![]() Ready or not (mostly not), on July 2nd, I'm headed to Italy for the race, which happens on the 10th. It's the first time I've ever tried anything this.crazy. In one day, we'll be riding about 85 miles and over 7 big passes, with 14,000 feet of climbing. So, for the last six months or so-in sun, snow and rain-I've been riding and training (well, trying to train) for this huge, 9500-participant Grand Fondo. After a cycling trip to Italy last fall, and based on a suggestion by one of the guides, I decided to train for (and participate in) the Maratona dles Dolomites. Ring One–PersonalĪs anyone who follows me on Twitter is aware, I've been doing a lot of cycling over the past few years (and tweeting about it in a rather boring way, sorry). Finally, we freeze the release and, with any luck, we release shortly after the release candidate is OK'ed by internal and external tests.Īnd I highlight all this because the whole "telling stories" part of our next release is going to be much shorter than usual, and we'll be doing other things a bit differently as well.During the last few testing cycles, I usually start telling the story of the release (which, at that point, we're pretty sure we're nearly done with), highlighting some of the more interesting elements.The fix/test cycle is repeated as many times as is necessary to ensure that we're meeting our quality standards, that new features are working as desired and satisfying the needs we'd identified during their design, etc.Once we've put them through a bunch of internal testing, we recruit a mix of old and new testers to put things through the "customer wringer".Those new features are designed and implemented.We plan a healthy mix of fixes, tweaks and features.There's a certain way I like to release a version of SuperDuper, or any application, really. ![]()
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