, Calendar, and Google Apps make it more than just another to-do app.
Not everything that GQueues offers is free, as email/SMS reminders, task assignments, and the advanced Calendar integration require a $25/year subscription (though there's a two-week trial to see if they're needed). Even on its free terms, though, GQueues is a nice-looking app that uses Google OAuth sign-in, so you don't give it your password and yet don't have to create a new password.
You create tasks, sub-tasks, notes, and tags on to-do items in a familiar fashion, and can also share those tasks with others, embed them in a public or private web page, and move items around in priority order using drag and drop. GQueues' video demonstration shows off some usage examples of the app:
GQueues is a free app to use in its basic form, with advanced features part of a $25/year subscription plan. If you think GQueues looks worth it, or wish it had a few other features to sell, tell your task-focused friends here in the comments.

Refer :

Here is Link to get this : http://www.gqueues.com/?logout=goog

Plans & Pricing :   http://www.gqueues.com/pricing

                 




HP launches new testing tool: Agile Accelerator !

The HP Quality Center Agile Accelerator is designed to help you manage Agile development using HP Quality Center 10.0. It can be imported into HP Quality Center 10.0 as a base project to manage both development and testing efforts within the same HP Quality Center Project. It comes with pre-built Agile user roles and related privileges, pre-defined Agile process workflows, configurations and rules to help you manage projects driven by Agile methodology. It also facilitates Agile reporting allowing you to track progress burn-down, burn-up and velocity.


Companies are increasingly turning towards alternative development management strategies to manage complex and emerging technologies. Projects are increasingly reviewing and adopting Agile methodology as the de facto standard to manage their application development environments for a variety of reasons. The important reasons amongst these are to reduce total cost of ownership, increase quality and reduce time to market.

What is Agile testing?

Agile testing is a software testing practice that follows the principles of the agile manifesto, emphasizing testing from the perspective of customers who will utilize the system. Agile testing does not emphasize rigidly defined testing procedures, but rather focuses on testing iteratively against newly developed code until quality is achieved from an end customer's perspective. In other words, the emphasis is shifted from "testers as quality police" to something more like "entire project team working toward demonstrable quality."

Agile testing involves testing from the customer perspective as early as possible, testing early and often as code becomes available and stable enough from module/unit level testing.

Since working increments of the software are released often in agile software development, there is also a need to test often. This is commonly done by using automated acceptance testing to minimize the amount of manual labour involved. Doing only manual testing in agile development may result in either buggy software or slipping schedules because it may not be possible to test the entire build manually before each release.

HP Quality Center Agile Accelerator

The HP Quality Center Agile Accelerator is designed to help projects manage Agile development using HP Quality Center 10.0. It can be imported into HP Quality Center 10.0 as a base project to manage both development and testing efforts within the same HP Quality Center Project. It comes with pre-built Agile user roles and related privileges, pre-defined Agile process workflows, configurations and rules to help you manage projects driven by Agile methodology. It also facilitates Agile reporting allowing you to track progress burn-down, burn-up and velocity.

Agile Accelerator Benefits

  • Supports multiple Agile practices including Scrum/XP methodology: Sprint, Backlog, User story
  • Reduces calculation effort including tasks, estimation, planning, and spent hours
  • Improves information visibility across all user groups such as product managers, project engineers, Scrum Master, and others.
  • Encompasses the full project lifecycle from planning to delivery, development and testing ensuring application meets promised requirements
  • Reports project progress and delivered value through Burn-up charts and Burn-down charts

Oracle Application Testing Suite 9.2 Introduces Unique Testing Capabilities for Rich Internet Applications

