Schedule and Events



March 26-29, 2012, Software Test Professionals Conference, New Orleans
July, 14-15, 2012 - Test Coach Camp, San Jose, California
July, 16-18, 2012 - Conference for the Association for Software Testing (CAST 2012), San Jose, California
August 2012+ - At Liberty; available. Contact me by email: Matt.Heusser@gmail.com

Monday, August 13, 2007

Look Ma, the works of Shakespeare on a stick!

At STAREast this year, James Bach had a "portable testing training kit." Roughly the size of a small purse (or, er ... a "man's bag"), I'm sure it had various test challenges in it.

I didn't get the chance to see it, but if pressed to make my own, it would be things like a stapler, a salt shaker, and a hard boiled egg. I would hand these to my student and say something like:

"Test This"

(This also, by the way, is my general litmus test for a tester. When it comes to actually talking about the real work of testing a thing - If the person is utterly confused, or smiles genially and changes the subject, or asks me what _I_ think - well, that tells me something. If they roll up their sleeves and dive in, that tells me something ...)

But I've been thinking about a different testing toolkit lately.

I keep my source materials, some tools, and a copy of my website on a USB Drive. The drive has recently been pushing its limits, so I just bought a replacement - a 4 GB drive, for thirty bucks from BestBuy.

4 GB is a lot of space. A lot.

This got me thinking about what I do when I come into a new company. The first thing I do is download a bunch of free tools - Putty, WinSCP3, Tasker, SnagIt, TextPad, ActivePerl, Dia, GVim, Audacity. I also have a bunch of PDF and Word documents that I read and re-read every year. With 4GB of space, I could put all of those on a memory stick, and more.

These are testing tools, but there are also security testing tools - and tutorials - that would fit easily on the stick. Snort, Crack, intrusion detection, SQL injection, and other tools come to mind.

With 4GB of space, I could put all these tools and more on a stick. If they were good enough, I could sell the stick as a value-added tool or, more likely, just have an interesting howto list on a website. Yes, getting a booth at DefCon and selling security tools has occurred to me, but for the time being, I'll keep my hat white, thank you very much.

So here's my two questions, take your pick:

1) If you developed a testing tool on a stick, what free (or cheap-ware) tools would you include? What is missing from my list? What entire categories are missing? If there a different kind of stick to develop? Yes, I could do a developer stick with apache, php, mysql, but most of those come with Linux Anyway.

2) If you don't like that, here's another one: The stapler, the hard-boiled egg, or the salt shaker. I've asked you to test it. What do you do?

7 comments:

Michael Kelly said...

Well, stapler testing is my specialty. I'd do this: http://www.testingreflections.com/node/view/928

Anonymous said...

I have to admit, I'd start by asking you questions about what you meant by testing. Am I testing the hard-boiled egg as a nutritive supplement, a missile weapon, or a hat, for example.

Anonymous said...

Some kind of open source spreadsheet software - how could I possibly entertain doing any kind of testing without access to a spreadsheet??

James Marcus Bach said...

Check out www.portableapps.com

I just put all that stuff on my stick.

Anonymous said...

Matt:

On the flash drive I use nearly daily I keep the following -

1) folder w utility apps
2) folder w research docs, I'm always reading something from mashups to PCI standards.
3) current writing folder because another copy on top of a backup is a good thing

For utility apps I usually keep: an install utility called Inctrl, a hex reader, dependency walker, wireshark ... and other utilities as appropriate to current work at hand.

I also keep a pocket knife and someday I might pick up this: http://www.thinkgeek.com/gadgets/tools/6b3b/

Enjoy,
Karen N Johnson

Testing Geek said...

I think with so many discussions on the usergroups and net, it is nice to see change in the attitude of testers. Instead of jumping to the test cases, people have started asking questions when faced with these types of questions.. to understand purpose of the testing.

Pradeep Soundararajan said...

If you don't like that, here's another one: The stapler, the hard-boiled egg, or the salt shaker. I've asked you to test it. What do you do?

I'd want to know what you mean by "testing" and then probably ask how much will I get paid to test this :)