sss ssss rrrrrrrrrrr ssss ss rrrr rrrr sssss s rrrr rrrr ssssss rrrr rrrr ssssssss rrrr rrrr ssssss rrrrrrrrr s ssssss rrrr rrrr ss sssss rrrr rrrr sss sssss rrrr rrrr s sssssss rrrrr rrrrr +===================================================+ +======= Testing Techniques Newsletter (TTN) =======+ +======= ON-LINE EDITION =======+ +======= December 1999 =======+ +===================================================+ TESTING TECHNIQUES NEWSLETTER (TTN), Online Edition, is E-mailed monthly to support the Software Research, Inc. (SR)/TestWorks user community and to provide information of general use to the worldwide software quality and testing community. Permission to copy and/or re-distribute is granted, and secondary circulation is encouraged by recipients of TTN-Online provided that the entire document/file is kept intact and this complete copyright notice appears with it in all copies. (c) Copyright 2003 by Software Research, Inc. ======================================================================== INSIDE THIS ISSUE: o Quality Week 2000 - Call for Participation o The New Yorker's Tribute to Y2K o "It Depends" by Johanna Rothman o European SEPG 2000 - Call for Participation o This Month in the "new" WorldSafety News o Object-Oriented Software Quality Seminar o "CMM in Practice: Processes for Executing Software Projects at Infosys" by Pankaj Jalote now available o Second International Symposium on Constructing Software Engineering Tools (CoSET'2000) - Call for Participation o 14th Brazilain Symposium on Software Engineering (SBES'2000) - Call for Participation o Season's Greetings, from Software Research and SR/Institute o TTN SUBMITTAL, SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION ======================================================================== C A L L F O R P A R T I C I P A T I O N DOUBLE CONFERENCE 13th Annual International Software & Internet Quality Week 2000 International Software International Internet Quality Week 2000 Quality Week 2000 30 May - 2 June 2000 San Francisco Bay Area, California CONFERENCE THEME: New Century, New Beginnings QW2000 is the 13th in the continuing series of International Conferences that focus on advances in software test technology, quality control, risk management, software safety, and test automation. This year marks the introduction of the QW2000 Double Conference. Parallel to Software Quality Week 2000, Internet Quality Week 2000 will draw specific attention to Quality Issues of the Internet, such as e- commerce, web site testing and web site quality. We are soliciting Full Day and 1/2 Day Tutorials, 45- and 90-minute presentations and panel discussions on any area of QA, Testing and Automation, and related software and internet quality issues. Real-life experiences or "How To" stories are particularly encouraged. Special consideration will be given to new and emerging software quality technologies. To help the Advisory Board facilitate the selection process, please submit your proposal by December 31! Abstracts and Proposals Due: 21 January 2000 Notification of Participation: 25 February 2000 Camera Ready Materials Due: 31 March 2000 Exhibition space and sponsorship opportunities for QW2000 are also available. Of the selected papers/presentations, the winner of the QW2000 Best Paper Award will receive $2000 cash, and the winner of the QW2000 Best Presentation Award will be invited to present his/her talk at QWE2000 in Brussels, Belgium. Questions? Check out the QW2000 WebSite, at <http://www.soft.com/QualWeek/QW2K/>, call [+1] (415) 861-2800, or send E-mail to qw@soft.com. ======================================================================== The New Yorker's Tribute to Y2K We tried to get rights to reprint this lovely ode by Calvin Trillin, "Oh Y2K, Yes Y2K, How Come It Has To End This Way," which appears on Page 87 of the 13 December 1999 issue of The New Yorker. Alas, we could not quite get the reprint permissions in time for this issue. You'll just have to dig it out of the newsstands on your own. Trillin's poem deals with Y2K and is a lot of fun. After going on for nearly a full page about the possible impact of the Y2K event, it ends (and here we quote a fragment only, which is permitted with attribution) as follows. But one fear makes us say, "Oy vey!" And here's the fear we can't allay: God's thinking of pulling the plug, And not with a bang but a bug. Rarely does the software quality field get such attention. ======================================================================== It Depends (c) 1999 Johanna Rothman Johanna Rothman observes and consults on managing high technology product development. You can reach her at jr@jrothman.com, www.jrothman.com. "The Answer to the Great Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything is 42" -- Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Some people think there's a specific answer to questions such as: - "What's the correct staffing ratio for developers to testers in a software development organization?" - "What's the best project management software?" - "When should I create a branch (separate source code line) for this release?" I wish there