Speakers

Keynote Speaker

Don Jackson

Don Jackson

Technical Evangelist
Perforce Software

Nagmani LNU

Nagmani LNU

Director Of Quality Engineering
Swivel

Featured Speakers

Bhaumik Shroff

Bhaumik Shroff

Senior QA Engineer
HCSS

David Turan

David Turan

Senior Software Engineer Test Crown Castle

Kathleen Conway

Kathleen Conway

Senior Engineering Manager SimSpace

Taisiia Bahbouche

Taisiia Bahbouche

QA Engineer II
Thryv

Nate Custer

Principal Technologist
TTC Global

Panel Discussion Speakers

Don Jackson

Don Jackson

Technical Evangelist
Perforce Software

Don comes with 20+ Years in Application Delivery Management. He is experienced in lifecycle management (agile, iterative, and waterfall), functional automation, and performance engineering).

Vinayak Sen

Product Manager
Slalom

It’s been over 70 years since Alan Turing defined what many still consider to be the ultimate test for a computer system — Can a machine exhibit intelligent behavior that is indistinguishable from that of a human? Originally coined the imitation game, the Turing test involves having someone evaluate text conversations between a human and a machine designed to respond like a human. The machine passes the test if the evaluator cannot reliably tell the difference between the human versus machine-generated text. Although the Turing test generally serves as a starting point for discussing AI advances, some question its validity as a test of intelligence. After all, the results do not require the machine to be correct, only for its answers to resemble those of a human.

Whether it’s due to artificial “intelligence” or imitation, we live in an age where machines are capable of generating convincingly realistic content. Generative AI does more than answer questions, it writes articles and poetry, synthesizes human faces and voices, creates music and artwork, and even develops and tests software. But what are the implications of these machine-based imitation games? Are they a glimpse into a future where AI reaches general or super intelligence? Or is it simply a matter of revisiting or redefining the Turing test? Join Tariq King as he leverages a live audience of software testing professionals to probe everything from generative adversarial networks (GANs) to generative pre-trained transformers (GPT). Let’s critically examine the Turing test and more because it’s judgment day — and this time, we are the judges!

Parth Saxena

Parth Saxena

Software Engineering Lead
JPMorganChase

Parth Saxena is a industry leader in software engineering with extensive experience driving innovation across diverse domains and emerging technologies. Parth is passionate about practical, real-world use of Generative AI to solve complex enterprise challenges. His recent work explores intelligent agents, RAG architectures, and LLM automation

Jorge Hernandez

IT Team Manager Salesforce nCino
BOK Financial

Software Quality Assurance executive leader with more than 18 years’ experience creating and delivering automation, performance, end to end, web, test strategies in complex industries and organizations. Holds 3 technology patents and PMP, ISTQB, AWS certifications, passionate about technology and building high performance Agile teams using trust as the foundation of long-lasting professional partnerships.

Jorge Hernandez
Jessica M

Jessica M

Director of Quality Engineering
TrustCloud

Meet Jessica Mosley, a dynamic and experienced leader with over 10 years of experience in leading teams and driving organizational growth. With over 20 years of experience in software development, IT, Customer Experience and DevOps, Jessica has developed a keen eye for identifying opportunities to improve quality and efficiency in software development.

Jessica is passionate about creating a better workplace and fostering human connection through the adaptation of a quality mindset. She firmly believes that quality is not just a metric to be measured, but a philosophy that should be ingrained in every aspect of an organization’s culture.