Highlights
Transitioning to Agile is no easy task, but it can have some great rewards. Check out this free Whitepaper for 10 tips that will help ease you into Agile development and testing.
See what a highly sought after Agile and SCRUM coach has to say about why he’s in love with Agile, what it takes to succeed and how he convinces Fortune 100 companies to make the switch, plus several additional insights.
Who’s more satisfied with the state of mobile apps, Android or iOS users? Find out in this original infographic that takes a category-by-category look and highlights users’ biggest pet peeves.
This original eBook covers everything you need to know about mobile app testing – from the different types of mobile apps to common pitfalls and how to test for them.
With the rise of mobile, developers and product managers are looking for guidelines to help them nail usability. Luckily, many can be found in the following pages of our latest free eBook: The Keys to Mobile Usability.
Sponsored Stories
An app isn’t “done” when it’s launched. Having successful mobile apps requires post-launch monitoring to see how users are responding. By monitoring key post-launch metrics, teams can tailor future releases to their real-life users’ wants and needs.
uTest recently acquired Apphance, a mobile testing tool that allows developer to distribute new builds over the air, collect bug reports and user feedback from within the app, and get automatic, detailed crash reports. In this story learn what Apphance can do for you.
As testing requirements get even more complicated, how companies test needs to grow and adapt. Old offshoring practices are giving way to newer, more flexible models of crowdsourced software testing.
USA TODAY prides itself on launching high-quality, successful apps on tight deadlines. As they expanded their reach to more and more mobile devices, they realized they needed some real-world testing help. uTest proved to be the perfect solution.
If all your testing is taking place inside a lab, you’re almost certain to release a product that will put bugs in front of your users. Don’t risk your reputation or revenue. Move a portion of your testing out of the lab and into the wild to head off these fringe use cases and help your QA team.