were One Right Answer. It would make product development much easier. Usually though, the only right answer is "It depends". The answer you need depends on your situation: what you're doing, how quickly you're trying to do it, the culture you work in, and the results you desire and can tolerate. In public forums, when I give the "It depends" answer, sometimes people get angry with me. They think I'm trying to hold some information back. I'm not; I just can't give them an answer without knowing more about their environment. for example, when someone asks a question about developer-tester ratios, I now think they're asking: "How do I estimate the effort needed to do to test this product, and how many people do I need to do that work?" To do that, I first analyze the project, to see what it will take to do the testing: - What kind of user interface does it have? An API (application programming interface) allows the testers to separate the testing into pieces, which can make it easier to test. A GUI without a well-defined API generally requires more testers. In general, a product without well-defined boundaries, such as an API, requires more testing than a product with well-defined boundaries. Testing exposes the lack of definition late in the product development cycle, which causes more rework and more testing. - How much new product are we building? Are we re-architecting the product, and adding significant features? Or, are we filling in the feature set from the basics that are already there? A re-architecture effort often requires more testers. - How large or complex is the product? Sometimes, the larger the product, the more testing is required. The more complex the product, the more testing is required. If the complexity is hidden from the user, even more testing may be required. - How experienced are the product's users? A sophisticated user base may mean we choose to do different kinds of testing, which will affect the type and number of testers. A novice user base may require much testing in specific areas, with portions of the product not tested as thoroughly. Once I've considered the product, I then think about the people available to do the development and testing: - How experienced is the development staff? Do the developers know how to create and run unit tests? Are the developers already doing design reviews, code inspections, and individual testing before the product reaches the system test phase? - How experienced is the testing staff? Do they understand the product's architecture and design? Do they know how to extend the tests that already exist? Do they understand the product? - What tools do the developers and testers have? Are they creating their infrastructure as well as creating the product? For the testers, is there a regression test suite? How much of the regression testing is automated? Do we understand how well it tests the current project? Finally, I consider the project and its importance to the company and to its customers: - What is the risk of doing less testing? Will this software be used to run airplanes or heart implant devices, or is it a desktop application that can be easily rebooted? The more crucial the=20 software is to people and our environment, the more testing I expect to plan and perform. - How much time do we have? Are we planning the testing at the beginning of the project, where we can consider automation to cut down on test repetition time, or is the testing supposed to start next week? - How good do we want it? What are our release criteria? What are we willing to spend on the total product development effort? Many organizations tend to have similar projects, so they go through this exercise once, and keep their discovered answer as a rule of thumb. That's fine, until they create a different product, have a different team, or encounter a different situation. Then their rule of thumb doesn't work anymore. When you're looking for a standard answer, consider whether there really is One Right Answer. You may need to analyze the problem before you can give an answer. It all depends-and what it really depends on is the analysis you perform of the tradeoffs. ======================================================================== Call for Participation **This call for participation and relevant proposal forms are available at http://www.espi.co.uk. European SEPG 2000: A New Commitment to Process Improvement 5-8 June 2000 Grand Hotel Krasnapolsky, AMSTERDAM The European SEPGTM conference, now in its fifth year, is the annual gathering of software process improvement professionals in Europe. Having started from modest roots in 1996, the event has earned tremendous support and respect for its high quality technical programme and ever-increasing audience. The European SEPG focuses on real-world experiences of organisations implementing software process improvement. It provides an in-depth overview of the approach for those contemplating a new initiative or just starting out, and practical guidance for those already on the process improvement path. This year, we will build on feedback from delegates and presenters at previous events and