News Facts
  • To enable companies to more effectively develop and deliver business-critical applications, Oracle today announced the latest release ofOracle Application Testing Suite 9.2, the industrys most complete, open and integrated application testing solution for Web, SOA, and packaged Oracle applications.
  • Oracle Application Testing Suite 9.2 extends support for automated functional testing and load testing for Oracle Database, Oracle Application Development Framework and Adobe Flex-based applications and expands integration with Oracle Enterprise Managers Real User Experience Insight, Oracle Real Application Testing, and Oracle Database Diagnostics Pack.
  • Oracle Application Testing Suite 9.2 now integrates key templates from Capgemini Groups TMapreg ; (Test Management Approach), a world-leading business-driven, risk-based approach for structured software testing that helps organizations more effectively manage and standardize test processes.
  • A key component of Oracle Enterprise Managers suite of Application Quality Management products, Oracle Application Testing Suite provides an integrated solution for load testing, functional testing and test management, enabling customers to thoroughly test applications and their underlying infrastructure to help ensure optimum quality, scalability and availability prior to deployment.
New Integrations and Enhancements Bolster Application Testing Process
  • Oracle Application Testing Suite 9.2 expands and streamlines the testing process. Highlights include:
    • Enhanced Test Management Capabilities: using Capgemini Groups TMapreg ; templates, application quality can be improved and testing time reduced.
    • Expanded Capabilities for Oracle Database Testing: allows users to create test scripts by importing real database transactions from Database Replay capture files to provide faster, cost effective, and more realistic testing.
    • Enhanced Test Starter Kits: deliver sample functional and load test scripts for testing the Oracle E-Business Suite Release 12 and 11i applications.
    • Extended Application Support: including Rich Internet Applications (RIAs) built with Oracle ADF, Adobe Flex, and Web Services, helps users ensure the quality of both their custom applications and packaged Oracle applications.
    • Additional Testing and Diagnostics Support: leveraging Oracle Real User Experience Insight, users can create scripts based on real user session recordings and identify performance bottlenecks in detail during a load test


        • Scripting enhancements: allows domain knowledge of Oracle Applications to be automatically applied to test scripts, making scripts simpler and easier to work with for non-expert testers, and increases efficiency of testers of all skill levels.
        • Expanded cross-script efficiency: such as synchronization and parameterization, makes it easy to create test regimes for coordinated, complex test scenarios.
      • Oracle Application Testing 9.2 also features testing accelerators for Oracle applications, including Oracles Siebel, the Oracle E-Business Suite, and Oracle Applications Development Framework-based applications, enabling easier and more efficient testing for Oracle applications not available in generic third-party application testing tools.
      Supporting Quote

      • "Ensuring the performance and health of applications continues to be a demanding issue for business and IT managers who are constantly faced with new application deployments and frequent upgrade cycles," said Richard Sarwal, Oracle senior vice president, Product Development. "With Oracle Application Testing Suite 9.2, our customers can speed up the application testing process, helping them consistently deploy high quality applications that support their critical business processes."
      Supporting Resources

      About Oracle
      Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL) is the worlds largest business software company. For more information about Oracle, please visit our Web site atoracle.com.
      TrademarksOracle and Java are registered trademarks of Oracle Corporation and/or its affiliates.
      TMapreg ; is a registered trademark of Sogeti, part of the Capgemini Group.
      Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.


Thursday, September 16, 2010

Internet Explorer 9 Beta

Dear XP users: No IE9 for you (Listen up people, XP is dead!)


Internet Explorer 9 is the new edition of Microsoft's hugely popular web browser. Building on the success of previous editions of IE with new features and a new look, Microsoft has high hopes for Internet Explorer 9.

The first thing you'll notice about Internet Explorer 9 is an overhauled interface. Making the most of the transparent graphical style available in Windows 7 and newer editions of Windows Vista, IE 9 looks sleek, smart and simpler than ever before. Like in Google Chrome, the Address bar and Search box have been merged to create a simpler, more seamless user experience.

Among the new features included in Internet Explorer 9 are better integration with the Windows operating system and a seriously beefed-up security system. IE 9 also lets you 'pin' websites to the Superbar and allows you to bookmark your favorite websites as 'applications' in your OS. The new Performance Advisor add-on identifies add-ons that are slowing Internet Explorer down (a feature badly needed in Mozilla Firefox).

