Suppose a team is building an email client for an organization’s internal communication between employees in different departments. The new client has all the basic functions of an email client. Will testing the software with external email accounts give us a better idea about the product’s ability to meet the organization’s demands?(1 point)

Responses

Yes, testing the new software with external email accounts would be a plus point.
Yes, testing the new software with external email accounts would be a plus point.

No, testing with external email accounts would not be beneficial since that is out of the software scope.
No, testing with external email accounts would not be beneficial since that is out of the software scope.

Yes, it will be like testing the email client with internal email addresses because it gives us detailed results.
Yes, it will be like testing the email client with internal email addresses because it gives us detailed results.

No, because we can test external email addresses after the deployment.

1 answer

The most appropriate response would be:

No, testing with external email accounts would not be beneficial since that is out of the software scope.

Since the email client is designed for internal communication within the organization, testing it with external accounts may not accurately reflect how well it meets the specific demands of internal communication and could introduce variables that are not relevant to its primary use case. It’s more effective to focus on how the email client performs under conditions that reflect its intended environment and usage.