reflect the growing process maturity of software organisations within Europe. The event will cater equally for those with little knowledge or experience of software process improvement, right through to high maturity practitioners who want to move their organisations still further upwards in their improvement efforts. Deadline for proposals: Friday, 14th January 2000 PROPOSALS We are seeking proposals for paper presentations, tutorials, and panel discussions. The conference will reflect the current state of practice in software process improvement, from within Europe and beyond. We are particularly interested in receiving proposals from individuals who can demonstrate personal experience, covering techniques, approaches, problems and solutions in the implementation of software process improvement. Proposals covering productivity gains in software development as a result of process improvement, are also welcome. Any submissions directly relevant to software process improvement will be considered , but the following topics are of special interest: Key Process Areas level 2 (requirements management, project management, subcontract management, quality assurance, configuration management); level 3 (organisational process focus and definition, training, integrated software management, product engineering, intergroup coordination, peer reviews); level 4 (quantitative process management, software quality management); level 5 (defect prevention, technology change management, process change management). Practical Issues in SPI Managing SPI (SPI project and programme management, risk management etc); Organising SPI (SEPGs, process improvement teams etc); the human side of change (motivation, resistance, total involvement and commitment); communication as a critical success factor for SPI (mechanisms, methods, messages); The training imperative; managing improvement risk; The improvement process (IDEAL and other models); small-scale SPI (improvement by small increments, improvement in small organisations); SPI in a multi-site context; Integrating SPI with other improvements (in software methods and tools, hardware, systems engineering, workforce capability etc). Software Procurement Managing subcontractors (requirements management, contract management, outsourcing management, risk management); suppliers (make/buy evaluation, supplier selection, supplier capability evaluation, supplier relationships). Measurement What metrics? (product and process metrics, key performance/improvement indicators, interim profiles, mini/light assessments, quality system reviews, measurement as a common feature in all KPAs, statistical process control); the measurement programme (designing, implementing and maintaining it, establishing and managing the metrics database); sizing and estimating. Business Context Senior executive commitment (how we get it, how they demonstrate it); SPI and the bottom line (business goals, value added, return on investment); inter-company benchmarking; certification and litigation issues. Special Issues Management issues (programme management, product and product-line management); technical issues (systematic reuse, corporate intranets for SPI); model integration (software, systems engineering, IPD, people, acquisition etc). PRESENTATIONS Presentation sessions are for 40 minutes which includes time for questions and answers. In particular, we are interested in papers which present practical tools (forms, checklists, procedures, etc.), empirical data (metrics) and actual results of applying software process improvement techniques. Accepted papers will be included in the conference proceedings. Presentation proposals should include: - 1-2 page abstract of the presentation (N.B. abstracts of less than 1 page cannot be reviewed) - 80 word summary - focus of the presentation, i.e. which KPA or special topic heading - audience level (getting started, intermediate, high maturity) - 100 -150 word profile of each presenter - completed Proposal Form (available from ESPI web site; see below) TUTORIALS Half day tutorial proposals should include: - 1-2 page abstract, containing an overview of the tutorial - 80 word summary under the heading 'Learning objectives' - 20 words under the heading 'who should attend' - audience level (getting started, intermediate, high maturity) - category of tutorial (KPA, Practical issues, Software procurement, Measurement, Business context, Special issues) - 100 - 150 word profile of the presenter (and co-presenter if applicable) - completed Proposal Form (available from ESPI web site; see below) PANELS Panel proposals should include: - 1-2 page abstract - 150 word summary - audience level (getting started, intermediate, high maturity) - list of proposed participants, organisations and job titles together with their status (confirmed, interested, not yet contacted) - contingency plans - completed Proposal Form (available from ESPI web site; see below) BIRDS-OF-A-FEATHER SESSIONS Birds-of-a-Feather sessions take place during the early evening at the European SEPG, and are available on a first-come, first-served basis to any delegate at the event. These sessions may