Internet Explorer 9 also offers improved speed and performance, as well as better compliance with web standards and new technologies. IE 9 features decent support for HTML 5 (the new generation of media-rich websites use this language), and now finishes the Acid 3 test with a near-perfect 95/100. New features like hang recovery and InPrivate Filtering provide Internet Explorer a stabler and more secure web experience than most other browsers.

In all, the latest version of Microsoft Internet Explorer 9 is faster and prettier than its predecessors - and really throws down the gauntlet to its competitors. Watch out: the browser wars just got exciting again.

Languages:

English

OS requirements for Internet Explorer:

  • OS: WinVista/7 Compatible with Windows 7

Minimum requirements:

  • Requires at least Windows Vista SP2
Download : http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/internet-explorer/download/ie-9/worldwidehttp://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/internet-explorer/download/ie-9/worldwide

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

LONDON SOFTWARE TESTING NEWS !

Refer : http://testinglondon.wordpress.com/

Ten Software Testing Myths ...

10 Software Testing Myths !

I was reading Lidor Wyssocky’s blog and his post on 10 software development myths. I thought, let me re-do this list for software testing – replace words “development” by “testing” and other relevant words. Here is the list … Bingo … we, the software testers *nearly* share the list of myths (frustrations?) …

It is interesting to note that last 5 myths go unchanged … development and testing share the honor. I even doubt that Lidor might be a software tester or a developer having a strong tester like mind.

10. The tester’s task is easy: he should merely write and execute the test cases by translating requirements to test cases. Additionally log some bugs.

9. Every test case is documented. Otherwise, how on earth can we expect to do regression testing and in general repeat testing?

8. Test case Reviews are a one-time effort. All you have to do is take an artifact after it is completed, and verify that it is correct. Test case reviews, for example, should merely verify that *all* requirements are covered by test cases and EVERY REQUIREMENT is COVERED by AT LEAST ONE TEST CASE.

7. Software Testing should be like manufacturing. Each of us is a robot in an assembly line. Given a certain input, we should be able to come up automatically with the right output. Execute a set of test cases (should execute 100 test cases a day) and report pass/fail status.

6. Software Testing has nothing to do with creativity. Creativity – what? The only part which requires creativity is designing your assembly line of test case design. From that point on, everyone should just be obedient.

5. Creativity and discipline cannot live together. Creativity equals chaos. [This one remains unchanged from original list of software development myths]

4. The answer to every challenge we face in the software industry lies in defining a process. That process defines the assembly line without which we are doomed to work in a constant state of chaos. [BIG ONE …This one remains unchanged from original list of software development myths]

3. Processes have nothing to do with people. You are merely defining inputs and outputs for different parts of your machine.

2. If a process is not 100% repeatable, it is not a process. Letting people adapt the process and do “whatever they want” is just going back to chaos again.

1. Quality is all about serving the customer. Whatever the customer wants, he should get. Things that don’t concern your customer should not be of interest to you.

Like Lidor, can say "As I said, I guess we still have a long way to go…" ?

7 Deadly Sins in "Software Testing"

1. Lack of "Lust for finding Defects" – Lust could be an objectionable vice in the Bible, but in the "Bible of Software Testing", lust is a good thing; lust for finding defects that is. Have a craving, appetite, or great desire towards finding defects is something that differentiates a great tester from that of a mediocre one. Once this lust dies down inside a tester’s heart, it would be very difficult to keep going.
Having said this, I do realize that there could be times like the "tester’s block syndrome" [a condition, associated with testing as a profession, in which a tester may lose the ability to find new bugs and defects in the software that (s)he is testing]. It can happen with anybody. But don’t let it become the end of the world for you. If you are struggling to find bugs in the software and feeling burnt out, "change the way you have been testing" – adopt new test ideas, try new ways to find where the AUT (application under test) might be broken, try out pair testing, explore new unexplored areas of the AUT and even try taking a short break. And still, if nothing at all works… then change your AUT! I know how difficult it can be to change the AUT (and your project) in certain contexts. In such cases, try out new applications (there are tons out there begging to be tested; just look around) and once you start finding defects in the new AUT, it won’t be long before you would start discovering defects (again) in your old AUT.

