Company says it has a low-cost solution.
Applying the lessons of XP to testing.
Company offers a new way to catch bugs.
Venerable security takes on high-tech crime.
A review of Pete McBreens’s book “Questioning Extreme Programming”
Author explains how to avoid some of the pitfalls of programming.
Database maker adds security function to its BI software.
We recently asked security maven Steve Orrin to tell us some of the tenets of secure coding today.
Wrangling among vendors seeking competitive advantage is slowing the adoption of protocols to support commercially viable Web services,
contends Ray Valdes, research director at Gartner Inc., a Stamford, Conn.-based consulting firm.
Two firms integrate their change and test management tools.
The Web Services Interoperability Organization is working on interoperability among different SOAP-based applications for Web services.
First look at a new testing product.
Mining for gold in underused bandwidth.
A new generation of tools takes on portfolio management, best practices,
collaborative development and other tasks.
Extreme Programming veterans share their experiences using the 'lightweight'
methodology to build applications for a client.
A discussion of a new way to create and test software.
How can one be sure that they have tested everything in their products, when one never knows how people are going to connect them to different devices from different vendors?
Software testing is a mindset, says author Louise Tamres. In her more than 16 years of consulting work, including stints for the Dept. of Defense and General Motors, she has applied specific techniques to assure the quality of the end product. In "Introducing Software Testing," her recent book for newcomers to software testing, Tamres tells readers how to apply truly critical thinking to this key process. Programmers Report recently spoke with Tamres about the new book.
A recent IBM Rational media day afforded the opportunity to check in with Grady Booch.
Improved software test automation tools and processes can help management get "more for less."