Volume 26,
Number 1,
January - February 2009
- Hakan Erdogmus:
A Tale of Two Conferences.
4-7
- Daniel E. O'Leary:
The Most Cited IEEE Software Articles.
12-14
- Natalia Juristo Juzgado, Ana María Moreno, Sira Vegas, Forrest Shull:
A Look at 25 Years of Data.
15-17
- Rebecca Wirfs-Brock:
Designing in the Future.
18-19
- Philippe Kruchten:
When Robert Rules.
20-21
- Holger M. Kienle, Adrian Kuhn, Kim Mens, Mark van den Brand, Roel Wuyts:
Tool Building on the Shoulders of Others.
22-23
- Nachiappan Nagappan, Andreas Zeller, Thomas Zimmermann:
Guest Editors' Introduction: Mining Software Archives.
24-25
- Harald Gall, Beat Fluri, Martin Pinzger:
Change Analysis with Evolizer and ChangeDistiller.
26-33
- Alexander Tarvo:
Mining Software History to Improve Software Maintenance Quality: A Case Study.
34-40
- Richard W. Selby:
Analytics-Driven Dashboards Enable Leading Indicators for Requirements and Designs of Large-Scale Systems.
41-49
- Gerardo Canfora, Luigi Cerulo, Massimiliano Di Penta:
Tracking Your Changes: A Language-Independent Approach.
50-57
- Timo Wolf, Adrian Schröter, Daniela Damian, Lucas D. Panjer, Thanh H. D. Nguyen:
Mining Task-Based Social Networks to Explore Collaboration in Software Teams.
58-66
- Michael W. Godfrey, Ahmed E. Hassan, James D. Herbsleb, Gail C. Murphy, Martin P. Robillard, Premkumar T. Devanbu, Audris Mockus, Dewayne E. Perry, David Notkin:
Future of Mining Software Archives: A Roundtable.
67-70
- Andrew D. Jurik, Alfred C. Weaver:
Body Sensors: Wireless Access to Physiological Data.
71-73
- Grady Booch:
Not with a Bang.
74-75
- Peter Sawyer, Neil A. M. Maiden:
How to Use Web Services in Your Requirements Process.
76-78
- Judith Segal, Chris Morris:
Guest Editors' Introduction: Developing Scientific Software, Part 2.
79
- Sarah Thew, Alistair G. Sutcliffe, Rob Procter, Oscar de Bruijn, John McNaught, Colin C. Venters, Iain E. Buchan:
Requirements Engineering for E-science: Experiences in Epidemiology.
80-87
- David De Roure, Carole A. Goble:
Software Design for Empowering Scientists.
88-95
- Catriona Macaulay, David Sloan, Xinyi Jiang, Paula Forbes, Scott Loynton, Jason R. Swedlow, Peter Gregor:
Usability and User-Centered Design in Scientific Software Development.
96-102
- Robert L. Glass:
A Classification System for Testing, Part 2.
104
Volume 26,
Number 2,
March - April 2009
- Hakan Erdogmus:
Cloud Computing: Does Nirvana Hide behind the Nebula?
4-6
- Olly Gotel, Stephen J. Morris:
More than Just "Lost in Translation".
7-9
- Philippe Kruchten:
You Are What You Read.
10-11
- Grady Booch:
The Resting Place of Innovation.
12-13
- Magne Jorgensen, Barry W. Boehm, Stan Rifkin:
Software Development Effort Estimation: Formal Models or Expert Judgment?
14-19
- Catharina Riedemann, Regine Freitag:
Modeling Usage: Techniques and Tools.
20-24
- Uwe Zdun:
Guest Editor's Introduction: Capturing Design Knowledge.
25-27
- Santonu Sarkar, Shubha Ramachandran, G. Sathish Kumar, Madhu K. Iyengar, K. Rangarajan, Saravanan Sivagnanam:
Modularization of a Large-Scale Business Application: A Case Study.
28-35
- Philippe Kruchten, Rafael Capilla, Juan Carlos Dueas:
The Decision View's Role in Software Architecture Practice.
