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A four-panel comic strip titled "HOW TO SCARE A TESTER." In the first three panels, a simple ghost with two eyes and a mouth says "Boo" to a stick figure tester. The tester remains unimpressed. In the fourth panel, the ghost says "There are no requirements." The tester screams "AHHHH!!!" in a speech bubble. The comic is drawn in black ink on a white background with a simple style. The website "imgflip.com" is watermarked in the bottom left corner.

You might freak out if you land in a team and on asking to see some requirements you are told there are no requirements. "Please just go break some things! Isn't that what you testers do?" This is a great opportunity to develop your question-asking skills. Ask people questions to reveal helpful information to support your testing efforts. Turn their answers into open questions to answer during an exploration session. Report back with your findings. You'll soon start mapping out requirements based on your observations and feedback with your team.

Simon Tomes
Simon Tomes
This is a four-panel comic titled "HOW TO SCARE A PROGRAMMER."

The first three panels show a ghost repeatedly saying "Boo" to a stick-figure person, who remains unimpressed.

In the fourth panel, instead of saying "Boo," the ghost says, "I found a bug," and the stick-figure person screams "AHHHH!!!" in terror.

There is also a small bug icon added near the text "I found a bug."

This comic humorously depicts how programmers are more scared of software bugs than ghosts.

Bug!

Rosie Sherry
Rosie Sherry
How not to flip the table using Selenium BiDi image
Browser test automation frameworks play a key role in web application tests
Seven years of community: Ministry of Testing Athens Meetup image
Learn how to build a community and start a meetup from scratch
Making regression testing a breeze with AI  image
Imagine a tool that learns from your app’s real-world traffic and turns it into ready-to-run tests
80% of people like us identify as Quality Engineers image
The expansion of the testing universe continues
Image of Serena Williams doing the Crip walk at Kendrick Lamar's performance for Superbowl 59.

How I feel when a bug is fixed before the feature or change is released.

Judy Mosley
Judy Mosley
AI vs testers? Friend or foe? image
How AI serves as a powerful ally to testers, augmenting their capabilities and enabling them to focus on higher-value tasks
A group of about twenty people standing next to each other forming a small arch shape. There is a slightly raised stage and a projector screen behind them. A bug and duck character are attempting to hide.
Can you find Bug and their buddy, Cosmo (a space duck)?
Career growth supported: MoT Weekly – Issue 505 image
  • Simon Tomes's profile
Who says testing can't be a party? Discover many ways to get involved with the testing, QA and quality engineering community. Read it all in this week's MoT Weekly.
Expand your testing Universe with Systems Thinking image
  • Diana Dromey's profile
Join The Testing Planet on the 27th of February, from 14:00 GMT
A group photo from a Ministry of Testing meetup in Berlin. The image shows 15 people arranged in two rows - 10 standing and 5 sitting/kneeling on a bright green carpet in the foreground. The group appears diverse and casual, with people wearing various informal attire like hoodies, sweaters, and casual business wear. In the background, there's a white wall with what appears to be a blue banner or poster. The atmosphere seems friendly and professional, typical of a tech community meetup."
Who says testing can't be a party? Last night, while Berlin turned into a winter wonderland, we turned testing concepts into games that h...
Room of attendees on tables listening to a speaker
MoT Coventry had its first session of the year which was a huge success! 🎉 With a record turnout of 35+ attendees, we kicked off the year...
A grey coloured cat is saying MVP done while another hits it on the head replying, not if its no accessible!

Accessibility should be a primary consideration when building MVPs, pilot programs or any quick builds. Save a ton of time and money later if you do.

Ady Stokes
Ady Stokes
How are teams approaching Quality Engineering? image
How teams implement quality engineering through collaboration, continuous testing and modern practices
How is Quality Engineering different from testing? image
Explore how quality engineering extends beyond traditional testing
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