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GTAC 2010: What Testability Tells Us About the Software Performance Envelope
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GTAC 2010: What Testability Tells Us About the Software Performance Envelope

Google Test Automation Conference 2010 October 28-29, 2010 “What Testability Tells us About the Software Performance Envelope” Presented by Robert V. Binder, President, System Verification Associates. ABSTRACT Broadly understood, testability defines the limits on producing and releasing complex systems with an acceptable risk of costly or dangerous defects. This talk will explore testability, consider what we know about how it, and challenge the audience with some open problems. * Essential complexity and emergent behavior * The economics of software risk * Reliability: why debugging doesn’t matter * Prevention: why it isn’t enough * Testing Strategies: looking for love in all the wrong places? * Test automation paradigms: still looking for love in all the wrong places? * The Testing Performance Envelope: up to and beyond the edge Robert V. Binder is a software entrepreneur and technologist with over 34 years of systems engineering experience. His 1994 analysis of software testability portal.acm.org has had a continuing influence on research and practice in this area. As principal of System Verification Associates, he leads teams that deliver advanced IT assurance solutions. He was recently awarded a US Patent for a unique approach to model-based testing of mobile systems. He is a member of the Editorial Board of Software Testing, Verification, and Review and internationally recognized as the author of the definitive Testing Object-Oriented Systems: Models, Patterns, and
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