involve formal presentations, round-table discussions or an open forum with no specific agenda. To apply for a session, submit your proposal (title, short description and format) as early as possible. EXHIBITION The European SEPG will again host an exhibition of organisations providing products and services to support software process improvement. Details will shortly be announced on the ESPI Foundation web site: www.espi.co.uk. VOLUNTEERS Volunteers are needed to assist with the management of the event, in the role of room monitors, session moderators, and other tasks within the event. Volunteers should offer two full days' effort, and in return we will waive the registration fee for the other two days. Unfortunately we will not be able to refund travel and accommodation expenses. SUBMISSION GUIDELINES Format Proposals should be sent in Word or Text format, by email or post (on disk). Please ensure that word counts are adhered to; they will be enforced by editing if necessary. (N.B. edited versions may not be verified with the authors before publishing, so it is much preferable that your proposal is precise!) The Proposal Form may be submitted in advance of your abstract, to notify us of your intention. One form must be completed for each presentation, tutorial or panel submitted. A copy of the relevant form (presentation, tutorial, panel) can be downloaded from the ESPI Foundation web site, at www.espi.co.uk. Additional requirements If your proposal is accepted onto the programme, we will require the following additional materials to be submitted by the due dates: - photograph of each presenter 24th March - logo for each company represented 24th March - written paper if available 14th April - final copy of Powerpoint presentation slides 14th April Contact Proposals and enquiries should be addressed to: European SEPG Conference Co-ordinator Email: esepgproposals@espi.co.uk Address: ESPI Foundation 1 North House Milton Keynes MK1 1SW United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0) 1908 630500 Fax: +44 (0) 1908 630700 Web: http://www.espi.co.uk ======================================================================== From: Blazedell@aol.com This Month in the "new" WorldSafety News: 1) Welcome and reintroduction to the WorldSafety.com news 2) Hot H.S.E. & Fire Protection Sites of the Month 3) Industry Event of the Month 4) WorldSafety.com Site Update 5) Newsletter Subscription Information 1) Welcome back to the WorldSafety.com news. My apologies for the absence of this newsletter over the past few months - I have decided to launch a new content strategy that will help save you time and provide value.. This new service will bring you a brief monthly roundup of the hottest websites, resources and events taking place online for health, safety, environmental and fire protection professionals. If things go well, I will try to increase this to a brief biweekly update. Keep in mind that this list now consists of 34,000 HSE and Fire protection related individuals that have signed up via the WorldSafety.com resource center over the past 4 years -if you no longer wish to see this information, please view the subscription information at the bottom of this email - (I've recently weeded out 28,000 non- working email addresses and 35 remove requests..) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2) Sites to See in November: (This is a new feature that I am modeling after the famous Yahoo email bulletin. I have been surfing related sites for over 6 years on a full time basis and hope to bring you sites of interest and value every month.) The sites below offer a superb blend of free information and time saving features -I highly recommend them! a) http://www.osha-slc.gov/rkeep_toc/rkeep_toc_by_sect.html The OSHA Record keeping guidelines section b) http://web.mit.edu/afs/athena.mit.edu/org/s/safety/apg/index.html MIT safety Office: Model web based safety communication program c) http://www.ehs.iastate.edu/gensafe.htm Iowa Sate Safety Pages: great blend of material here d) http://www.agc.org/Safety_Info/tbtalk.asp The Association of General Contractors: safety section, offers great resources e) http://www.eig.com/smodex.htm Eagle Insurance: Large selection of free safety meeting materials f) http://www.pacificemployers.com/tool.htm Pacific Employers: Many free forms and safety topics g) http://www.fire-ems.net/ Fire-Ems Net: Endless fire protection communities and resources h) http://www.worldsafety.com/email_communities.htm Peer based email communities: links to the largest industry peer networks in the world including the number #1 Vermont SafetyList and also the WorldSafety.com SafetyJobs and SafetyForum groups. i) http://www.jobsearchengine.com For those searching, a pretty neat career tool that pulls from multiple job posting sites. