|

Five for Friday – May 4, 2018

It’s Star Wars Day! Here’s what I found interesting this week.

  • Quote I’m pondering (or quote within a quote, as it’s the authors of The Coaching Habit who are quoting Bernard Shaw):
    “Bernard Shaw put it succinctly when he said, “The single biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place.”
  • Book I’m reading now: Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams
  • I’m big on learning from failure – but I found this article on Blind Spots in Learning and Inference has a lot of interesting points on blind spots often made when looking at failures (focusing on two widely famous failures).
  • Are you kidding me? More CPU Flaws?
  • I taught a workshop earlier this week on web testing tools. We spent a chunk of time on Postman, but I wanted to give credit to Danny Dainton, as I borrowed from (and referenced) his github repository on All Things Postman. Thanks Danny.

Similar Posts

  • Let it happen

    I come across this frequently enough that I’m sure I’ve blogged about it before, but context dictates that I do it again. The story I hear goes pretty much like this: My team really needs to improve X, but nobody is taking responsibility for it. The fix is obvious – we need our exec /…

  • Roles and Boxes

    The fine folks at the Ministry of Testing keep promoting my blog posts, so the least I can do is give them a link and a shout out. I’m looking forward to talking about “Testing without Testers” at Test Bash Philadelphia (preview here) and about my role on the team. This morning, I passively listened…

  • Who Owns Quality?

    On request from Adam Goucher – another excerpt from How We Test Software at Microsoft.  BTW – Adam wrote a review of HWTSAM here – although Linda Wilkinson beat him to the clever title. This is from a section on quality in chapter 16. It’s something I believe strongly in and would love to hear…

  • The Myth of the Degree

    There’s been s lot reported lately on the Equifax security breach. Equifax failed to apply a security patch for Apache Struts in a timely manner, and attackers took advantage of this to get at a whole lot of customer data. What we don’t know at this time is whether this was a fluke due to a…

  • Walls on the Soapbox

    I chair an advisory council for a community of senior testers at Microsoft. We have a variety of events ranging from talking heads to open space events to panels to whatever type of event we think is the most different than the previous one. Yesterday, we had our fifth annual “soapbox” event, a lightning talk-ish…

2 Comments

  1. I read a few pages from the book “Why we sleep” so far. I will continue reading it this weekend.

    There is an interesting study of “Sleep cadence in people of different age groups” context in the book “When” by “Daniel Pink”. Try to get hold of this book when you get a chance. I might like it, for the fact that, the book is based on the surveys and data from numerous sources, for the most part. https://kcls.bibliocommons.com/item/show/1764089082 . I made some high level notes after reading this book – https://ramsblog.wordpress.com/2018/04/03/when-perfect-timing-for-everything/

    1. I was a release day reader of When, and definitely see some parallels in Why We Sleep (but obviously WWS goes quite a bit deeper).

      But looks like we share a reading list 🙂

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.