2. Envy – If you are in the field of testing then I can almost certainly bet that you must have come across testing teams where only few team members perform exceptionally well and the others instead of taking it as a reason of motivation rather feel envious about them. Enviousness and jealousy leads to hatred and hatred in turn takes you further away from the path to success.

3. Lack of "Greed for Knowledge" – Like lust, greed also is a good thing to have for a software tester. Some call it the "burning desire to learn" and others call it "the passion to excel", but to me they all mean essentially the same thing. Once some great mind said -- "knowledge is wealth/money". And it couldn’t be agreed more for software testing. I believe that a tester should be like a "search engine king", who is a jack of all trades and the master of many! As a test manager I would want my testers to be knowledgeable in every aspects of computing -- knowledge about programming languages, operating systems, web services, technology updates, gadgets, search engines, scripting skills… everything counts as long as they help the team to be better at testing.

4. Sloth – Laziness is not a luxury if you are in the software business; and the onus is even greater if you are a tester working in a tight testing schedule. In my opinion, this is one of the greatest sins a tester could ever commit – laziness in testing, laziness in learning new stuffs, laziness in updating your skills, laziness in showing interest in finding defects in what you’re testing… all can doom you and your career as a tester. So beware!

5. Wrath – Numerous situations may arise in a tester’s life where (s)he would find her/him against the team of programmers. But anger and wrath are never the solution to such scenarios. Hate the defects, NOT the programmer. Criticize the software that we test, NOT the programmer who coded it. And don’t ever forget that to err is human and if there were no errors, there would be no need for us (testers) in the team. Being diplomatic and factual with a small dose of humility can do wonders in dealing with any such adverse situations; NOT anger/wrath.

6. Pride – I can imagine how an occasional self-pat can help boost self-confidence and create room for the much needed motivation. But be careful NOT to overdo it and keep it at "occasional" level. Pride is probably the easiest gateway to witness failure and the feel-good factor associated with pride makes it even more dangerous.

7. Gluttony – Yes, I said that greed is a good thing for you if you are in the profession of software testing. But greed is not same as gluttony (over-testing, excess testing)! Learning to know where to stop testing is a lesser known art. If you didn’t find any new defects in the past hour of testing, then perhaps you wouldn’t find any, even if you extend the testing session for another couple of hours! In such cases taking a much needed break is a wiser decision than to extend the testing session. Furthermore, every test projects are associated with budget constraints and you wouldn’t probably want to make your testing efforts look like a liability to the whole project instead of adding value, would you?

What are the other deadly sins for a software tester that you would want to add to the above list? Share your thoughts via comments.

Selenium IDE - Opensource Tools

Selenium IDE


Selenium IDE is a Firefox plug-in to develop Selenium test cases , it provides these features:

  • Recording user actions
  • Saving user actions as a reusable script
  • Context menu in Firefox to add assertions and verifications
  • Full editing of the test cases

The add-on works only in Firefox, but tests can be run in other browsers like Internet Explorer, Safari and Opera. (Selenium Platforms)

Selenium IDE Installation



1. Using Firefox, download the IDE from the SeleniumHQ:http://seleniumhq.org/download/

2. Select Install Now.

3. Restart Firefox.

After Firefox reboots you will find the Selenium IDE listed under the Firefox Tools menu.

Create a test case


1. In Firefox: go to Tools>Selenium IDE

2. Start doing some actions in the browser.

In this guide, I am testing submitting a Google Sign-up form with none of the required fields.

