In order to improve browser testing tools, release engineering team has created browser testing user satisfaction survey:
It should take you up to 5 minutes. Most of the questions have simple 5 level linear scale. There are 5 sections, and the last question in each section will be free form text field, so you can leave comments on anything we forgot to ask.
For details about the survey, feel free to take a look at phabricator task:
https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T131123
Željko
We had a question on the survey creation task about respondents' privacy. Here's the answer:
* All submissions will be seen and collated by members of the Release Engineering team (namely Zeljko and I).
* Submissions do not require logging into Google nor providing a name or email.
* A summarized version will be made public (on, at least, mw.org).
* The 1-5 ratings will be averaged and shared per question.
* The free form comments will not be shared directly (iow: no direct quotes) but instead we'll paraphrase one or more at a time.
I hope that helps.
Please help us improve the browser testing tools we provide!
Greg
<quote name="Željko Filipin" date="2016-07-01" time="17:50:49 +0200">
In order to improve browser testing tools, release engineering team has created browser testing user satisfaction survey:
It should take you up to 5 minutes. Most of the questions have simple 5 level linear scale. There are 5 sections, and the last question in each section will be free form text field, so you can leave comments on anything we forgot to ask.
For details about the survey, feel free to take a look at phabricator task:
https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T131123
Željko
QA mailing list QA@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/qa
And now with an official one: https://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/Survey_Privacy_Statement_for_July_2016_...
Thanks to WMF Legal for helping us with this so quickly today.
Greg
<quote name="Greg Grossmeier" date="2016-07-05" time="08:35:48 -0700">
We had a question on the survey creation task about respondents' privacy. Here's the answer:
All submissions will be seen and collated by members of the Release Engineering team (namely Zeljko and I).
Submissions do not require logging into Google nor providing a name or email.
A summarized version will be made public (on, at least, mw.org).
The 1-5 ratings will be averaged and shared per question.
The free form comments will not be shared directly (iow: no direct quotes) but instead we'll paraphrase one or more at a time.
I hope that helps.
Please help us improve the browser testing tools we provide!
Greg
<quote name="Željko Filipin" date="2016-07-01" time="17:50:49 +0200"> > In order to improve browser testing tools, release engineering team has > created browser testing user satisfaction survey: > > https://goo.gl/xS6mmV > > It should take you up to 5 minutes. Most of the questions have simple 5 > level linear scale. There are 5 sections, and the last question in each > section will be free form text field, so you can leave comments on anything > we forgot to ask. > > For details about the survey, feel free to take a look at phabricator task: > > https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T131123 > > Željko
QA mailing list QA@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/qa
-- | Greg Grossmeier GPG: B2FA 27B1 F7EB D327 6B8E | | identi.ca: @greg A18D 1138 8E47 FAC8 1C7D |
A friendly reminder that the survey will close this Friday, July 15. We have received 15 responses so far. It would be great to get a few more this week.
Thanks!
Željko
On Fri, Jul 1, 2016 at 5:50 PM, Željko Filipin zfilipin@wikimedia.org wrote:
In order to improve browser testing tools, release engineering team has created browser testing user satisfaction survey:
It should take you up to 5 minutes. Most of the questions have simple 5 level linear scale. There are 5 sections, and the last question in each section will be free form text field, so you can leave comments on anything we forgot to ask.
For details about the survey, feel free to take a look at phabricator task:
https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T131123
Željko
The last reminder (I promise!) that we are officially closing the survey today, but we will not be looking at the results until Monday... ;)
Željko
On Mon, Jul 11, 2016 at 2:20 PM, Željko Filipin zfilipin@wikimedia.org wrote:
A friendly reminder that the survey will close this Friday, July 15. We have received 15 responses so far. It would be great to get a few more this week.
Thanks!
Željko
On Fri, Jul 1, 2016 at 5:50 PM, Željko Filipin zfilipin@wikimedia.org wrote:
In order to improve browser testing tools, release engineering team has created browser testing user satisfaction survey:
It should take you up to 5 minutes. Most of the questions have simple 5 level linear scale. There are 5 sections, and the last question in each section will be free form text field, so you can leave comments on anything we forgot to ask.
For details about the survey, feel free to take a look at phabricator task:
https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T131123
Željko
Survey report is now available:
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Browser_testing/User_satisfaction_survey
Questions? Comments?
Željko
On Fri, Jul 1, 2016 at 5:50 PM, Željko Filipin zfilipin@wikimedia.org wrote:
In order to improve browser testing tools, release engineering team has created browser testing user satisfaction survey:
It should take you up to 5 minutes. Most of the questions have simple 5 level linear scale. There are 5 sections, and the last question in each section will be free form text field, so you can leave comments on anything we forgot to ask.
For details about the survey, feel free to take a look at phabricator task:
https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T131123
Željko
Interesting patterns there.
Is the plan to follow-up with these with particular actions? That said, it seems to me a bit muddy as to what activities would best serve the responses. I suppose education/support work for those that don't feel they know *e.g.* how to use the rake/grunt entry points, or where to start on fixing flaky cucumber tests?
On Fri, 2 Sep 2016 at 03:15 Željko Filipin zfilipin@wikimedia.org wrote:
Survey report is now available:
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Browser_testing/User_satisfaction_survey
Questions? Comments?
Željko
On Fri, Jul 1, 2016 at 5:50 PM, Željko Filipin zfilipin@wikimedia.org wrote:
In order to improve browser testing tools, release engineering team has created browser testing user satisfaction survey:
It should take you up to 5 minutes. Most of the questions have simple 5 level linear scale. There are 5 sections, and the last question in each section will be free form text field, so you can leave comments on anything we forgot to ask.
For details about the survey, feel free to take a look at phabricator task:
https://phabricator.wikimedia.org/T131123
Željko
QA mailing list QA@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/qa
On Fri, Sep 2, 2016 at 7:42 PM, James Forrester jforrester@wikimedia.org wrote:
Is the plan to follow-up with these with particular actions?
The plan short-term is to update the documentation. I am working on it.
That said, it seems to me a bit muddy as to what activities would best serve the responses. I suppose education/support work for those that don't feel they know *e.g.* how to use the rake/grunt entry points, or where to start on fixing flaky cucumber tests?
I am not sure what is the question. :)
I think updating documentation and offering on-line and in-person training should be next steps.
Željko
wikitech-l@lists.wikimedia.org