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BrowserStack launches AI agent suite to automate, simplify software testing
BrowserStack launches AI agent suite to automate, simplify software testing

Time of India

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Time of India

BrowserStack launches AI agent suite to automate, simplify software testing

Academy Empower your mind, elevate your skills Accel-backed BrowserStack has launched a suite of artificial intelligence (AI)-powered agents integrated across its software testing platform, aimed at helping software teams accelerate release cycles, improve test coverage, and boost product suite, called BrowserStack AI , comprises five agents that address key pain points in the software testing life cycle, which are test planning, authoring, maintenance, accessibility, and visual company claims these tools can increase productivity by up to 50% and cut test creation time by over 90%.'We mapped the entire testing journey to identify where teams spend the most time and manual effort and reimagined it with AI at the core,' said Ritesh Arora , CEO and cofounder of BrowserStack. 'Early results are game-changing; our test case generator delivers 90% faster test creation with 91% accuracy and 92% coverage, results that generic LLMs can't match.'Unlike generic copilots or disconnected plugins, BrowserStack AI agents are built directly into BrowserStack products, drawing context-aware insights from a unified data store across the testing lifecycle, the company suite includes the test case generator agent, which creates detailed test cases from product documents, and the low code authoring agent, which turns them into automated tests using natural suite also includes the self-healing agent, which automatically adapts and remediates tests during execution, preventing failures caused by user interface (UI) changes, while the A11y issue detection agent uses AI to surface accessibility issues across websites and apps. Also, the visual review agent highlights only meaningful changes, making reviews company also has an integration layer, called BrowserStack MCP Server, that enables developers and testers to test directly from their integrated development environments (IDEs), large language models (LLMs) or any other MCP-enabled client.'AI is only useful if it delivers meaningful, context-rich outcomes,' said Arora. 'That's why we've invested in building AI agents that understand test environments, real-world execution data, and user behaviour across thousands of teams.'Founded in 2011 by Ritesh Arora and Nakul Aggarwal, BrowserStack is a cloud-based platform for developers to test websites and mobile apps across different devices, operating systems, and browsers. It operates across 21 data centres worldwide and provides access to more than 30,000 real devices and browsers for February, the company announced the launch of the AI-powered test platform that consolidates the entire toolchain for quality assurances under one platform from creating, planning, executing and debugging testing, with an aim to help development teams deliver applications faster and which said that over 700 engineers are now working on its AI-powered test platform, has more than 20 additional agents in development. The company's tools currently power more than three million tests daily for over 50,000 teams, including companies like Amazon, Microsoft , and Nvidia.

How to make evacuation drills accessible for the disabled
How to make evacuation drills accessible for the disabled