3. Click on the Red button to stop recording

4. To save the test case: Click on File>Save

5. Enter the file name

6. Click on Save

These are the actions recorded in my example, “GoogleSignUpErrors”:


Add verifications and assertions to test cases


First we need to know the difference between verification and assertion. If you need to verify something in a page and stop testing if the element is not present, then you need to use assertion; on the other hand, if you want continue the test even if the element is not present , use verification.

For example in the “GoogleSignUpErrors” test, after clicking on the “Sign in” link in the Google home page, it is necessary to verify that the page is a Google Account in order to continue with the rest of the steps; in this case, you can use the asserTitle command to ensure the HTML title is “Google Accounts”.

To add assertTitle command to your test case:

1. Right-click on the action that comes before the assertion.

2. In the context menu, click on Insert New Command.

3. Choose the assertion command.

4. Enter the target value.

See assertTitle action in the Test pane:


Run the test case


1. In Firefox: go to Tools>Selenium IDE

2. Click on: File> Open

3. Select the test case file name

4. Click on “Play Entire Suite” or “Play Current test case”.

The first play button plays the entire test suite and the second one plays the current test case.

In this case we just have one test case, so both buttons are the same.

Export the test case


In Selenium IDE, the Test case pane shows in “Table” all the recorded actions in the “GoogleSignUpErrors” test case. If you click on “Source” you will see by default, the HTML format of the script. You can also change the programming language in the menu: Options> Format to see the script in other languages.

For example, the test case in Java looks like this:



As you can see, test cases can be exported to these languages: HTML, Java, Groovy, C#, Perl, PHP, Phyton and Ruby.

To export the test case:

1. Go to File>”Export test case As…”

2. Select the language, in this example: Java(Junit)

3. Enter the file name: “GoogleSignUpErrors.java”

In my next post I am going to show how to install Selenium-RC and run GoogleSignUpErrors.java from the command line.

References:


Selenium Project: http://seleniumhq.org/

Agile Tester ?

Am I Agile Tester?

FRIDAY, 7 MAY 2010 LEAVE A COMMENT

Agile testingI've often wondered if there's such a thing as an 'Agile Tester' or am I just a Tester who happens to work in an Agile Development environment. Having read countless blogs and based on my own experiences, I've come to the conclusion that the 'Agile Tester' really does exist. Let me explain...

The Agile Tester
As a Tester, you guide the development team in a way that ensures each user story/feature of the product behaves as intended and without bugs.

Agile Testers work with Product Managers and Owners to get a clear and common understanding of each feature in a way that everyone on the team is speaking the same language. An important step in this understanding is communicating how we know when a feature is done.

The Tester completes the requirement gathering in the form of test cases and once there is enough to be tested, checks the feature against these and carries out additional exploratory testing of the feature. The purpose of the exploratory testing is: 1) to understand the feature and how it is implemented, 2) to find additional or unexpected behavior, and 3) to refine and define additional test cases for the user story.

Unexpected behavior is discussed with Developers and Product Owners before deciding what to do about them. Often they are simply refinements on the original idea but they can also be either needed or unneeded additional functionality. Sometimes they are also just plain bugs. By addressing these refinements and making sure they are what the product owner or customer wants, we minimize the risk of creating the wrong product.

By testing early and often, Testers provide an early feedback to Product Mangers and Developers about whether the user story is on track or not. By further developing test cases based on exploratory testing, Testers define the intended product behavior as an "executable specification".

This is not the traditional approach - This is agile.

The Agile Tester does exist : - )

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Microsoft Office 2010 beta !!

