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5 votes
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Aggressive testing, contact tracing, cooked meals: How the Indian state of Kerala flattened its coronavirus curve
5 votes -
Australian scientists have made a test to check who is likely to develop coronavirus
3 votes -
William Osman did a vlog about his wife testing positive for COVID-19
4 votes -
Despite having the highest death toll so far, Italy's coronavirus deaths are far higher than reported, with thousands dying but never being tested
8 votes -
Testing backlogs at US private laboratories have ballooned
4 votes -
The lost month: How a failure to test blinded the US to Covid-19
8 votes -
Iceland employs detective work, testing and quarantine in coronavirus fight
8 votes -
The science behind coronavirus testing, and where the US went wrong
3 votes -
Why widespread coronavirus testing isn't coming anytime soon
7 votes -
Iceland's large-scale testing strategy includes people who don’t have any symptoms
7 votes -
How one woman fought to get her husband tested while her state was applauded for having no coronavirus
11 votes -
New blood tests for antibodies could show true scale of coronavirus pandemic
8 votes -
Sixteen things that software testers wished they’d learned earlier
5 votes -
US FDA turns to Twitter to help track testing supply shortages
4 votes -
Florida: Drive-thru COVID-19 testing gets off to rocky start
4 votes -
How testing for Covid-19 works
6 votes -
Testing shortages force extreme shift in strategy by Sacremento health officials
3 votes -
Drive-through virus testing so popular they had to shut it down
8 votes -
Rep. Katie Porter gets US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention chief to agree to pay for coronavirus testing
9 votes -
Kaiser to open drive-up coronavirus testing areas
4 votes -
‘It’s just everywhere already’: How delays in testing set back the US coronavirus response
15 votes -
What should be on a QA tester’s résumé? Here's what the recruiters say they want to see
10 votes -
The facts on US coronavirus testing
5 votes -
Why the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention botched its coronavirus testing
6 votes -
Gates-funded program will soon offer home-testing kits for new coronavirus
7 votes -
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s rocky effort to get Americans tested for coronavirus, explained
9 votes -
ExoMars parachute tests delayed, mission faces review
4 votes -
In search of the full stack testing team: What makes the best QA teams so good
4 votes -
Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas ended pre-season F1 testing with fastest lap – both on Friday's final day and overall
3 votes -
The app that broke the Iowa Caucuses was sent out through a beta testing platform
10 votes -
Three US airports to check passengers for a deadly Chinese coronavirus
8 votes -
Five reasons why software testing needs humans
6 votes -
Exotic threats in mobile testing...
I'm currently in the process of reading the excellent "Lessons Learned in Software Testing: A Context-Driven Approach". Early on the following is mentioned. Test common threats before exotic...
I'm currently in the process of reading the excellent "Lessons Learned in Software Testing: A Context-Driven Approach". Early on the following is mentioned.
Test common threats before exotic threats.
Seems reasonable enough. That said, it got me thinking It'd be cool to generate a list of such threats for future devs/testers to draw on. So...I'm calling on the collective experience of any Tilders involved in iOS or Android development to lend a hand.
In your time working on mobile, what issues have you encountered that you would you classify as exotic? I.e those issues that infrequently arise but when they do can cause major damage. Any and all help is appreciated.
4 votes -
The citizen scientist who finds killers from her couch: How CeCe Moore is using her genetic knowledge to expose murderers
8 votes -
The benefits of test-case reduction, and tools that can help do it automatically
3 votes -
We Re-Launched The New York Times Paywall and No One Noticed
9 votes -
Norwegian researchers say data may point to second blast at Russian test site
8 votes -
Global network's nuclear sensors in Russia went offline after mystery blast
7 votes -
Accuracy of genotyping chips called into question
3 votes -
Very rare pathogenic genetic variants detected by SNP-chips are usually false positives: implications for direct-to-consumer genetic testing
8 votes -
How White nationalists see what they want to see in DNA tests
11 votes -
Alfa Romeo calls up Marcus Ericsson for Pirelli F1 testing
2 votes -
Spotify begins testing curated podcast playlists
10 votes -
A road trip through New Mexico’s atomic past
5 votes -
The high cost of slow tests
8 votes -
Metamorphic Testing
5 votes -
How much testing do you guys do?
Pretty straight forward question, but basically I was watching a discussion panel the other day talking about the ethics of Self-Driving cars. A topic came up about people writing crappy code, and...
Pretty straight forward question, but basically I was watching a discussion panel the other day talking about the ethics of Self-Driving cars. A topic came up about people writing crappy code, and more than that, people not testing their code. And if they do, they do point testing. I am in my last semester of uni and I am working with some companies where we are doing pretty extensive testing, happy flows and a lot of alternate flows, as well as UI/UX testing. I wanted to extend this question to you, do you guys do testing, what type? How much do you focus on it? And if u love it/hate it?
12 votes -
The fertility doctor’s secret children - Donald Cline used his own sperm to inseminate over fifty of his patients without their knowledge
9 votes -
What Could Kill Testing?
8 votes