Quality Management ROI Calculator - Focus on Test Automation
The Rational Quality Management ROI calculator is intended to give you an idea of what return you can garner from implementing our functional testing solutions. Our quality management solutions offer tools to develop a continuous process, powered by automation to govern software delivery.
» Gartner MarketScope: Application Quality Management Solutions, 1Q 08
This Gartner MarketScope provides guidance for enterprises seeking to purchase tools to manage risk and software quality. We focus on tools fit for large-scale enterprise use and that are ready out of the box to manage quality requirements and functional testing.
» Whitepaper: Tips for Writing Good Use Cases
Writing a good use case isnt easy, but, fortunately, our experience can be your guide. The concepts and principles assembled here represent the works of many people at IBM, and they form a foundation of proven best practices.
» Whitepaper: The Role of Integrated Requirements Management in Software Delivery
Learn about the critical role integrated requirements management can play in helping ensure your business goals and IT projects are continuously aligned-whether you are sourcing, integrat-ing, building or maintaining your software. It also looks at ways that integration and automation can help ensure managing projects and the required changes can be executed using manageable processes that satisfy stakeholders and development teams.
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Getting Stuff Done on Linux [Part 2] Mar 20, 2008, 09 :00 UTC (0 Talkback[s]) (2612 reads)
"We all use the internet. I'm sure anyone reading this has also heard of Firefox but do you know about all the others? Konqueror is a nice browser based on the KHTML rendering engine, the same great engine Safari and WebKit use, which means it supports a few things (like drop-shadows on text) which no other browsers do. Then there's Epiphany, which will display pages the same way Firefox does, but which fits the look 'n feel of GNOME environments a bit better than Firefox 2.0 does (Firefox 3, however, fits very well). There are also lightweight browsers like Kazehakase you might like. Firefox is by far the most extensible, though..."