Many QA testers are hesitant to poke their noses into the code they are testing, preferring to do black box testing instead. But what if getting a little nosey could help you save time and become a better tester? What if you could better assess risk by peeking under the covers and determine just how much testing is required for a feature? For over two decades (ouch!), Earline Deutsch has been a software developer, but in the past 18 months she switched to serving as a Software QA Engineer. In this session, she'll discuss her experiences in a whole new light from reviewing code changes to...
Earline Deutsch
Software QA Engineer
SS&C
Earline Deutsch is currently a Software QA Engineer at SS&C and has been developing software since the days of Y2K. She started off as a Java developer but then flipped to .NET programming, with experience mostly in backend development of APIs and third-party integrations for companies like FedEx, International Paper, Stein Mart, and SS&C. Earline recently decided to try her hand at being a QA and is enjoying every minute of it. Her testing experience is heavily entrenched in APIs, using tools like Postman, Mocha, Chai, and Node.js to create test suites that are repeatable.