36-42
- Antony Tang, Jun Han, Rajesh Vasa:
Software Architecture Design Reasoning: A Case for Improved Methodology Support.
43-49
- Christof Ebert:
Guest Editor's Introduction: How Open Source Tools Can Benefit Industry.
50-51
- Dirk Riehle, John Ellenberger, Tamir Menahem, Boris Mikhailovski, Yuri Natchetoi, Barak Naveh, Thomas Odenwald:
Open Collaboration within Corporations Using Software Forges.
52-58
- Christiane Gresse von Wangenheim, Jean Carlo Rossa Hauck, Aldo von Wangenheim:
Enhancing Open Source Software in Alignment with CMMI-DEV.
59-67
- Rebecca Wirfs-Brock:
Designing with an Agile Attitude.
68-69
- Diomidis Spinellis:
Start with the Most Difficult Part.
70-71
- William N. Robinson, Sandeep Purao:
Specifying and Monitoring Interactions and Commitments in Open Business Processes.
72-79
- Jingyue Li, Reidar Conradi, Christian Bunse, Marco Torchiano, Odd Petter N. Slyngstad, Maurizio Morisio:
Development with Off-the-Shelf Components: 10 Facts.
80-87
- Greg Goth:
Agile Tool Market Growing with the Philosophy.
88-91
- Christiane Gresse von Wangenheim, Forrest Shull:
To Game or Not to Game?
92-94
- Robert L. Glass:
Making Research More Relevant While Not Diminishing Its Rigor.
96
Volume 26,
Number 3,
May - June 2009
- Hakan Erdogmus:
Diversity and Software Development.
2-4
- Rebecca Wirfs-Brock:
Creating Sustainable Designs.
5-7
- Greg Wilson:
Not on the Shelves.
8-9
- Grady Booch:
Like a River.
10-11
- Diomidis Spinellis:
Drawing Tools.
12-13
- Christof Ebert, Jürgen Salecker:
Guest Editors' Introduction: Embedded Software Technologies and Trends.
14-18
- Peter Liggesmeyer, Mario Trapp:
Trends in Embedded Software Engineering.
19-25
- Jesús Martínez, Pedro Merino, Alberto Salmeron, Francisco Malpartida:
UML-Based Model-Driven Development for HSDPA Design.
26-33
- Jean-Yves Mignolet, Roel Wuyts:
Embedded Multiprocessor Systems-on-Chip Programming.
34-41
- Junbeom Yoo, Eunkyoung Jee, Sung Deok Cha:
Formal Modeling and Verification of Safety-Critical Software.
42-49
- Michael R. Smith, James Miller, Lily Huang, Albert Tran:
A More Agile Approach to Embedded System Development.
50-57
- Ronald Kirk Kandt:
Experiences in Improving Flight Software Development Processes.
58-64
- Les Hatton, Michiel van Genuchten:
Point/Counterpoint.
66-69
- Stan Rifkin:
Guest Editor's Introduction: Software Measurement.
70
- Onur Demirörs, Çigdem Gencel:
Conceptual Association of Functional Size Measurement Methods.
71-78
- Magne Jorgensen:
How to Avoid Selecting Bids Based on Overoptimistic Cost Estimates.
79-84
- Neil A. M. Maiden:
Card Sorts to Acquire Requirements.
85-86
- David Harel, Michal Gordon-Kiwkowitz:
On Teaching Visual Formalisms.
87-95
- Ben Chelf, Christof Ebert:
Ensuring the Integrity of Embedded Software with Static Code Analysis.
96-99
- Torgeir Dingsøyr, Finn Olav Bjørnson, Forrest Shull:
What Do We Know about Knowledge Management? Practical Implications for Software Engineering.
100-103
- Adenekan Dedeke:
Is Linux Better than Windows Software?
104
Volume 26,
Number 4,
July-August 2009
- Hakan Erdogmus:
The Seven Traits of Superprofessionals.
4-6
- Grady Booch:
The Defenestration of Superfluous Architectural Accoutrements.
