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Previously on "The end result of bobville, you'll never retire"

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  • The Spartan
    replied
    Originally posted by tranceporter View Post
    That's all true, but one if the things I dread is when "intuitiveness" of the front end is handled by the QA. I have seen this happen before, and some testers love to take on the role of an "accessibility expert", when he cannot find any serious bugs in the system. "Xyz functionality is working great, but I simply cannot understand the layout. Why can't you put this button here, and the drop down here?" says a critical bug. This is one of the common issues I have seen where QA and developers start working against each other, because such bugs involve the business, and whole gamut of people you would not want to involve, coz they don't have an effing clue about what's happening, but hold the funds and care only about the timeline. Soon it escalates into a cluster**** of issues, where the same page is designed and re-designed 10 times, and as a developer, I lose interest. IMO, design of websites should be initially for UI specialists, and then left to actual end users of beta testing, to complain about lack of intuitiveness.
    Hahaha you'd hate me then I love to raise accessibility issues and problems with the design though I do log those as feature requests. Not all of them are taken on board due to timescales but I've had more implemented than were thrown out so I must secretly know what is better for users

    Leave a comment:


  • mudskipper
    replied
    Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post
    whs

    Listening is a skill.
    Sorry, what?

    Leave a comment:


  • Mich the Tester
    replied
    Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
    Psychopathic personalities, who lack empathy, find this terribly difficult. They just blindly parrot their own understanding, regardless of what the other person finds hard to grasp, which may hinge on one small misunderstanding or missing piece of the jigsaw, as the explainer would realise if they bothered listening.
    whs

    Listening is a skill.

    Leave a comment:


  • OwlHoot
    replied
    Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post
    Good that you're aware there's a problem and here's what I think can help;

    - some techies (I sometimes make this mistake too) gloss over details that for them are obvious, but for others may appear quite difficult, like 'you need to do a pull from git and then bla bla; don't assume someone else knows how to do this
    It's more than about simply regurgitating sufficient details - You need to be aware of what the other person doesn't understand, which can range from the whole thing (obviously, if they're new to it) to just a single sticking point.

    Psychopathic personalities, who lack empathy, find this terribly difficult. They just blindly parrot their own understanding, regardless of what the other person finds hard to grasp, which may hinge on one small misunderstanding or missing piece of the jigsaw, as the explainer would realise if they bothered listening.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotAllThere
    replied
    Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post
    - some techies, and this is really irritating, think that if someone else doesn't know how to do something they find simple, then that person is somehow dumb. He isn't necessarily dumb, but just needs a little help on that subject....
    As a techie, the ones that bug me are not those who don't know how to do something, but otherwise intelligent people who just can't be bothered to learn and want spoon-feeding.

    Thickos I can deal with (which is why I get on well with the testing team ).
    Lack of knowledge - no problem.
    Deliberate pig-ignorance...

    Leave a comment:


  • cojak
    replied
    I've finished a very successful contract where Agile and off-shoring together restricted the creativity and curtailed the ability to get things done outside of the (poorly) deployed Agile teams.

    I think that this could be a very profitable route over the next few years if I can package it without insulting the hiring client.

    'You need me because you're too thick to implement Agile properly' may not win me too many contracts.

    Leave a comment:


  • tranceporter
    replied
    Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post
    Good that you're aware there's a problem and here's what I think can help;
    That's all true, but one if the things I dread is when "intuitiveness" of the front end is handled by the QA. I have seen this happen before, and some testers love to take on the role of an "accessibility expert", when he cannot find any serious bugs in the system. "Xyz functionality is working great, but I simply cannot understand the layout. Why can't you put this button here, and the drop down here?" says a critical bug. This is one of the common issues I have seen where QA and developers start working against each other, because such bugs involve the business, and whole gamut of people you would not want to involve, coz they don't have an effing clue about what's happening, but hold the funds and care only about the timeline. Soon it escalates into a cluster**** of issues, where the same page is designed and re-designed 10 times, and as a developer, I lose interest. IMO, design of websites should be initially for UI specialists, and then left to actual end users of beta testing, to complain about lack of intuitiveness.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mich the Tester
    replied
    Originally posted by tranceporter View Post
    Lol, I must say I have been knowingly guilty of that. Sometimes, you just assume that the QA knows the stuff you have coded based on the requirements, and just skip the instructions altogether I must say though, that this is where SpecFlow features and scenarios can help a lot if uses correctly.
    Good that you're aware there's a problem and here's what I think can help;

    - never assume; it makes an 'ass' out of 'u' and 'me'. Alternatively 'assumption is the mother of all ****-ups'

    - some techies (I sometimes make this mistake too) gloss over details that for them are obvious, but for others may appear quite difficult, like 'you need to do a pull from git and then bla bla; don't assume someone else knows how to do this

    - some techies, and this is really irritating, think that if someone else doesn't know how to do something they find simple, then that person is somehow dumb. He isn't necessarily dumb, but just needs a little help on that subject. Perhaps the most intelligent person I know doesn't know how to copy and paste a file in the windows explorer. He's an author who's written some critically acclaimed books in Holland, and his knowledge of the world and his understanding of the human condition far surpasses mine. Likewise a local catholic priest; I'm not a believer, but I've learnt a lot from just chatting with him in the pub about human nature.

