Tag RSS FeedGet The RSS Feed For This Page Here.

Michael Hunter's Blog
MHunter Description:
Michael "The Braidy Tester" Hunter is a Test Technical Lead for Microsoft Expression. Despite having developed for twenty years and tested for ten he is still amazed that he gets paid to play all day. Michael publishes his other blog and other good stuff at www.thebraidytester.com.

Oct 09
2008

</blog>

Posted by Michael Hunter in Testing

This post will be my last. For now at least - I cannot see into the future, so I will not say I will never blog here again.

Thanks to all of you readers, and an especial thanks to each of you who commented on my writings. See you 'round the

Oct 07
2008

Five Questions With Dave Liebreich

Posted by Michael Hunter in TestingFive Questions

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it Liebreich bills himself as a software testing architect, a consultant, a coach, and a manager. I bill him as someone who knows a whole lot about testing. Regardless of whether he is helping your team as an individual contributor, your Director Of Test, or anything in between, Dave can help your team become its Best Option version of yourself.

Dave has served as Test Architect at Mozilla Corporation and as QA Manager at Yahoo!, so he knows his way around complex, distributed, networked systems. What's more, he has the know-how to translate his experiences into the product you are building, even if said product is neither complex nor distributed nor networked. Through it all, Dave helps you keep track of what you are doing, why you are doing it, and how you will know you are done.

Here is what Dave has to say:


Sep 30
2008

Five Questions With Scott Louvau

Posted by Michael Hunter in TestingFive Questions

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it Louvau writes software for Microsoft. He doesn't write any software you have ever used, though, unless you have ever worked on his team. The software Scott writes, you see, is the software his team uses to test their product. To paraphrase the commercial, Scott doesn't test the software you use, he makes the testing of the software you use better.

Scott tells me that if he was not in software he would be some sort of craftsman because "I really like the idea of doing a job you can get better at every day". He recounts a Discovery Channel special on how aircraft carriers are built, a process which involves welding together giant panels of steel. The host watched as a welder took a panel which had buckled from the heat of welding it and completely flattened it with a single hit of his hammer. When the host asked the welder how he knew where and how to hit the panel, the welder replied "Twenty-eight years on the job".

Although Scott has only six years on the job so far, I am sure his teammates would agree that he knows where and how to hit their buckled panels in order to flatten them out. Here is what Scott has to say:


Sep 23
2008

Five Questions With Michael Kelly

Posted by Michael Hunter in TestingFive Questions

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it Kelly is a tester's tester. He talks about testing on his blog as well as in magazines ranging from InformIT to Better Software. He talks about testing at the Indianapolis Workshops on Software Testing he co-founded as well as at conferences ranging from the Indianapolis Quality Assurance Association Quality Enrichment Conference to the upcoming Pacific Northwest Software Quality Conference. And he tests software for companies large and small as well as for the fun of it.

Regardless of how you come to know Michael, his passion for improving the craft of testing and for helping testers improve themselves comes shining through. Here is what Michael has to say:


Sep 15
2008

Five Questions With Dmitri Klementiev

Posted by Michael Hunter in TestingFive Questions

Dmitri Klementiev tests software at Microsoft. No, he develops software for Microsoft. No, he tests software for Microsoft. I'm confused.

Oh, I get it: Dmitri is the type of tester for whom Microsoft originally coined the title Software Development Engineer in Test: he spends his days developing software to help other testers better do their job. In Dmitri's case this has largely meant putting massive amounts of time into developing the tool many Microsoft testers use to automate their drive-my-application's-user-interface test cases. Dmitri's Doctorate Of Mathematics and experience in mathematical and computer modeling seems to be holding him in good stead as he navigates the intricacies of automating the user interfaces of Microsoft's many different applications and operating systems.

Here is what Dmitri has to say:


Sep 09
2008

Five Questions With Gil Broza

Posted by Michael Hunter in TestingFive Questions

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it broke Edgar Allen Poe's second cipher. Gil Broza is a certified NLP Master Practitioner. Gil Broza is living what he describes as a "wild life" as he learns how to raise twins.

Perhaps more germane to this blog, however, is that Gil Broza has been working on software for close to two decades and has been XPing and Agileing for much of that time. Regardless of whether you have a financial, bioinformatics, or content delivery system to maintain or to build, Gil can show you, coach you, and help you do so in an Agile and Industrial XP fashion. You may have heard Gil talking at Agile 2008, at DDJ's own SD Best Practices conference, or at one of Industrial Logic's workshops on various XP-related topics.

