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Archive for July, 2008

I’ve been converted. Kindof.

July 27th, 2008

Becky Fiedler is going to jump for joy when she reads this — likely because I give her so much flak — but due to work’s Get Everyone a Laptop campaign, I am now the proud user of a Macintosh computer.

(”Hi, my name is Tim, and I use a Mac.”)

Now, before you get all excited, I need to preface it a bit: I’ve already installed Ubuntu, and it happily lives alongside OS X. :)
Though I’ll likely be using Ubuntu for most of my day-to-day work, getting a Mac gets me some great perks:

  1. I can play with Mac OS X anytime I want.
  2. I get great Mac hardware (it looks sexy, and actually works well in both OS’s).
  3. I can switch between Mac and Ubuntu for browser testing (Safari, anybody?).

The biggest win, however, is I can take it home. My old clunky Acer is going to get very lonely very quickly.

Work , , ,

Best. Conference. Ever.

July 24th, 2008

Author’s note: This post is wildly overdue.

I’ve been meaning to write this post for a while. I was thinking about how I’d write it — how creative I could be while introducing it — to the point where I never actually got to writing it. And you know what, ladies and gentleman? That’s simply atrocious, considering how absolutely awesome CAST 2008 was.

I enjoyed this CAST more than the other two previous CASTs. Though CAST 2007 sported a fun and enlightening certification debate, and CAST 2006 paved ground with an interesting but heated discussion after the first keynote, this CAST seemed different.

The biggest difference, I think, was that I wasn’t a student.

Rob Sabourin likes to talk about people going out in the world and being “blooded” after many years experience. I am by no means a blooded professional — I’m still getting dirt under my nails — but in the last year, I’ve gained a new appreciation for the “people” aspect of our industry. Whereas in college I focused on code, exams, homework and text books (to the greatest degree of perfection I had time for), in the real world I can focus on people.

At this CAST, I made an effort to talk to as many people as I could. Not only would I talk to them, but I did my best to find something interesting about what they had to say. Though I could have simply shied away or given into nervousness or not even cared, I met so many interesting people that I’d argue meeting people was the single best part of CAST.

Though the “people” aspect was likely the part of CAST I enjoyed the most, it definitely wasn’t everything. Here’s a few bullets that highlight my CAST experience:

  • Getting on a plane with absolutely no sleep, making it to Toronto in good spirits and then exploring the city.
  • Meeting people that I met at previous CASTs (shout out to Henrik, who was the first recognizable face I saw).
  • Going to Jerry Weinberg’s tutorial, and meeting him for the first time.
  • Being told I look Irish.
  • Being told I look like Wolverine.
  • Being given a staff badge by Paul Holland, making me feel as if I was part of the group (though I’m sure he just wanted to make me available to help :) ).
  • Seeing Cem and Becky again.
  • Going to a small Irish pub to see Michael Bolton & Nick Wolf play traditional Irish music.
  • Getting tested by Ben Simo through his use of children’s toys.
  • Seeing RobSab and his wife Anne’s presentation. (Absolutely beautiful, and even more beautiful that they can do it together.)
  • Having a new analogy for manual test scripts that deals with diseased rats.
  • Meeting the Dorset House Publishing people, who literally work right across the deck from The Open Planning Project in New York City.
  • Being gently pushed to give a lightning talk. (Dawn, thank you for that.)
  • Noticing as people took notes when I gave my lightning talk.
  • Getting handshakes afterward when people told me it was a good lightning talk.
  • Getting told that I could have a quarterly Tim-bits column in The AST Update (or another soon-to-be named AST magazine).
  • Getting told by Scott Barber and others that I should publish a book of Tim-bits a few years down the road.
  • Being told I look Irish, again.
  • Being told I look like Wolverine — again.
  • Going out to a pub with Michael Bolton and many others, and teaming up with Louise Perold for his bouncy-ball testing game.
  • And finally, Hanging out with Carsten, Louise, Henrik, Ben and Chris during most of my CAST off-time.

And there’s more items I can list. Much more.

Overall, this CAST was a great experience, and I want to thank everyone who shared in that experience with me. Thank you, all.

CAST, Testing

TOPP’s got a new do!

July 13th, 2008

People have told me many times — especially since I’ve been to New York — that I look like Wolverine, or more recently, the actor known as Hugh Jackman. I’m not totally sure that’s true. Even so, whenever I’m told I could be Hugh’s stunt double, it’s almost always followed up by, “It’s the sideburns.” And it is the sideburns: I have long, Wolverine-like sideburns. To my benefit, they get attention.

Similarly, TOPP, the company I work for, has had some growth of its own also worthy of attention. On top of hiring plenty of awesome people and putting our feelers out for a new office, our website’s got a new do. I must say, we’ve got a pretty attractive website. If I saw it in the street, I’d do a double take. It looks professional.

So, in short, this post is to simply say, “Good work guys and gals. You’ve got a growth on the side of your head that looks nice. You should be proud.”

And we are.

Work

Quick Update, eh?

July 13th, 2008

This is gonna be a quick one, because, well… I gotta go spend my Loonies!

I’ll be in Toronto tomorrow for CAST 2008. For those that don’t know, CAST is the Association for Software Testing’s annual conference. On the docket this year is Jerry Weinberg, Cem Kaner, RobSab and many others. I’m excited.

Among the coolness of hanging out with Testing aficionados this week, I get to use the flight from NY to Toronto and back to further my testing history lesson. A few books mentioned to me finally made it to my doorstep, and the flight will give me a great time to read them. So much better than the subway.

What’s also coming out of the pipe (hopefully) soon is a personal project aiming to give a bit of stability to the crazy world of Javascript. I’ve spent the last year writing Javascript for The Open Planning Project, and after a bit of reflection, I feel like I, we, and the collective Javascript writers around the world are back in the relative stone age. Put bluntly and likely inappreciatively, Javascript is the C of browser languages. That’ll change soon, but in the interim — I’d guess four years before it reaches critical mass — we need a bit more stability.

Oh, and let me plug some Obama volunteerism real quick: If you’re interested, a couple volunteers and I are creating voter demographic maps using OpenLayers and Geoserver for Obama’s campaign in North Carolina. You can see a quick (and recent) hack-job here, though it will be password protected soon to accommodate sensitive data. If you’re interested in helping this mapping effort, or you know Obama campaign workers who could benefit from their own instance, feel free to join the OpenPlans project here.

And with that: CASTaways, I will see you tomorrow. Everyone else, goodnight!

CAST, Testing