    - among testers there is a huge variety of backgrounds, but what should unite them is critical thinking, an ability to ask probing questions and some conceptual understanding of technology; they will usually have some practical techy skills, but they can be very varied. I was a DBA/Database Dev before testing, so I know a fair bit about SQL and procedural SQL, relational database models, data relations, logical relations between lumps of information and how to analyse the meaning of some piece of data, etcetera; that doesn't mean I know anything about Python, Hadoop or any of the other cool new technologies. One of the best testers in the world is Cem Kaner. A brilliant man who can rip almost any application apart with exploratory testing, provides excellent training for testers and he has contributed an enormous amount to the testing field; he's not a techie; he trained as a lawyer. See that? Critical thinking is what made him succesful, not a gift for technology.

    - Always remember how incredibly privileged you are to be asked to share your knowledge on some subject. There are hundreds of millions of people who are never asked to do that; they are wrongly seen and treated by their employers as human donkeys with a strong body and no other value than the ability to shift heavy objects from one place to another. When they eventually lose that ability, they'll be replaced with a younger body and left to find some way of surviving. Think of Boxer's role in Animal Farm and be glad that that's not you.

    - One last thing; there are no stupid questions, but there are stupid people. Stupid people can get smarter by asking questions. Remind yourself, when faced with a question that you think someone shouldn't need to ask because you think he should know anyway; if I help him with his question today, tomorrow he'll be less stupid and just a bit smarter. If I don't help him, then tomorrow I'll have to deal with that stupid guy again; that makes you stupid.
    Last edited by Mich the Tester; 16 March 2013, 09:32.

    Leave a comment:


  • eek
    replied
    Even more when you discover you can get a decent logo for £3.50

    How to get a professional logo for £3.46 | Econsultancy

    Leave a comment:


  • bobspud
    replied
    Originally posted by minestrone View Post
    Not my impression.
    Think you should take a look at these guys...

    Platige Image

    I would not want to be in graphics design would in Soho when the advertising market get a handle on what they can do and for how much money...

    Leave a comment:


  • vetran
    replied
    Originally posted by tranceporter View Post
    The question, however, is if he learns it after leaning on you the first time, and sort out the same problem next time without reading the manuals, or wasting your time? I have seen that habit a lot. Like some previous poster mentioned about First line support, it's far easier to adopt the habit of quickly leaning on someone to find a solution, than searching yourself for an answer. Sooner or later, in the contracting world I have seen, such contractors get the kick after the first month of "leaning".
    jury still out. he just asked me about an issue his direct colleague on another site is the expert on, there are docs I put up 4 years ago in the help area I showed him last night.

    was sorting out usb hard drives for him yesterday so very nervous.

    give him a month and see how we get on.

    Leave a comment:


  • tranceporter
    replied
    Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post
    I think leaning on others is fine if you first try and do a bit of groundwork with the wonders of google; techies are often absolutely terrible at giving spoken or written instructions on how to do something so it's generally a good idea to sit down together with them and work through something making notes as you go.
    Lol, I must say I have been knowingly guilty of that. Sometimes, you just assume that the QA knows the stuff you have coded based on the requirements, and just skip the instructions altogether I must say though, that this is where SpecFlow features and scenarios can help a lot if uses correctly.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mich the Tester
    replied
    Originally posted by tranceporter View Post
    The question, however, is if he learns it after leaning on you the first time, and sort out the same problem next time without reading the manuals, or wasting your time? I have seen that habit a lot. Like some previous poster mentioned about First line support, it's far easier to adopt the habit of quickly leaning on someone to find a solution, than searching yourself for an answer. Sooner or later, in the contracting world I have seen, such contractors get the kick after the first month of "leaning".
    I think leaning on others is fine if you first try and do a bit of groundwork with the wonders of google; techies are often absolutely terrible at giving spoken or written instructions on how to do something so it's generally a good idea to sit down together with them and work through something making notes as you go.

    Leave a comment:


  • tranceporter
    replied
    Originally posted by vetran View Post
    I work from home mostly because the infrastructure desk has been vacant for four months and the 6 months before then the person in the chair was building their career so everyone kept asking me to fix their PC. Came to a head when my boss arrived for an annual visit and there were 6 people asking for me to fix their PC's, sort of made it easy for me.

    Anything he doesn't understand he rings me, I send him the manuals and wait, 10 minutes later he rings me asking the same question having not read the manuals. He's actually native Sikh and quite intelligent so not a Bob.

    Its an attitude, experience builds resourceful-ness but you are marked on jobs completed so there is no incentive for him to think, he just tries to leach off me.
    The question, however, is if he learns it after leaning on you the first time, and sort out the same problem next time without reading the manuals, or waste your time again? I have seen that habit a lot. Like some previous poster mentioned about First line support, it's far easier to adopt the habit of quickly leaning on someone to find a solution, than searching yourself for an answer. Sooner or later, in the contracting world I have seen, such contractors get the kick after the first month of "leaning".
    Last edited by tranceporter; 15 March 2013, 12:42.

    Leave a comment:


  • vetran
    replied
    I work from home mostly because the infrastructure desk has been vacant for four months and the 6 months before then the person in the chair was building their career so everyone kept asking me to fix their PC. Came to a head when my boss arrived for an annual visit and there were 6 people asking for me to fix their PC's, sort of made it easy for me.

    Anything he doesn't understand he rings me, I send him the manuals and wait, 10 minutes later he rings me asking the same question having not read the manuals. He's actually native Sikh and quite intelligent so not a Bob.

    Its an attitude, experience builds resourceful-ness but you are marked on jobs completed so there is no incentive for him to think, he just tries to leach off me.

    Leave a comment:

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