A curated collection of software testing blogs and resources covering agile testing, test automation, TDD, and quality assurance.
Awesome Testing Blogs is a curated directory of software testing resources including blogs, articles, and publications from testing professionals and organizations. It solves the problem of discovering quality testing content by organizing resources into structured categories like agile testing, test automation, and test-driven development.
Software testers, QA engineers, test automation developers, and engineering managers looking to stay current with testing methodologies and best practices.
Developers choose this resource because it provides a single, well-organized source for discovering authoritative testing content, saving time compared to searching across multiple platforms, and it's maintained by the testing community to ensure quality and relevance.
An awesome, curated list of various software testing related blogs and similar resources.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
The list emphasizes hand-picked resources from recognized authorities like Lisa Crispin and Martin Fowler, ensuring access to high-quality, expert-driven content.
Resources are categorized into specific topics such as agile testing and test automation, making it easy to navigate and find relevant blogs quickly.
It accepts contributions through clear guidelines, allowing the community to keep the list current and comprehensive, as seen in the CONTRIBUTING.md link.
Covers a wide range from organizational culture to technical subjects like API testing and embedded systems, providing balanced insights for professionals.
The list relies on manual contributions and the last-updated badge, meaning it might not reflect the most recent blog posts or emerging trends in real-time.
Users must navigate to external sites for content, as the list only provides links without previews or summaries, increasing reliance on third-party sources.
Being community-driven, it may reflect contributor biases and miss niche or newer voices, despite the emphasis on recognized authorities.
While curated, there are no ratings, popularity indicators, or recency checks for individual blog posts, making it harder to gauge value at a glance.