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - and finally.......The WorldSafety.com - Cool Site Of the Month: A new environmental website run by Time Online called Heroes for the Planet that profiles people doing extraordinary things to protect and preserve the environment. They are looking for nominations for heroes, so if you know of anyone in your organization or elsewhere who deserves recognition, please visit them and let them know. The site is also a good resource for news and information on conservation. http://www.pathfinder.com/time/reports/environment/heroes/0,2967,0,00.html - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ***If you would like to suggest a site of value, please submit it via: http://www.mindharbor.com/DBWebLink/DBLink/submitlink.asp I'll pick sites of "value" on a random basis from this list or via my own favorites every month -watch for many more outstanding resources!! - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3) Industry Event of the Month: NOSHCON 2000 : 24 - 26 May 2000, Sun City "BEYOND 2000 - A NEW PERSPECTIVE ON VALUE ADDED SAFETY, HEALTH & ENVIRONMENTAL RISK MANAGEMENT FOR SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS EXCELLENCE" NOSHCON 2000 is one of the largest occupational Safety, Health and Environmental conferences in the world, organised by NOSA, focusing on the challenges and opportunities facing SHE (Safety, Health & Environment) professionals in the global marketplace of the 21st Century. This conference attracts around 2300 delegates over the 3 day period. Respected speakers from all over the world (approx. 50 - 60 over the 3 day period) covering subject areas which include Occupational Hygiene, Occupational Safety, Industrial Environmental Management, Auditing and a wide range of SHE-related Legal, Human Resources and Information Technology issues. For further information, contact Marina Nel or Jacqui Price on +27 12 3217736 or fax: 27 12 3232436 or visit our website : www.nosa.co.za or via e-mail : worksafe@nosa.co.za. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Please post your events at: http://www.calendars.net:8194/safety I will randomly select one a month to highlight in the news.. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 4) WorldSafety.com Website Update: ***If you haven't seen our new look and features please stop by!! I am updating things daily and adding many new features. *** We now have a free email service similar to hotmail -you can have your very own secure "@WorldSafety.com" Internet based email and check it from anywhere in the world! -Completely free -please show your support of WorldSafety.com and join today! *** I have launched a free resource site with Vallen and Medtronic Physio-control discussing automatic emergency defibrillation technology. Please check out this new technology that offers help in sudden cardiac arrest cases. These result in as many as 1,000 deaths a day in the USA. You can find real life stories, links and resources that may help educate and assist you in researching public access defibrillation. Please stop by: http://www.WorldSafety.com/aed for more information. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 5) Subscription Information I make every effort to keep all members addresses current and private. If you wish to be removed from this free industry news service, please follow the send in an email to the below point of contact. If you know of someone that may have interest -Please forward this along to them and ask them to view the subscribe information and/or stop by the website and leave their email address in the subscribe area.. ***To Subscribe send email to: WorldSafetyNews-subscribe@onelist.com ***To Unsubscribe send email to: WorldSafetyNews-unsubscribe@onelist.com - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To contact me directly: Blazedell@worldsafety.com - I respond to email faster than phone but feel free to leave me a voice mail at 800-364-1111 X596 Thanks so much for your support and until next time..... Best and Safest Regards, Mike Blazedell -Founder http://www.WorldSafety.com/ Blazedell@WorldSafety.com 800-364-1111 X596 This list is sponsered by NASA GSFC.Announcements of meetings and courses are welcome. Selling and atvertising is not allowed on this government listserver.IE,not sales prices or costs allowed, use e-mail address for that please. ======================================================================== Seminar at the National Research Council of Canada OBJECT-ORIENTED SOFTWARE QUALITY February 7th, 2000, Ottawa This seminar is a continuation of NRC's successful series on software engineering. The focus is on measuring and improving the quality of object-oriented software. Leading experts will be talking on the state- of-the-practice, as well as presenting the state-of-the-art. Speakers include: Robert Binder on OO testing, Chris Kemerer on the adoption of OO technology, Dave Card on quantitative management of the design process, Khaled El Emam on OO metrics, Taghi Khoshgoftaar on quality modeling and prediction, Saida Benlarbi on framework tailoring, and Rama Munikoti on business value. The seminar is targeted at both practitioners currently implementing object-oriented techniques, or those who are planning to, as well as researchers in the object-oriented area. Further information on the seminar and on registration can be found at: http://wwwsel.iit.nrc.ca/ooseminar ======================================================================== A