Mint

time15-05-2025

  • General
  • Mint

How to make evacuation drills accessible for the disabled

All of last week, 31-year-old Amrit Khurana tried to tune into family conversations about the heightened tensions between India and Pakistan following the Pahalgam terror attack. A non-verbal autistic person based in Noida, she could follow the discussions to a limited extent. 'She could not chip in but would ask limited questions. A lot of our family members are in the defence services, and we would talk about them. She would ask in short sentences about their whereabouts," says her mother Aarti. 'I was not sure how to explain all of this to her." Like the rest of the country, Noida underwent blackout simulations and evacuation drills. However, there was very little information about making these drills inclusive for people with disabilities or about having these difficult conversations around conflict. Aarti ran some searches online and came across a guide published by Siddhant Shah, disability access consultant and founder of Access For ALL, and Rohan Marathe, head of A11y at the same organisation, which aims to improve access through design and advocacy. Titled 'How Inclusive and Accessible is Your Evacuation Mock Drill', this succinct resource focuses on inclusive evacuation preparedness and drills for all the stakeholders, whether persons with disabilities, caregivers or corporate disability inclusion leaders. Available as a free download in PDF, audio guide and screen reader formats, this document is covers three aspects—creating an emergency go bag, evacuation plans and shelter-in-place—for persons with hearing, visual and motor impairment and with neurodiverse sensitivities. Efforts are underway to create a Braille version. 'When I read the guide, which was readily available on social media, it hit me hard. We should be making conversations and drills more inclusive for everyone," says Aarti. In the context of evacuation preparedness for those with neurodiverse sensitivities, Shah mentions that caregivers ought to have a visual story to explain emergencies. Under the section 'shelter-in-place', he suggests limited exposure to news or loud sounds to reduce anxiety and to keep routines as consistent as possible. Aarti decided to follow the guidelines and made visual cards for Amrit—a sort of a snakes-and-ladders game on paper. 'I drew the two countries and a conflict map, and created visual cues around what we plan to do in case of a blackout or in case we are not together during evacuation. It is difficult to gauge how much Amrit understands, but it is important to make this effort," says Aarti. While the two countries have announced a ceasefire, the resource continues to be significant in case of any eventuality, natural or manmade. Also read: Garba as therapy? Know why therapists are treating Parkinson's with Indian dance Arpan, a Vadodar-based school with which Access for All works, reached out to them on 7 May after the escalation in tensions. As it was vacation time, parents had gotten in touch with the school for help with the anxiety that children on the neurodivergent spectrum experienced due to siren noises. That got Shah thinking about ways to diminish the unease of both caregivers and children. 'I was also thinking of ways of guiding my mother, who suffers from a permanent partial visual impairment, through such drills. How do you create camaraderie among people to create an onus of assisting others in an emergency?" he says. 'The National Disaster Management Authority has guidelines in place, but those are more for floods, landslides, earthquakes and tsunamis." The latest addition of precautions and measures to the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016, is related to covid-19. 'One has to think of many things in a conflict scenario. How do people who are non-verbal ask for help? There are small but significant measures that can be taken," says Shah. For instance, an emergency go bag should contain a whistle, which can be worn around the neck. For senior citizens or people with motor impairment, assistive tools such as braces, cushions, catheter kits, spare wheelchair parts and flashlights with head straps should be part of the pack. The drill should be practiced using accessible exits and a wheelchair or walker should be stored near the bed and the door. For those with a hearing impairment, pack five sets of extra batteries for the hearing aid. For the visually impaired, put Braille/large-print labels on items, and the evacuation plan could include a tactile map of the house and building. The route could be practiced with a guide or family member using orientation markers like textured floor signs. In the shelter-in-place plan, identify safe, obstacle-free indoor space and pre-attach glow-in-the-dark tape to essential items. People can install emergency alert apps with visual notifications, create emergency cards explaining specific support needs, keep a phone with a speed dial to caregivers, and use talking emergency apps such as Seeing AI and Be My Eyes. This can smoothen the evacuation process for everyone in the neighbourhood or the workplace. Also read: Why strong social connections matter more than ever At Arpan, a school run by a not-for-profit trust, facilitators have translated the guide into Gujarati and shared it on a WhatsApp group with parents. The institution has students mostly from underprivileged backgrounds, aged 6 to 40, with disabilities such as Down Syndrome, cerebral palsy and cognitive movement challenges. 'Most of the parents were not aware of how the constant news of conflict was impacting the students. They noticed minor sensory issues such as an increase in flapping of hands. Since it is vacation time, the students were confined to their homes, and were feeling triggered on seeing the flurry of updates," says Meera Rathore, principal, Arpan. 'We suggested weaning them off the screen and engaging them with visual stories. For the non-verbal students, we asked caregivers to speak short sentences of reassurance to give them comfort." Arpan communicated to parents the idea of creating a visual/pictorial emergency checklist, giving them comfort items such as fidget toys and stress balls, and doing breathing exercises to calm them. They were also asked to create an ID card explaining the disability, medication list and emergency contacts. 'Some of the parents have created this for the kids. For the rest, we are creating these ID cards," says Rathore. One of the suggestions is to practice an evacuation drill by creating a dotted line around the home or the school, or using picture-based maps, and practicing these step-by-step drills repeatedly. 'These are simple steps that can go a long way in case of any emergency situation," she says. Also read: Why autism in Indian women often goes unseen

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