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Showing posts from September, 2017

SMAC (Social Media, Mobile, Analytics and Cloud)

SMAC is a notion based on four touching technologies that create an ecosystem to enhance the IT architecture of the business. Four components of SMAC are: 1.       Social Media 2.        Mobile 3.        Analytics 4.        Cloud Social media broadens the scope of communication, Mobile connectivity allows faster communication, Analytics provide the prospect for data analysis and prediction, Cloud eliminates the geographical barriers to store information. These four concepts use different technologies. So, to learn complete SMAC you need to master all four Social Media, Mobile, Analytics and Cloud. Now in SOCIAL Media, you can learn: -  ·        Mobile marketing Mobile marketing is a multi-channel, digital marketing strategy aimed at reaching a target audience on their smartphones, tablets, and/or other mobile devices, via websites, email, SMS and MMS, social media, and apps. ·        SEO (Search engine optimization) Search engine optimization (SEO) is the

Web services: Testing

It’s constantly stress-free for a tester to transfer from one technology to other but at times it's additional difficult to move from one methodology to other. Jumping from custom application to COTs ( Commercial Off-The-Shelf)  is still an easy transition; tester has a better idea like what part they need to focus or which modules are more susceptible than others. When testers take up web services it tosses many challenges, it’s continuously important to know what you need to do, rather than you first do and then learn. With the dispersed architecture of loosely coupled systems which may be technically apart but frequently need to communicate in terms of data requirements. Web Services arise in the picture when such is the requirement. A Web service provides an artless interface for commutation among these loosely coupled systems using a typical data transfer mechanism. Ladders in Web service testing: The first and foremost challenge is to imagine what is expected from a

Crowdsource testing

Crowdsource testing , also identified as crowd-testing, is the exercise of sending out prototype software and app products to wide-ranging groups of people for testing rather than having testing performed internally by core QA team. It has been used to describe the process of requesting a crowd to perform a task rather than hiring consultants or contractors. It allows more entities to participate, often at a reduced cost and with enhanced testing quality. Testers may be developers or interested members of the general public, as in beta testing and they get a reward for finding software bugs. Crowdsourced product testing makes it imaginable for a larger variety of people to try a product in a superior range of conditions than what is possible in-house, often leading to glitches being found that might otherwise only be revealed by consumers. It's practically impossible to test the vast number of devices, OS and various configurations of software that applications can run on