OFFICE 2010 > I had a feeling that 2010 wasn’t going to be an upgrade to Office like what Windows 7 is to the Windows family. Having said that, Office 2010 Technical Preview does show some promising upgrades. In between giving my exams I did find some time to play around with the leaked version of Office 2010 & found some improvements over Office 2007. One of the biggest additions to Office 2010 will be its online collaboration capabilities I wrote about & we have some proof of that in the current Preview build. Here are some noticeable improvements in the technical Preview build:

1. Built-In Screen Capture Tool:

A really handy addition & at the same time a beautiful implementation of the same. Word & Powerpoint both have the ‘Screenshot’ feature under ‘Insert’ & the useful part is that it caches screen shots of the currently open windows for one-click insert. At the same time also gives you the marquee select option. Screen shot of the ‘Screenshot’ feature:

Office 2010 Screen capture

2. Background Removal Tool (for images):

Office 2010 background Removal

This is a feature that I’m sure quite a lot of us will be using. A neat addition to picture properties is ‘Background Removal’. To show you the power of this tool, here is an image that I inserted into a Word 2010 document:

Office 2010 Background Removal

And after using the tool this is what I got:

Office 2010 Background Removal

NOTE: No use of Photoshop AT ALL!

The tool also let’s you have certain amount of background left with edges & effects, screen shot:

Office 2010 Background Removal

Here is the Background Removal tool options tab:

Office 2010 Background Removal

3. Protected Mode:

I found this to be a good addition as a feature. Every time you download a document from the internet & open it, Word 2010 will open it in a ‘Protected mode’ that won’t allow you to edit the document unless you enable editing of the document. Screen shot:

Office 2010 Protected View

You can edit which file types are to be opened in the protect mode from the Trust Center panel. Screenshot:

4. New Smart Art Templates:

I gotta admit, I love ‘Smart Art’. It’s right up there amongst the best features in Office & in Office 2010 there are new templates added. Existing categories have new templates & there’s a new category as well. Screen shot:

Office 2010 Smart Art

5. Author Permissions:

As I had talked about co-authoring a document & collaborating over the Internet will be one of Office 2010’s USPs, the ‘Protect Document’ option under ‘Review’ in Office 2007 has now been renamed to ‘Restrict Editing’ & a new tab titled ‘Block Authors’ has been added. Screen shot of the option in Word 2007 & Word 2010 side-by-side:

Office 2010 Author permissions

6. Completely Revamped Options Under the Office Button:

Office 2010 has introduced a huge a change in the document options that are presented to you under the Office button. One of biggest pains was the meta-data that can be added in a document. Quick access to permissions, document meta-data under document info. With Office 2010 you now have the option of saving your document to a SharePoint location as well. Screen shot:

Office 2010 Word 2010 Backstage

7. A Kick-Ass Print Control Panel Under the Office Button:

This is a fantastic addition, clicking ‘Print’ under the Office 2010 button opens a plethora of printing options. No need go through a ‘Print Wizard’ you can select all your print options from here & hit print. Screen shot:

Office 2010 Word 2010 Print Backstage Options

8. Jumplists in Outlook 2010:

As you’ll might have seen, Outlook 2010 now makes use of Windows 7’s Jumplist feature for quick access to certain processes. Screen shot:

Office 2010 Outlook 2010 Jumplists

9. New Splash Screen

You don’t really figure out the awesomeness till you see the close & minimise options & the sleek animation :)

UPDATE:

10. Powerpoint Gets Word 2007′s Equation Editor & New ‘Action’ Tab

Powerpoint 2010 Office 2010 Actions Tab Animations

Martin asked in the comments whether Powerpoint 2010 now has the Equation Editor & yes it does. Along with it, there is another tab – ‘Action’ which allows you to configure mouse-click or mouse-hover action of objects. Options include running a Macro or a program amongst others. Screen shot:

Powerpoint 2010 Office 2010 Insert Equations

PS: I haven’t touched Excel, Access & others yet!

