Month: November 2006

The simple things in life…

Does your system accept real world data? Does it restrict the lengths of fields and/or prevent certain characters from being entered? How do you know when you are allowing the right kinds of data? While chatting with colleagues about the NOTAG bug and some of the features of the system we are working on (it […]

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Software testing in Korea

While I wasn’t able to find out much about Korean software testing as a whole, one of the cool things about attending the Korean Games conference was a chance to pick up some Korean testing vocabulary. Here are today’s words – 검증 (Geom-jeung) – Verification 추적 (Chu-jeok) – Tracking 지원 (Ji-won) – Support 가능성/가능 테스트 […]

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Back from Korea

I know I don’t write that frequently, but I have an excuse for the extended break this time – a five week visit to South Korea. I had thought about advertising my absence, but it occurred to me that if there is some criminally minded person paying attention to my blog, they could quite easily […]

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