Here is what Gil has to say:


Sep 02
2008

Five Questions With Keith Braithwaite

Posted by Michael Hunter in TestingFive Questions

Keith Braithwaite is hard core about doing good work. As a Principal Consultant with Zuhlke, he works with teams to help the do the good work they know they are capable of yet do not know how to achieve. One example I particularly like involved building a system to autogenerate trades. While trading systems are complicated in and of themselves, this particular system had to negotiate banking calendars for many different countries in order to determine when and where particular trades would be valid. The development team had mired themselves in a marsh of messiness as they attempted to codify the rules for this system. Keith helped them make their way out of this swamp by having them define examples of the rules rather than the rules themselves. This approach worked well - so well , in fact that no defects have been reported since the system entered production!

Keith was an early adopter of Extreme Programming and Agile and has learned lots about how to succeed (and fail) at adopting these practices for everything from line-of-business applications to embedded software. For the last several years he has been passing along his learnings to the rest of us in the form of blog posts, papers, and presentations, including several talks at the recent Agile 2008.

Here is what Keith has to say:


Aug 26
2008

Five Questions With Michael Corning

Posted by Michael Hunter in TestingFive Questions

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it is a man on a mission. No small mission, either: his goal is to remake testing at Microsoft, and then throughout the rest of the world. Michael joined Microsoft's Engineering Excellence group in part to pursue this mission, which involves patterns applied at every level, concepts ranging from robotics to Aristotle, and innovative testing approaches from across Microsoft and the industry. Dunno whether he will be successful in this endeavor; regardless, I imagine he and his compatriots are in for a fun ride. (Full Disclosure: I am a founding compatriot.)

If this seems an audacious goal, well, Michael is an audacious guy. He is so passionate about politics - both in general and in specifics - that he is Team Lead for the Microsoft Political Action Committee. As a volunteer planning commissioner for his town he is leading a comprehensive for-the-next-century replanning effort which involves patterns applied at every level, concepts ranging from robotics to Aristotle, and innovative technologies from across Microsoft and the industry. As before, while I don't know whether he will be successful in this endeavor, I imagine he and his compatriots are in for a fun ride.

(Can you guess what he talks about in the testing classes he teaches? Yep: patterns applied at every level, concepts ranging from robotics to Aristotle, and innovative technologies and testing approaches from across Microsoft and the industry.)

Here is what Michael has to say:


<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 Next > End >>

Get your FREE Subscription to Dr. Dobb’s Digest today!

Dobbs Code Talk Quick Poll

This time next year, your most important operating system (host and/or target) will be:

Look Who's Code Talking


Edward Grech
City: Sliema

Åsmund Wego
City: Kongsberg

Bob Armstrong
City: Woodland Park

Robert Jacques
City: Baltimore

wolfgang teschner
City: hannover

Mike Swaine
City: Grants Pass

Dobbs Code Talk Tags

.NET abstraction Ada Adobe Agile Ajax algorithm Algorithmic complexity ALM Analogical reasoning Android Anecdotes Apple Application Development AppStore Architecture and Design ARM Artificial Intelligence Artificial Life Assembler Programming Audio files AVX AWK Banking Bazaar Best Practices Blender Books Brain computer interfacing Build C C Programming C Sharp Cartoon Category theory Cellular automata Clojure Cloud Computing Cobol Cocoa Coder Of The Month Cognition as compression Collaboration Common Process/Frameworks Compilers Computational humour Computational narrative Computational politics Computer Science Computers in art computing pioneers concurrency Conferences Consciousness research Contest Contest140 contests CPlusPlus crime CSharp D Programming Data Centers Databases Debugging Delphi Deployment design Design Patterns Digital Signal Processing Distributed Django Documentation DSL dynamic language Eclipse EDA education Emacs Embedded Systems Encryption engineering Erlang Etymology Excel exception handling Facebook Financial computing Five Questions Flash Flash Lite Flex Forth Fortran Fraud FreeBSD Fun Functional Programming gadgets Games Gender Git gnuplot Go Google Graphics GUI hardware Heron High School High-Performance Computing History Holographic reduced representations HTML5 Humanity Humour Hungarian Notation Identity Inkscape Innovation Intel Interview iPhone J2EE Java JavaFX JavaOne JavaScript language engineering Legal lex LINQ Linux Lisp Literate Programming Logic Programming m4 Mainframes Make Mathematica Mercurial Mesh messaging Metaprogramming Microsoft MID Miscellaneous Musings ML Mobile Software Mobility modeling modular programming multicore Music MVC myblog Natural Language Processing Networking Neural networks newspeak Nokia numerical computing Object Rexx ObjectiveC Office Office 2007 Online spreadsheets OOP Open Source Openaccess publishing OpenBSD OpenSolaris Operating Systems Optimization Oracle Pair Programming Parallelism Concurrency Parsing Pascal Patents Patterns Performance Perl PHP Podcast Pop11 Poplog Privacy Processing Productivity Programming Language Implementation Programming Language One Programming language semantics Programming Languages Programming Style Project Management Prolog Psychology Public understanding of science puzzle Python QA Quantum Computing Quotes Rails Realtime recls Requirements Research practice REST Review RIA rich internet applications Robotics Ruby SaaS Software as a service Scala Schadenfreude Science fiction Screencast Scripting SD Best Practices Search Security Semantic Web Silverlight Snobol SOA social Social Networks Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence a Software Development Methodology and Management Songs and poems Spending Priorities Spreadsheets SQL Startups Statistics Storage String pattern matching Survey Teaching Testing The Business of Programming The Dobbs Challenge The Future Theory Topology Transhumanism Travel on the Job Twitter Types Unix Upgrade Usability Use Cases USENET User Experience User Interface Design Version Control video virtual machines Virtualization Visual Studio Visual Studio Sponsored Post WCF Web Development Windows Windows 7 Windows Live Wireless WOA WPF X Window System yacc

