Pilot lights are often designed so that the heat from the flame holds a bimetallic switch in the open position. Should the light go out, the bimetallic switch will shut as it cools.
If a webpage is an iceberg, the buttons and menus and dropdowns are the visible part. If I understand this page object, that’s what he proposes testing.
But the bit I care about is the bit underneath that will compose REST calls from those UI elements and sometimes make subsequent REST calls from the result of the previous ones.
That is the tricky bit to test, and the bit where we *still* fall back to manual testing and recorded demos for qa.
I was hoping this was a suggestion for a better selenium.
I’m curious about the control surfaces. Since you have the four quadcopter motors, you could potentially just induce all three of yaw pitch and roll by powering those up.
I wonder if the reduction in weight from the now unneeded servos would pay for the extra battery drain.
Those who recall cars with fm radios and gsm phones will have heard something similar if their car had a random compartment right below the stereo.
When a call came in, before the phone would ring, the radio would emit this very clear tri di di dit dah dah. But only when the phone was very near the radio.
Does your monitor have a nonstandard rgb pattern? If zed is trying to do its own subpixel rendering then getting the pattern wrong is going to mess up your results.
… this is incredibly wrong headed. People forget. Even when we promise we will remember, we forget. And what we remember is often false and distorted; more so with every revisit.
Take snapshots and souvenirs to aid and anchor your memory. Take careful photographs to adorn your walls and communicate to others.