Interesting discussion, you did bring up some of the persistent issues with implementation of automation for test execution. False & high expectations from the onset being the number one problem I’ve seen time and time again over the last 20+ years working with tools.
It would be another good talk if you were to cover the common misconceptions regarding this line of work and how best to safeguard against them so you can have a chance of gaining a higher level of success. With success meaning gaining ‘useful’ benefit from implementing the automation. And useful can mean multiple things, depending on purpose.
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Interesting discussion, you did bring up some of the persistent issues with implementation of automation for test execution. False & high expectations from the onset being the number one problem I’ve seen time and time again over the last 20+ years working with tools.
It would be another good talk if you were to cover the common misconceptions regarding this line of work and how best to safeguard against them so you can have a chance of gaining a higher level of success. With success meaning gaining ‘useful’ benefit from implementing the automation. And useful can mean multiple things, depending on purpose.
Regards,
Jim Hazen