It would be great if someone from the WebTest community could attend this.
I'm attending PNSQC in Portland Oct. 8 - 10, but I'm not sure I can stay for
this.  If anyone is interested, please let me know as well as responding per
the instructions below.
thanks
Lisa


*Agile Alliance Functional Testing Tools Visioning Workshop*
*Call for Participation *
Dates:     October 11 - 12, 2007
Times:     8 AM - 5 PM
Location: Portland, Oregon
Venue:    Kennedy School

*Description*
The primary purpose of this workshop is to discuss cutting-edge advancements
in and envision possibilities for the future of automated functional testing
tools.

This is a small, peer-driven, invitation-only conference in the tradition of
LAWST, AWTA, and the like. The content comes from the participants, and we
expect all participants to take an active role. We're seeking participants
who have interest and experience in creating and/or using automated
functional testing tools/frameworks on Agile projects.

This workshop is sponsored by the Agile Alliance Functional Testing Tools
Program.  The mission of this program is to advance the state of the art of
automated functional testing tools used by Agile teams to automate
customer-facing tests.

There is no cost to participate.  Participants will be responsible for their
own travel expenses.  (However, we do have limited grant money available to
be used at the discretion of the organizers to subsidize travel expenses.
If you would like to be considered for a travel grant, please include your
request, including amount needed, in your Request for Invitation.)

*Requesting an Invitation*
If you're interested in being invited to participate in this workshop,
please send an email to " [EMAIL PROTECTED]" answering the
following questions:

1. What is your experience using functional tests as a way to specify
functional requirements?

2. What is your experience with automated functional testing tools on Agile
projects?

3. What do you hope to contribute to the workshop? Do you have any code or
examples that you'd like to share? (Please note that you should not share
anything covered by a non-disclosure agreement.)

4. What do you hope to get out of the workshop?

Invitations will be issued by September 1, 2007 so that we can confirm hotel
room requirements.  *Please send in your request as soon as possible, before
the workshop fills up.*

*Pass This Along*
If you know of someone that would be a candidate for this workshop, please
forward this call for participation on to them.
**
*Additional Background*
Automated functional testing is an integral and essential part of Agile
development.  Many Agile teams use functional tests to codify the system
requirements.   Some also practice Acceptance Test Driven Development.

Agile teams have particular needs for automated tools that are not well
served by traditional record-and-playback GUI drivers.  As requirements
specifications, functional tests must be readable: clear, succinct, and
expressed in the language of the business domain.   As an automated safety
net, the tests must be maintainable: built with reusable domain specific
testing language components, easy to change as the requirements change.

The good news is that tool support for automated functional tests has grown
significantly in recent years.  There is a large variety of commercial and
open source testing tools/frameworks available that support Agile
development practices.   The FIT framework was a significant boost to the
state of the art of automated functional testing, both in terms of the
syntax of the specification (tables), the detailed test execution feedback
(cell by cell), and the development/execution environment (desktop tools
rather than development or specialized tools).

However, we believe that it's time for another significant boost to the
state of the art.

- We are lacking integrated development environments that facilitate things
like: refactoring test elements, command completion, incremental syntax
validation (based on the domain specific test language), keyboard navigation
into the supporting framework code, debugging, etc.

- We need more expressive test specification languages, possibly integrating
executable: text, tables, shapes, and colors together into a single test.

- We need specification languages that can describe user interaction in a
readable and maintainable fashion.

- We need to be able to view/navigate the tests in multiple different ways
in order to see how the pieces of the puzzle contribute to the bigger
picture of the domain/feature: organize tests based on their domain context;
search for tests based on user-defined keywords (cross cutting concerns).

- … and things that we haven't even thought of that will take us out of the
current box, and into a new level of effectiveness ….

The Agile Alliance Functional Testing Tools Program seeks to advance the
state of the art by creating opportunities for people who are in a position
to advance the state of the art to share information and ideas, and explore
possibilities.


--
Lisa Crispin
Co-author,
Testing Extreme Programming
http://lisa.crispin.home.att.net

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