7-8
- Duncan Hall:
The Ethical Software Engineer.
9-10
- Rebecca Wirfs-Brock:
Principles in Practice.
11-12
- Martin Fowler:
A Pedagogical Framework for Domain-Specific Languages.
13-14
- Jonathan Sprinkle, Marjan Mernik, Juha-Pekka Tolvanen, Diomidis Spinellis:
Guest Editors' Introduction: What Kinds of Nails Need a Domain-Specific Hammer?
15-18
- Lan Cao, Balasubramaniam Ramesh, Matti Rossi:
Are Domain-Specific Models Easier to Maintain Than UML Models?
19-21
- Steven Kelly, Risto Pohjonen:
Worst Practices for Domain-Specific Modeling.
22-29
- Manuel Jiménez Buendía, Francisca Rosique, Pedro Sánchez, Bárbara Álvarez, Andrés Iborra:
Habitation: A Domain-Specific Language for Home Automation.
30-38
- Atzmon Hen-Tov, David H. Lorenz, Assaf Pinhasi, Lior Schachter:
ModelTalk: When Everything Is a Domain-Specific Language.
39-46
- Jules White, James H. Hill, Jeff Gray, Sumant Tambe, Aniruddha S. Gokhale, Douglas C. Schmidt:
Improving Domain-Specific Language Reuse with Software Product Line Techniques.
47-53
- Janos L. Mathe, Jason B. Martin, Peter Miller, Ákos Lédeczi, Liza M. Weavind, András Nádas, Anne Miller, David J. Maron, Janos Sztipanovits:
A Model-Integrated, Guideline-Driven, Clinical Decision-Support System.
54-61
- Gerald D. Everett, Bertrand Meyer:
Point/Counterpoint.
62-65
- David Garlan, Robert Allen, John Ockerbloom:
Architectural Mismatch: Why Reuse Is Still So Hard.
66-69
- Paul C. Clements, Mary Shaw:
"The Golden Age of Software Architecture" Revisited.
70-72
- Uwe Honekamp:
The Autosar XML Schema and Its Relevance for Autosar Tools.
73-76
- Frank van der Linden, Björn Lundell, Pentti Marttiin:
Commodification of Industrial Software: A Case for Open Source.
77-83
- Sebastian Barney, Ganglan Hu, Aybüke Aurum, Claes Wohlin:
Creating Software Product Value in China.
84-90
- Colin Codephirst:
Where Have All the Stencils Gone?
91-92
- Jeff Patton:
Leah Buley: Toward Collaborative, Pragmatic User-Experience Work.
93-94
- Tom DeMarco:
Software Engineering: An Idea Whose Time Has Come and Gone?
96-95
Volume 26,
Number 5,
September-October 2009
- Hakan Erdogmus:
Architecture Meets Agility.
2-4
- Responses to "Software Engineering: An Idea Whose Time Has Come and Gone?".
5
- Tore Dybå, Torgeir Dingsøyr:
What Do We Know about Agile Software Development?
6-9
- Frank Buschmann:
Introducing the Pragmatic Architect.
10-11
- Grady Booch:
Software Abundance in the Face of Economic Scarcity, Part 1.
12-13
- Diomidis Spinellis:
Job Security.
14-15
- Andrew Jensen Ko, Robin Abraham, Margaret M. Burnett, Brad A. Myers:
Guest Editors' Introduction: End-User Software Engineering.
16-17
- Joel Brandt, Philip J. Guo, Joel Lewenstein, Mira Dontcheva, Scott R. Klemmer:
Opportunistic Programming: Writing Code to Prototype, Ideate, and Discover.
18-24
- Martin Erwig:
Software Engineering for Spreadsheets.
25-30
- Kevin McDaid, Alan Rust:
Test-Driven Development for Spreadsheet Risk Management.
31-36
- Gerhard Fischer, Kumiyo Nakakoji, Yunwen Ye:
Metadesign: Guidelines for Supporting Domain Experts in Software Development.
