Gibbs Laws of Software Test Cases: First Law: The likelihood - TopicsExpress



          

Gibbs Laws of Software Test Cases: First Law: The likelihood of the developer, dev lead, and Project Manager being engaged in a meeting when, you need clarification, is exponentially correlated with the ambiguity of the test cases and requirements. Second Law: The likelihood of requirement changes is directly proportional to the number of minutes before the scheduled roll out. Third Law: A single Ipad may be recharged by an infinite number of Ipad chargers or cables. However, according to the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principal, it is impossible to determine the precise location of any given charger, or for the charger and the Ipad to occupy the same desk drawer at the same time. Fourth Law: A software test in motion must remain in motion until it is misdirected by an executive who wants to change the UI design. Fifth Law: Where urgency plus cost, multiplied by potential lost earnings, is higher than the Gross National Product of the European Union, the test environment servers will inevitably fail.
Posted on: Mon, 21 Apr 2014 20:59:09 +0000

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