I Attended John Stevenson’s great talk and workshop at Monday night’s Software Testing Club Atlanta. I’m happy to report the meeting had about 15 in-person attendees and zero virtual attendees. Maybe someone read my post.
John is a thoughtful and passionate tester. He managed to hold our attention for 3 hours! Here are the highlights from my notes:
- The human brain can store 3TBs of information; This is only 1 millionth of the new information released on the internet every day.
- Over stimulation leads to mental illness.
- John showed us a picture and asked what we saw. We saw a tree, flowers, the sun, etc. Then John told us the picture was randomly generated. The point? People see patterns even when they don’t exist. Presumably to make sense out of information overload.
- Don’t tell your testing stories with numbers. “A statistician drowned while crossing a river with an average depth of 3 feet”; Isn’t that like, “99 percent of my tests passed”?
- Don’t be a tester that waits until testing “is done” to communicate the results. Communicate the test results you collected today? I love this and plan to blog about it.
- Testers, stop following the same routines. Try doing something different. You might end up discovering new information.
- Testers, stop hiding what you do. Get better at transparency and explaining your testing. Put your tests on a public wiki.
- Critical thinking takes practice. It is a skill.
- “The Pause”. Huh? Really? So? Great critical thinking model explained in brief here.
- A model for skepticism. FiLCHeRS.
- If you challenge someone’s view, be aware of respecting it.
- Ways to deal with information overload:
- Slow down.
- Don’t over commit.
- Don’t fear mistakes. But do learn from them. This is how children learn. Play.
- (Testing specific) Make your testing commitments short so you can throw them away without losing much. Don’t write some elaborate test that takes a week to write because it just might turn out to be the wrong test.
- You spend a 3rd of your life at work. Figure out how to enjoy work.
- John led us through a series of group activities including the following:
- Playing Disruptus to practice creative thinking. (i.e., playing Scamper.)
- Playing Story War to practice bug advocacy.
- Determining if the 5 test phases (Documentation, Planning, Execution, Analysis, Reporting) each use Creative Thinking or Critical thinking.
- Books John referenced that I would like to read:
- The Signal and the Noise – Nate Silver
- Thinking Fast and Slow – Daniel Kahneman
- You are Not So Smart – David McRaney
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3TB? How about more like 2.5 Petabytes. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/what-is-the-memory-capacity/