When the first computer bug was discovered in 1947, it was quite literally a moth that had become trapped inside a system at Harvard University that was disrupting the electronics. At that time, the ...
What if the very process meant to ensure your AI applications work flawlessly is actually holding you back? Manual testing, once the backbone of quality assurance, is now a bottleneck in the ...
A technology has been developed that uses robots rather than humans to evaluate the performance of newly developed catalysts. By operating 45 times faster than manual work while also improving ...
Founder and CEO of ZAPTEST, with 20 years of experience in Software Automation for Testing + RPA processes, and application development. Business operations (BizOps) automation is an inevitable future ...
Are you grappling with managing your test data in an automation framework? Here’s a fact: effective Test Data Management (TDM) can significantly improve your software testing process. This ...
Combine AI-generated tests with intelligent test selection to manage large regression suites and speed up feedback ...
FREDERICK, Md.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Spirent Communications plc (LSE:SPT), a leading provider of test and assurance solutions for next-generation devices and networks, today announced the release of the ...
From generating test cases and transforming test data to accelerating planning and improving developer communication, AI is having a profound impact on software testing. The integration of artificial ...
Testing places unique demands on AI. Errors carry real business risk, and fragile tests or slow updates can quickly erode trust in results. As a result, while momentum around AI in testing is strong, ...
With the European Accessibility Act (EAA) and its national implementation through the Accessibility Strengthening Act (Barrierefreiheitsstärkungsgesetz, BFSG ...
When automated pen-testing tools appeared a few years ago they prompted an interesting question: How close are they to replacing human pen testers? While the short answer was "not that close — yet," ...