254: Making Load Testing with Real Browsers a Reality with Tim Koopmans
Have you ever wished there was an easier way to performance test your application without worrying about how to automate it from the protocol layer? If so, you’ll want to listen in to today’s episode with the founder of Flood.io, Tim Koopmans. Tim will share why he thinks browser-level performance testing using Element can help with your performance testing efforts.
About Tim Koopmans
Following a decade long career as an Australian Army Officer, Tim spent the last 15 years working as an independent consultant in performance, development, and operations of IT systems. Tim has worked with clients from the retail, finance, telecommunications, government and private sectors in Australia and around the world.
Tim helps make the Internet fast at flood.io, a distributed cloud-based load testing platform for everyone. When his 150ms ping is too slow to work remotely, he finds himself on the next 20h flight to work locally.
Connect with Tim Koopmans
- Twitter: @tim_koopmans
- LinkedIn: timkoopmans
- Company: flood.io
Rate and Review TestTalks
Thanks again for listening to the show. If it has helped you in any way, shape or form, please share it using the social media buttons you see on the page. Additionally, reviews for the podcast on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated! They do matter in the rankings of the show and I read each and every one of them.

Powered By SauceLabs
Test Talks is sponsored by the fantastic folks at Sauce Labs. Try it for free today!
Related Podcasts
About This Episode: Your AI code review tools read the diff. They stare at your code. But they never actually […]
About This Episode: What happens to QA when AI is writing ten times more code than your team can test? […]
About This Episode: Everyone is talking about AI replacing testers, writing tests, and transforming software quality. But what if we’re […]
About This Episode: AI coding tools promised to make development faster — and they delivered. But here’s the problem nobody […]