37-44
- Christian Dörner, Sebastian Draxler, Volkmar Pipek, Volker Wulf:
End Users at the Bazaar: Designing Next-Generation Enterprise Resource Planning Systems.
45-51
- Andrew Jensen Ko:
Automating the Web with CoScripter: An Interview with Tessa Lau.
52-53
- Janice Singer, Mark R. Vigder, Judith Segal, Steven Clarke:
Point/Counterpoint.
54-57
- William N. Robinson:
Seeking Quality through User-Goal Monitoring.
58-65
- Narasimha Bolloju:
Conceptual Modeling of Systems Integration Requirements.
66-74
- Neil A. M. Maiden:
Where Are We? Handling Context.
75-76
- Rini van Solingen:
A Follow-Up Reflection on Software Process Improvement ROI.
77-79
- Terry Bollinger, Clement L. McGowan:
A Critical Look at Software Capability Evaluations: An Update.
80-83
- Michael A. Cusumano, Alan MacCormack, Chris F. Kemerer, Bill Crandall:
Critical Decisions in Software Development: Updating the State of the Practice.
84-87
- Andreas Bruns, Andreas Kornstädt, Dennis Wichmann:
Web Application Tests with Selenium.
88-91
- Rebecca Wirfs-Brock:
Design for Test.
92-93
- Arthur B. Pyster, Richard Turner, Devanandham Henry, Kahina Lasfer, Larry Bernstein:
Master's Degrees in Software Engineering: An Analysis of 28 University Programs.
94-101
- William Everett, James Cusick, Laurie Williams:
John D. Musa.
102
- Robert L. Glass:
Doubt and Software Standards.
104-103
Volume 26,
Number 6,
November-December 2009
- Hakan Erdogmus:
A Process That Is Not.
4-7
- An Agile Cure for All Ills?
8
- Rebecca Wirfs-Brock:
The Responsible Designer.
9-10
- Bran Selic:
Agile Documentation, Anyone?
11-12
- Neil A. M. Maiden:
Oi, Analyst.
13-14
- Grady Booch:
Software Abundance in the Face of Economic Scarcity, Part 2.
15-16
- Cleidson R. B. de Souza, Helen Sharp, Janice Singer, Li-Te Cheng, Gina Venolia:
Guest Editors' Introduction: Cooperative and Human Aspects of Software Engineering.
17-19
- Nils Brede Moe, Torgeir Dingsøyr, Tore Dybå:
Overcoming Barriers to Self-Management in Software Teams.
20-26
- Martin P. Robillard:
What Makes APIs Hard to Learn? Answers from Developers.
27-34
- Ban Al-Ani, David F. Redmiles:
Trust in Distributed Teams: Support through Continuous Coordination.
35-40
- Yvonne Dittrich, Sebastien Vaucouleur, Stephen Giff:
ERP Customization as Software Engineering: Knowledge Sharing and Cooperation.
41-47
- Harris Wu, Lan Cao:
Community Collaboration for ERP Implementation.
48-55
- David Lorge Parnas, Bill Curtis:
Point/Counterpoint.
56-59
- Ciera Jaspan, Michael Keeling, Larry Maccherone, Gabriel L. Zenarosa, Mary Shaw:
Software Mythbusters Explore Formal Methods.
60-63
- Mary Shaw:
Continuing Prospects for an Engineering Discipline of Software.
64-67
- Frank Buschmann:
Learning from Failure, Part 1: Scoping and Requirements Woes.
68-69
- Victor Pankratius, Ali Jannesari, Walter F. Tichy:
Parallelizing Bzip2: A Case Study in Multicore Software Engineering.
70-77
- Guillaume Pothier, Éric Tanter:
Back to the Future: Omniscient Debugging.
78-85
- Diomidis Spinellis:
Basic Etiquette of Technical Communication.
86-87
- Greg Goth:
The Task-Based Interface: Not Your Father's Desktop.
88-91
- Medha Umarji, Forrest Shull:
Measuring Developers: Aligning Perspectives and Other Best Practices.
92-94
- Robert L. Glass:
Goodbye!
95
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