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That warn't a Nice Thing to Say...
Date: 2003-07-25 11:30 am (UTC)*I* am a QA person.
...and not only that, but also one with a different perspective on
QA than you have! Amazing, but true!
Z
P.S.: And I *KNOW* I'm not the only QA Engineer on your Friends
List.
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Date: 2003-07-25 11:30 am (UTC)JOhn.
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Date: 2003-07-25 11:59 am (UTC)Signed, a former and hope-to-be-again QA engineer who is married to one.
Re: That warn't a Nice Thing to Say...
Date: 2003-07-25 12:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-07-25 12:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-07-25 12:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-07-25 12:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-07-25 12:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-07-25 12:53 pm (UTC)In other words, sounds like it sucks.
:-)
JOhn.
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Date: 2003-07-25 01:28 pm (UTC)IV&V?
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Date: 2003-07-25 01:33 pm (UTC)But, I'm in Tech Support. We're quirky and weird and demanding! :)
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Date: 2003-07-25 03:56 pm (UTC)This is a term used by companies that have big "M" methodology, like those that are level 3 CMM or better. In those companies, QA (usually renamed to SQA) is the group tasked with making sure the processes used to develop the product (from idea through to delivery, and across all teams) have a high level of quality and are being followed. Software Testing activities fall into the domain of IV&V.
Think of it in terms of automobile manufacturing. The SQA group is equivalent to their QA groups, which monitor the processes used to build cars. Their Testing groups are usually called Quality Control, and they check the end product for defects.
If ever you work for one of the large governmental contractors, you'll get puzzled looks if you say your code hasn't been QAed yet.
(Besides, QA isn't a verb. The proper verb is "test". :-)
JOhn.
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Date: 2003-07-25 03:58 pm (UTC)JOhn (QA Fascist, but in a nice way ;-).
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Date: 2003-07-25 04:02 pm (UTC)GDE SystemsMarconi Integrated SystemsBAE Systems. IIRC, they were one of the first companies to achieve CMM 3 -- I've got the mug at home holding pens. They were working on 4 while I was there, and starting a Six Sigma program, too. Never, ever, ever want to work in that kind of environment again.I don't want to work somewhere people are tweaking live code and there's no control at all, and I think it's great for someone with a better eye for detail and more patience to check out my work before it goes live, but processes and testing should help, not hinder.
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Date: 2003-07-25 04:38 pm (UTC)Now I'm scared.
How we change...
Date: 2003-07-26 06:12 pm (UTC)When I went to work for IBM in '68 (I look forward to the day when I have to specify *which* '68 -- *grins*), we wrote *really complex* code. I mean, our operating systems were almost 1 meg core image!(remember core, anyone?) And we had to shoot bugs on systems that had 16 megs of total storage. An impossible task, you say? It seemed so. I remember core dumps that were 6 to 8 inches tall, and in there somewhere was the explanation of why the code failed. I learned to read machine code fairly fluently and to add hexadecimal numbers in my head quickly. I could generally keep a mental image of all 16 general purpose registers' contents over time; it helped.
One of my more recent projects had to present the same appearance on several different versions of IE and Netscape on Macs and PCs. Testing becomes something else when one no longer has access to all of the possible combinations of hardware/software that might run the code.
One of my more embarassing failures as an IT professional was when I tried to build a test plan for a moderately complex system back in the 80's. I learned that it is not a trivial task to do good QC, especially in an environment where QC is seen as a burden, not a blessing.
Good SQA and QC is really difficult to do on large projects. It takes lots of creativity, knowledge, and attention to detail. My hat is off to those who do it well and create a win-win environment of cooperation, not competition.
I hope this post isn't too long. If I need to move it to my journal and put a pointer to it here, let me know. I'm still learning LJ etiquette... :-)