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Application performance engineering

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Application performance engineering is a method to develop and test application performance in various settings, including mobile computing, the cloud, and conventional information technology (IT).

Methodology

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According to the American National Institute of Standards and Technology, nearly four out of every five dollars spent on the total cost of ownership of an application is directly attributable to finding and fixing issues post-deployment. A full one-third of this cost could be avoided with better software testing.[1][full citation needed]

Application performance engineering attempts to test software before it is published.[2][full citation needed] While practices vary among organizations, the method attempts to emulate the real-world conditions that software in development will confront, including network deployment and access by mobile devices.[3][full citation needed] Techniques include network virtualization.[4][full citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The Economic Impacts of Inadequate Infrastructure for Software Testing," National Institute of Standards and Technology.
  2. ^ "Code Complete," Steve McConnell. Microsoft Press. Page 960.
  3. ^ "Testing and Optimizing Mobile Application Performance," Software Test Professionals Online Summit, June 6, 2012.
  4. ^ The 2011 Application & Service Delivery Handbook, pp. 10, 81, 82.

Further reading

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