TestBash Smash

Short story is that TestBash may be my new favorite testing conference. Great venue (no, fantastic venue), well-organized, and excellent variety and diversity across the different presentations. I was reflecting while walking the streets of Philadelphia this morning and realized that almost every talk was experiential – filled with stories of problem solving and discovery.

For those who know me, let me put it this way. I don’t think I rolled my eyes even once! (except the time when Nancy asked how many of us were context-driven testers).

I also met so many people I’ve only known on twitter (so many, in fact, that I can’t list them), and a large handful of new people I follow now too.

As for my talk, it seemed well received for a talk that (in title) could be scary to a lot of testers. Honestly, I don’t think the talk would have worked as well with a less sophisticated group of testers. It’s really easy to take an idea like testing without testers and look at it with no critical thinking and dismiss it entirely – but folks seemed to get how it could work (and I, of course, was unafraid to talk about how it can fail miserably.

I used a ping pong metaphor to describe the inefficiencies in typical test-dev relationships, and I hammed it up a bit figuring if I was going to look stupid, I’d go all in. It went a little  better than I expected, and I owe Angie Jones an apology:

To my credit, Angie – I don’t have an A game. I barely have game, so I just wing it and see what happens. This time, ping pong worked – I was fortunate and lucky.

Overall, a very good experience, and a conference I look forward to attending again someday.

Similar Posts

  • Test Responsibility

    I apologize in advance for yet another exploration of what testers do. More and more, I feel that Brent is right, and Test is a 4 Letter Word, but I feel we (whatever we want to call ourselves) can advance through discussion of our roles and responsibilities. A few weeks ago, I was talking to…

  • Learning to learn

    As I write this, I’m waiting (literally, waiting on hold) to give a webinar for Swiss Testing Night. It’s a twenty minute presentation – which I love (see my last post for another twenty minute presentation from me. I would love to see a test conference filled with nothing but 20-30 minute presentations someday (and…

  • So Long, Tester Center

      Earlier today, Ron posted the following about the Microsoft Tester Center: So Long, Tester Center. There’s nothing I can say that Ron didn’t say – it was a fun effort – just hard to do without any full time support (and as our individual jobs got more complex and demanding). The good news, is…

  • Why is the Weasel angry?

    I’m surprised that many people are still asking me what an angry weasel has to do with software testing. The answer, of course, is nothing. I’m surprised however, how many people can visit my site at angryweasel.com/blog and never check out plain old angryweasel.com (where I happen to share the story of where the name…

2 Comments

  1. Your presentation was fantastic – if that’s “barely having game” I’d hate to think what the rest of us would have to live up to.

    I think one of the reasons so many of the presentations were so well-received is because they were experiential, and all of us have been there in some way or other. It helps a lot – particularly when, like me, you’re the only tester in the organization – to see that others have the same kinds of challenges and that they find ways to solve them.

  2. Very much enjoyed getting a chance to chat with you in such a comfortable setting. I agree that Testbash seems to have figured out how to host “an inclusive testing community” conference just about perfectly. As for me, I hope that we meet again sooner rather than later.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.