Update #2:

Have been lazing around about updating this post but here are some new features in Powerpoint 2010:

11. Broadcast Presentations To Your Clients:

I say this is one sweet feature! Now you can broadcast your presentations by sending the intended viewer a URL, this works along with Office Live Workspaces & you need an account of the same. Screenshot:

Office 2010 Powerpoint 2010 Broadcast presentations

12. Record Slideshows As Videos!

Well, don’t know why this wasn’t there in O2003 or O2007. Screenshot:

Office 2010 Record Powerpoint slideshows as videos

Office 2010 Record Powerpoint slideshows as videos

13. Inserting & Editing Videos Is Painless & Fun:

I’ll be honest, I never really enjoyed inserting videos in my presentations ‘coz it wasn’t a pleasant experience. It sucked. Not anymore, check out these options, screenshot:

Office 2010 Powerpoint 2010 inser & edit videos

Office 2010 Powerpoint 2010 inser & edit videos

14. Compress Media While Saving Presentations

As shown above, the all new file menu, known as — Backstage gives you options to compress the media files inserted in the presentation to reduce file size, it even gives an esitmate of the presentation size. Screenshot:

Office 2010 Powerpoint 2010 Save As COmpress Media Backstage

15. New Animations & Slide Transitions

My favorite from the new ones is the Gallery transition effect. Another addition to transitions is that the % can be defined. Screenshots:

Office 2010 Powerpoint 2010 New Slide Transitions

16. Save File Notification

When closing an unsaved file Office 2010 now lets you know that it has auto-saved a draft. Screenshot:

17. New Icons:

Office 2010 New Icon set

18. Hide Ribbon:

With Office 2010, a cleaner interface has been worked upon. There is now a single-click show/hide option for the Ribbon. Screenshot:

Office 2010 Beta New Features Hide Ribbon Show Ribbon

~Enjoy

Additional Info : http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/10things/?p=900

Linux Fedora 13

Linux Fedora 13

While I had done reviews of other distributions in the past, my reviewing Fedora may be a bit more biased in some regards since it has been my primary OS of choice for several years. Nevertheless, Fedora 13 has been an impressive initial release and though not a perfect one, has much to boast about. In my review I will only speak of features to which I have to some extent used or researched, but the full feature set may be found here.

Look and Feel

The artwork is beautiful. Just beautiful. KDE is beautiful, XFCE is beautiful, and GNOME is still beautiful. The interface continues to get more user friendly. For instance, when a user plugs in a printer, Fedora will go and find the driver for that printer in the repositories so the user doesn’t need to go install hplip or whatever package has their driver. This functionality has been implemented for media codecs already in a previous release and continues to work well in Fedora 13.

The icons have also been updated and look much nicer than previous releases. GNOME is at 2.30 and does not use gnome-shell by default. This release of GNOME has slightly more eye candy but not many dramatic changes. I did see one issue on an HP Mini netbook that the default font size at fresh install seemed way too big and awkward. They returned to a sane size after an update, although I’m not sure if it was the update or my tweaking with some things that fixed it.

Another thing I have noticed is cairo-dock, as shown in my screenshot, is much improved for stability with this release. I had used it on and off in Fedora 12 but it suffered frequent crashes and display defects. Since upgrading I have not seen a single occurrence of either here on my equipment (your mileage may vary).

Performance

The performance is at least on par if not slightly better than Fedora 12, which was already pretty impressive. Fedora 13 runs nice and smooth on an HP Mini I installed it on with a quick boot time. In part just to see how it would work, I installed Fedora running XFCE on an old, old machine with a 400MHz Celeron with 96M of RAM and a 4G hard drive. To be fair I did a hard drive swap for the installation, but it boots and runs with about 1G of hard drive space left to spare.

Video performance is one of the big features of this release. There is now 3D support in the open source nouveau driver for nVidia cards and expanded 3D support in the radeon driver for newer ATI cards by using the mesa-dri-drivers-experimental package. While the 3D implementation of nouveau isn’t complete yet, but it has been able to take advantage of some of the advanced features of newer video cards. The nouveau driver has come a very long way in a short time.

