This post is a follow up for my earlier recap which talked about logistics and keynotes. In this post I’d like go in depth for the concurrent sessions that I attended
Being a mobile Software Developer in Test just by the name Mobile Dev Test conference is very relevant to my domain and career interests. Conference tweets are at #mobileiotconf
I already covered that Apple has announced announced several testing tools at WWDC 2015 but responsive design mode didn’t get any mention in it.
I work for Godaddy mobile team and I am the tester on this iOS app https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/godaddy-mobile/id333201813?mt=8 and I getting tired of these reviews
I can’t help but get excited when apple was talking about UI testing in WWDC 2015, state of the platform talk. Yes, there is appium and yes apple usually sucks at creating testing tools but this year appears to be different. Or perhaps I am…
Well the biggest thing for me as a tester is that they are thinking about testing and starting to add some features that are taken for granted on any other platform. iOS platform is notorious for automation and testing — a simple act of installing a pre-release…
As a mobile tester, you are constantly spending your time with phones. And not typically on one phone, it is a mix of iPhones, Nexus, Samsung etc. For me typically this runs about 20 hours on these tiny keyboards and screens per day.
Now that we have understanding of what is mobile first, how is different, what to test for and some tools, now it is time to talk about Automation.
If you have been using smartphones and apps, you must have experienced an app suddenly closes. You didn’t want it to close but the it closed all of a sudden — this is called a crash. This can happen to both system installed apps like Mail, Maps, Gmail etc to developer apps installed…
Though on the surface looks like a naive question but it nevertheless a valid one
A key distinction to make Apps are not Websites. Native apps are more akin to desktop applications, rather than websites…