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4 votes
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Winamp in 2020 (Webamp Electron app)
13 votes -
Apple app review process updates
6 votes -
Estimating software testing time: a few useful guidelines
4 votes -
The Anti-Capitalist Software License has a goal of "contributing to a world beyond capitalism"
14 votes -
Why Johnny won't upgrade
12 votes -
Five rules for successful test automation
5 votes -
TietoEVRY, a software company from Finland, has developed a new font called Polite Type which uses machine learning to rewrite offensive language into more inclusive forms
10 votes -
Requiring a Facebook account for Oculus VR is bad for users, devs, and competition
17 votes -
The Eliza Effect
10 votes -
Five ways cloud-native application testing is different from testing on-premises software
4 votes -
Bitwarden review
11 votes -
What’s the difference between a good QA director and a great one? A comparison
4 votes -
Turning Lambda@Edge into a software platform
4 votes -
The rise and fall of Adobe Flash
10 votes -
LibreOffice: the next five years
12 votes -
Four lessons software teams can learn from rock bands
4 votes -
Google blew a ten-year lead
27 votes -
Oculus Go will no longer be sold, software maintained until 2022
8 votes -
How to design a Proof of Concept project to evaluate software
4 votes -
Retiring old service versions
3 votes -
Sexism in technology
11 votes -
How do you design a Proof of Concept project for a new dev/test tool?
Input wanted for an article. Let's say that your company is considering the purchase of an expensive new application to help in the company's software development. The demo looks great, and the...
Input wanted for an article.
Let's say that your company is considering the purchase of an expensive new application to help in the company's software development. The demo looks great, and the feature list makes it sound perfect for your needs. So your Management arranges for a proof of concept license to find out if the software is worth the hefty investment. The boss comes to you to ask you to be in charge of the PoC project.
I'm aiming to write an article to help developers, devops, and testers determine if a given vendor's application meets the company's needs. The only assumption I'm making is that the software is expensive; if it's cheap, the easy answer is, "Buy a copy for a small team and see what they think." And I'm thinking in terms of development software rather than enterprise tools (e.g. cloud-based backup) though I suspect many of the practices are similar.
Aside: Note that this project is beyond "Decide if we need such a thing." In this scenario, everyone agrees that purchasing a tool is a good idea, and they agree on the baseline requirements. The issue is whether this is the right software for the job.
So, how do you go about it? I'm sure that it's more than "Get a copy and poke at it randomly." How did (or would) you go about designing a PoC project? If you've been involved in such a project in the past (particularly if the purchase wasn't ideal), what advice could someone have given you to help you make a better choice? I want to create a useful guide that applies to any "enterprise-class" purchase.
For example: Do you recommend that the PoC period be based on time (N months) or workload (N transactions)? How do you decide who should be on the PoC team? What's involved in putting together a comprehensive list of requirements (e.g. integrates with OurFavoredDatabase, meets performance goals of X), creating a test suite that exercises what the software dev product does, and evaluating the results? ...and what am I not thinking of, that I should?
7 votes -
Munich is shifting back from Microsoft to open source
14 votes -
Employee monitoring software surges as companies send staff home
18 votes -
The mobile testing gotchas you need to know about
5 votes -
Gopass - The team password manager
7 votes -
It's called artificial intelligence—but what *is* intelligence?
4 votes -
The need for software testing: Neil Ferguson's unstable epidemiologic model
10 votes -
Do antiviruses still slow your computer down?
9 votes -
Nitter, JS free interface for Twitter
15 votes -
How Apple reinvented the cursor for iPad
6 votes -
Why do I pay Adobe $10K a year? Reviewing video production software alternatives
14 votes -
Organizing and running a developer room at FOSDEM
3 votes -
Are we simple yet?
4 votes -
US unemployment checks are being held up by a coding language almost nobody knows
21 votes -
Apple changes default MacBook charging behavior to improve battery health—battery will charge to 80% by default
9 votes -
Recommendations for a simple video chat system for Grandma
Grandma is understimulated in assisted living, and while Mom is looking into ways to either bunk with her, or drag her back to our place, I'm exploring other options. Her apartment does have...
Grandma is understimulated in assisted living, and while Mom is looking into ways to either bunk with her, or drag her back to our place, I'm exploring other options. Her apartment does have wireless internet, so we could set up some sort of telepresence or video calling device, but even something as simple as a Relay or a KC2 isn't great, because it loses power, and needs to be explained to her.
I'm thinking that we might have better luck with a Tablet or a PC solution, and I do have a Kindle Fire (5th Gen?) and an off brand Windows 10 tablet around, and I am open to a Pi Project or speciality devices, but it has to be simple enough to plug and play, and the dream would be if it could start a video chat without the receiver having to pick up, or at least as simple as a nurse being able to come in and start a call. Any suggestions?
18 votes -
Why doctors hate their computers
23 votes -
Who would have thought an iPad cursor could be so much fun?
9 votes -
The iPad cursor is here, no wait required
6 votes -
The software that’s being made available free to help with home working during the COVID-19 crisis
4 votes -
Sixteen things that software testers wished they’d learned earlier
5 votes -
Suggestions for free video editing software
I'm using OBS Studio to create some video tutorials. Nothing complicated, just me talking and demonstrating the steps on my screen. I essentially just need to slice up these recordings into clips,...
I'm using OBS Studio to create some video tutorials. Nothing complicated, just me talking and demonstrating the steps on my screen.
I essentially just need to slice up these recordings into clips, delete portions of the recordings where I mess up or there are long pauses, and export it all as one video.
I've used Premier in the past but I no longer have it. While I am pretty capable of learning how to use software, I would prefer something that doesn't have a huge learning curve.
I need something that runs on either Windows or Linux and is free. Not "free trial" free, but actually free. Open source would be a plus but not a requirement.
Feel free to recommend your favorite free video editor even if it doesn't meet all of my requirements, as maybe it will help someone else in the future.
8 votes -
What should be on a QA tester’s résumé? Here's what the recruiters say they want to see
10 votes -
switching.software: Ethical, easy-to-use and privacy-conscious alternatives to well-known software
18 votes -
In search of the full stack testing team: What makes the best QA teams so good
4 votes -
An app can be a home-cooked meal
12 votes -
Steam hardware & software survey: January 2020
11 votes -
Mycroft won against their patent troll
22 votes