Subscribe to Dr. Dobbs Newsletter

Email:
Dr. Dobb's Update
Delivered twice a week, Dr. Dobb's Update provides unbiased and objective news, commentary and technical features spanning the entire software development marketplace.

Latest Comments

Jonathan's Last Day at Sun
For the 8 years I worked there, it was fantastic. I worked there under McNealy and I have undying admiration for the guy. I only knew Jonathan periphe...
Implementing Thread Local Storage on OS ...
Back in the day, I did a fair amount of work with PThreads. Wonderful design. Some quirks, but basically really, really nice. Although I wrote a lot ...
More Technonecrophilia with Snobol One-L...
Yeah, It's probably identical except for the (embedded) copy number, I would think. Once it became freely distributable, the copy I've been distribut...
More Technonecrophilia with Snobol One-L...
There's a spitbol-3.7-win.exe at http://code.google.com/p/spitbol/downloads/list . I found it via Dave Shield's blog page http://daveshields.wordpress...
Jonathan's Last Day at Sun
Sadness.

The Latest From Our Member Blogs

How To Select Trainees
Written by Joel Wiesen   
01/27/10
Hiring the right trainee can be harder than hiring a trained programmer.  One approach is described at my website: http://www.aprtestingservices.com/business/lpat/
 
Technical Job Interviews
Written by Keith Kerlan   
01/20/10
What is the best way to interview for software developer positions?  I've been on both sides of the job interviewing table, but have been on the interviewee side of some not too  great inter
 
Timers/timeouts in multi-threaded event-loops
Written by Christof Meerwald   
01/03/10
The traditional way to integrate timeout handling (or timers) in (single-threaded) event loops was to just pass the appropriate timeout value to the select/poll/epoll syscall. While this works fine
 
C vs C++
Written by Issam Lahlali   
12/04/09
I think that the debate "C vs C++" will end when the two langages died, and each one have its advantages and inconvenients, the choice of one instead of another depend on the application c
 
Great Jobs at CISCO
Written by Brent Rogers   
11/30/09
Hello! I am a recruiter at CISCO. We have a number of great jobopportunities at CISCO right now. Please take a look at the job links listedbelow and please send me an updated resume if you are interes
 
OK Labs, ST-Ericsson, and the Mobile/Wireless Ecosystem
Written by Steve Subar   
11/17/09
Two weeks ago, OK Labs and ST-Ericsson announced the selection of OK Labs as ST-Ericsson's mobile virtualization partner. To earn this coveted position, OK Labs prevailed in a rigorous evaluation
 
C++ Ninjas Needed in Santa Clara, California
Written by Brent Rogers   
09/30/09
Hello! I am a recruiter at CISCO. Our PostPath teamin Santa Clara is building a new Email SaaS business at CISCO. We are looking forsenior developers with Zimbra expertise to help us accomplish this t
 
Fighting Fragmentation with Mobile Virtualization
Written by Steve Subar   
09/21/09
Last week Motorola and T-Mobile announced the launch of a new and innovative Android-based smartphone, the Cliq. This attractive, feature-rich slider handset happens to build on a chipset and firmware
 
Insights into Router Design: Unit Testing of Networking Protocols
Written by Rajesh Kumar Venkateswaran   
09/07/09
  Unit testing is a software validation methodology through which a programmer tests individual modules or units of source code. If the programmer has been responsible for developing a networ
 
Insights into Router Design: Implementation of Networking Protocols
Written by Rajesh Kumar Venkateswaran   
09/06/09
  Modern data networking consists of a large number of networking protocols, each of which has its own domain of applicability. Some run on end stations (also called hosts), some on enterp
 
Insights and Innovations in Networking
Written by Rajesh Kumar Venkateswaran   
09/05/09
Networking devices such as routers and switches have evolved quite a bit over the past years, both in the service provider network and in the enterprise. It is a challenge to build these devices, bo
 
reddit threads community
Written by Christof Meerwald   
08/30/09
I have just started a threads community over at reddit to cover topics such as multithreading, concurrency and parallel programming. Feel free to join if you are interested. -- cmeerw.org 
 

The Latest From Dr. Dobbs

DDJ