Is there still a career path for manual QA these days?
I became disabled a few years ago, and the most likely scenario for me is that I will stay on disability for the foreseeable future. But from time to time, I think about my halcyon days doing QA, which was a job I really liked.
This leads me to wonder -- is manual QA even a valid career path anymore? Or are these jobs being eaten by automation, AI, and the usual protestations that "devs do their own QA" and "we don't need QA"...in other words, forcing your users to become unpaid beta testers for a finished product and hoping for the best?
Just curious.
2 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 11.9 ms ] threadI don't know how common that is anymore; as you've noted, a lot of companies de-emphasize the need for a dedicated QA team.
I doubt you'll find anything at larger silicon valley-esque startups, but any company that creates tools for non-technical end users (either internal or external) typically needs QA.