Installation and Upgrading

Installation is even more user friendly. The anaconda installer has re-done the menu for storage setup. It is now easier for a Windows user to resize their current partition and install Fedora alongside with less manual steps. I should note that some users in the #Fedora support channel on Freenode have complained about Windows 7 not liking the work of the Fedora installer in some ways. Fedora has also improved btrfs, although not officially supported, one feature touted is filesystem rollbacks. The anaconda installer can setup Fedora over btrfs by passing ‘btrfs’ to at startup of installation.

Upgrading is a little more annoying. If you used the default partitioning for Fedora in the past, using preupgrade will be a bit of a pain. There is no way to find enough space in /boot with only a 200MB partition, and if you used the default LVM, resizing that partition will be a chore. You can however use a wired ethernet connection and just let anaconda download those images during the upgrade process. On the two machines I have done this with so far the end result was really good. Everything was updated and after checking several things was pretty pleased with the process. But if you don’t have a way to get a wired connection, I would recommend using the install media to upgrade.

Recommendation

Try it! If you run Fedora already, upgrade! This has been a very stable out-of-box release for Fedora. Whether you’re into eye-candy and usability or a smart OS for performance and useful tools, Fedora 13 will likely make you smile a bit

Mr. Andrew Buxton’s Visit to Technopark

Monday, 13 September 2010 10:26
Mr. Andrew Buxton’s Visit to Technopark on 9th September 2010
Mr. Andrew Buxton, is the chairman of Council of Advisors at Testhouse Ltd., which is an independent software testing and QA company, with deep experience in the Banking domain. Headquartered in London, UK., Testhouse also has offices in Spain, UAE and USA, and is currently in the process of attempting rapid growth for the company in India. Mr. Andrew's visits to Technopark, is to meet Technopark team and discuss forward plans, which includes amongst other things, a potential move to the Technopark environment. Mr. Buxton had discussions with CEOs of Technopark companies.Dr. Ajay Kumar IAS, Principal Secretary, Mr. Mervin Alexander, Chief Executive Officer, Technopark, Mr.Vijay Kumar CEO testhouse India  too were present.





































Last Updated on Monday, 13 September 2010 10:35
Refer :http://www.technopark.org/campus-notes/225-mr-andrew-buxtons-visits-to-technopark

Monday, September 13, 2010

Expo:QA Madrid 2010 Conference

Expo:QA'09, Madrid, 27th-29th of October - Meet Specialists in Testing from all around the world and enjoy Spain!

"Interanational Conference in Software Testing, in one of the most attractive capital of Europe

- 30 speakers from 10+ countries,
- 3 stages
- 4 keynotes
- 3 Tutorials
- Exibition hall with the Market leaders
(and a Networking Party with a menu by the best Chef of the world... but it shouldn't be the only reason to attend;-) ( Dinner )

And some prominent guests, among them:

Tom Gilb, author of 9 books about Software Engineering and Quality, major influencer of the “Agile” culture, inventor of the term ‘Software Metrics’ and co-author of the static testing method ‘Software Inspection’,

Jeff Johnson, well-known expert in Software Usability and author of the bestseller GUI Bloopers: Don'ts and Do's for Software Developers and Web Designers, will explain how to design highly-usable GUIs.

Tracks on:
- Test Automation
- Agile Testing
- Test Management & Business
- Test Technics
- and more at Program

Project - Transport for London

Hi All,

I would like to announce that Testhouse has been selected by Transport for London as their testing partner for the Journey Planner Services business. Our role is to act as TFL's quality gate to all other suppliers whilst also providing UAT and Performance testing of TFL's mobile services platform and UAT testing of their new Journey Planner iPhone application. Having already successfully tested TFL's Cabwise system we are now becoming strategically involved on larger projects. As London's second largest employer, TFL is an excellent addition to our new client relationships.

Thanks to all those involved with Cabwise and in progressing the opportunity to partner with TFL.


Cabwise: http://www.tfl.gov.uk/tfl/gettingaround/taxisandminicabs/taxis/default.aspx
Journey Planner: http://journeyplanner.tfl.gov.uk/user/XSLT_TRIP_REQUEST2?language=en