When I wrote an app to teach Transfusion Medicine, I selected 10 friends and 
colleagues--5 of them content experts in the field with no particular computer 
expertise and 5 of them friends I knew from Apple User Groups from way back in 
the days when all Apple ][ users were "hobbyists." The latter were tasked with 
beating up on the software, trying to break it. All of them got a free copy of 
the software. 

This worked quite well. In all the years the software was sold, I never got a 
single bug report, although I have gotten content feedback through the same 
publisher. 

Sent from my iPad

> On Apr 12, 2017, at 2:06 PM, Jonathan Lynch via use-livecode 
> <use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> 
> I have been getting feedback from friends and family on my app, but I want to 
> find a wider circle of testers. I plan to seek testers on the use-list as 
> well, but for now I am trying to find a couple dozen nonprogrammers so I can 
> judge how the average public reacts to the app.
> 
> How do those of you who program for the general public do this?


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