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Never stop learning – Thoughts after four years with our epic team

Xebia

If you add a culture in which we continuously help each other by focusing on what we can still improve, that sometimes can become a bit scary. ‘Out of our Xpirit-sight’ I started coaching computer science students from a university on Agile and Growth Mindset. Agile is a company way of working, not an IT one.

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Article: Moving towards a Future of Testing in the Metaverse

InfoQ Culture Methods

In this article, Tariq King describes the metaverse concept, discusses its key engineering challenges and quality concerns, and then walks through recent technological advances in AI and software testing that are helping to mitigate these challenges.

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Article: How I Contributed as a Tester to a Machine Learning System: Opportunities, Challenges and Learnings

InfoQ Culture Methods

Have you ever wondered about systems based on machine learning? In those cases, testing takes a backseat. And even if testing is done, it’s done mostly by developers itself. A tester’s role is not clearly portrayed. Testers usually struggle to understand ML-based systems and explore what contributions they can make.

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People, processes, and technology shine bright on the road to digital transformation

CIO

When I joined Discover® Financial Services in 2021, the company was executing its Runway: Mission 80,000 Feet vision to transform the engineering culture toward product-centricity. We came together as one team across the organization to create a culture of continuous learning, knowledge sharing, and improvement.

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Article: Getting Rid of Wastes and Impediments in Software Development Using Data Science

InfoQ Culture Methods

This article presents how to use data science to detect wastes and impediments, and concepts and related information that help teams to figure out the root cause of impediments they struggle to get rid of.

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Grown-Up Lean

LeanEssays

The implications were clear: Perhaps in the end the open-source culture will triumph not because cooperation is morally right…. In 1988, Berkley scientists David A Patterson, Garth Gibson, and Randy H Katz presented the paper A Case for Redundant Arrays of Inexpensive Disks (RAID) [3] at the ACM SIGMOD Conference.