Sunday, August 28, 2011

"Mijn" hofdansgroep, Nieuwe lessen per September 2011


Hofdansgroep "I Cortigiani Allegri"

Lieve allemaal, 

We leren hofdansen aan van de 16e t/m 19e, begin 20e eeuw.
Danspartner en ervaring zijn niet verplicht.
Kom gerust een keer kijken en meedoen!
De volgende data worden de hofdanslessen in het najaar 2011 gegeven: 
zaterdagen: 10 september, 8 oktober, 5 november 
zondagen: 25 september, 23 oktober, 20 november 
tijdstip is van 13-16uur 
Locatie: Den Haag, panamaplein 30, sporthal hoge veld, multifunctionele ruimte (boven)
De lessen zullen gegeven worden door Erwin Mulder. 

De kosten zullen 15 euro per les van 3 uur zijn.
Je kan er voor kiezen alle lessen te volgen (zaterdag en zondag),
of enkel op zaterdag danwel zondag. Inhalen van deze lessen zijn mogelijk op de andere les van de maand. Oftewel kom je normaal op zaterdag dan kun je die maand op zondag inhalen en andersom.

Meer (actuele) info op onze hyves: http://vrolijkehoffelijken.hyves.nl
En binnenkort zal de info ook bijgewerkt worden op onze site:
http://www.touchedbymagic.com/hofdansen
  • Bezoekadres: Panamaplein 30, Den Haag

Contactgegevens

Mieke en Hepziba
Emailadres: hofdansdenhaag@gmail.com
Webadres: http://www.touchedbymagic.com/hofdansen

Good reads for software testers

I asked my software testing friends on twitter what they thought were good reads for software testers. So far I got these suggestions:





@Pandameisje Good reads: kaner.com, developsense.com, @geraldmweinberg books @sgershon @testsidestory : Start here: http://www.ayeconference.com/test-trimming-a-fable-about-testing/ (by @testertested PradeepSoundararajan)


@pandameisje I definitely second @testertested's suggestions. I'd add Lessons Learned in sw testing. + many books that are NOT abt testing (by @TestSideStory Zeger Van Hese)


@Pandameisje @rvansteenbergen Lessons Learned in Software Testing by @jamesmarcusbach. The basis for critical thinking for testers! (by @agiletesterNL Anko Tijman)


@agiletesterNL @Pandameisje Yes. That's a really good start. And of course testen 2.0 tells you all about testing within agile teams
&
@Pandameisje Well, thr R sum favorite books of me on testevents.com & read testblogs (I mention my favs in my newsletter of chickenwings)
&
@Pandameisje @agiletesternl Also a lot of good free testmagazines out there, with "tales from the trenches". Lot of practical usable info (by @rvansteenbergen Rob van Steenbergen)

@Pandameisje start with book perfect software by g. Weinberg.or abt context driven testing.why:"to get head straight about testing.." j bach (by @JeroenRo Jeroen Rosink)

@Pandameisje Alice in Wonderland is a good read for a tester! Seriously! The pragmatic programmer is very good, not only for programmers. (by @ola_hylten Ola Hyltén)

Of course I had to ask Ola, why Alice in wonderland?
This was his response:
Alice is confronted with things she doesn't understand and is forced to figure out new ways. I find many passages useful. If you don't find Alice useful, try something else :) There are no right or wrong here. If u can use it, do it, if not, don't

If I get more replies I'll add them here,
and when you have more suggestions feel free to add them as a comment (I will add it as clickable links if they are references to websites...)

I also found these sites via twitter, I think these might be very useful suggestions as well:
For junior (and also more senior) testers:
http://simonsaysnomore.wordpress.com/2011/08/28/good-start-for-a-junior-tester/
Suggestions by @testingclub:
A beginning to a testing career -http://www.softwaretestingclub.com/forum/topics/a-beginning-to-a-testing-career

Mieke