1. High for the test or maintenance costs are an indicator that a test should be done manually. Another is the need for the human trial to determine the accuracy of results and extensive human intervention to maintain current test run. For these reasons, the following tests are a good fit for manual testing:
2. Installation, configuration, operation and maintenance. In many cases, these tests consist of loading the CD-ROM and tapes, changing hardware, and other ongoing hand holding by the tester.
3. Configuration and compatibility. As the operations and maintenance checks, these tests require the reconfiguration of systems and networks, installing software and hardware, and so on, all requiring human intervention.
4. Error handling and recovery. Once again, the need to force mistakes? By turning off a server, for example? It means that people should continue to participate during the test run.
6. Usability. As with localization, human judgment is needed to check for problems with the facility, simplicity, & elegance of the user interface & workflows.
5. Location. Alone a human examiner with allow skills can select whether a translation makes no sense, is culturally noisome, or is otherwise inappropriate. (Money, date, & time testing can be automated, but they require to rerun these tests for regression is limited.)
7. Documentation & help. Like usability & localization, checking documentation requires human judgment.















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