new book has come out that might be of interest to you. Title: CMM IN PRACTICE: Processes for executing software projects at Infosys Author: Pankaj Jalote Publisher: Addison Wesley (SEI Series in Software Engineering) The book describes an actual implementation of the CMM framework (up to level 4) and is based on my experience in implementing the CMM in a large software organization. For more info visit www.awl.com/cseng/titles/0-201-61626-2/ or www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0201616262/ref=rm_item I hope you will find the book useful in your work. Best, Pankaj ======================================================================== C A L L for P A P E R S The Second International Symposium on Constructing Software Engineering Tools (CoSET'2000) 5th June 2000 A one day workshop co-located with the International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE'2000) Limerick, Ireland, 4-11 June 2000 Conference: http://www.ul.ie/~icse2000/ Symposium: http://www.itacs.uow.edu.au/~jon/coset2k/ Automated tools play an important role in the promotion and adoption of software engineering methods and processes, both within a particular organisation and within the software engineering community generally. The development of these tools is itself a significant software engineering task, requiring a considerable investment of time and resources. There are a large number of different kinds of automated software engineering tool, variously known as Computer Aided Software Engineering (CASE), Computer Aided Method Engineering (CAME), Integrated Project Support Environments (IPSE), Software Engineering Environments (SEE), and meta-CASE tools. Although these tools differ in the particular methods, activities, and phases of the software development cycle to which they are applied, constructors of these tools often face similar implementation issues. Decisions about host computing platform, implementation language, conformance with standards and reference models, choice of repository, integration and interoperability mechanisms, and user interface style have to be made. The different strategies adopted by tool constructors when solving these tool development problems is the theme of this symposium. The symposium will be based around the participants' experience reports of constructing their software engineering tools. The purpose of the symposium is to bring together an international audience of researchers and practitioners with similar interests and experience, to exchange ideas, and to learn about different technologies and techniques for software engineering tool development. The symposium will focus principally on practical software engineering issues encountered by tool developers. The symposium complements the themes and aims of the co-located ICSE conference, and it will be of interest to many practicing software engineers. The inaugural CoSET symposium was held at ICSE'99 in Los Angeles, May 1999. CoSET'2000 will continue the investigation of themes and concerns explored in CoSET'99, including: * specification and generation techniques; * interchange formats and tool API's; * forward and re-/reverse- engineering tools; * tool evaluation, usability issues, and cognitive support; * tools for tool builders; * languages, frameworks, and component-based development. We are requesting two categories of symposium submission: * short papers, of typically 2000-4000 words; * full papers, of 5000-6000 words plus figures/tables. Papers in both categories of submission will be fully refereed by the programme committee. The accepted short and full papers will be published in the Symposium Proceedings. We request that authors format their submissions according to the instructions that can be found on the CoSET'2000 web page. Submissions should be sent to the Symposium Chair as hard copy, or electronically as PDF, postscript, or RTF files. The symposium organisers will select the most promising full papers for submission to IEEE Software for possible publication after a further process of peer review. Important dates are: Submission of papers 1 February 2000 Notification of accept/reject 15 March 2000 Camera ready copy due 17 April 2000 Symposium 5 June 2000 For more information contact: Dr Jonathan Gray (CoSET'2000 Chair), jSchool of I.T. & Computer Science University of Wollongong NSW 2522, AUSTRALIA Tel: +612 4221 3606, Fax: +612 4221 4170 E-mail: coset2000@cs.uow.edu.au ======================================================================== The 14th Brazilian Symposium on Software Engineering - SBES'2000 Joao Pessoa - Paraiba - Brazil Hotel Tambau 4-6 October, 2000 http://www.gi.cefetpb.br/sbes2000 CALL FOR PAPERS The Brazilian Symposium on Software Engineering (Simposio Brasileiro de Engenharia de Software - SBES, in Portuguese) is an event which integrates the academic, industrial and commercial communities. SBES is the official event of the Brazilian Computer Society (Sociedade Brasileira de Computacao - SBC) in this field and includes presentation of technical papers, invited speakers and tutorials. Previous editions of the SBES were highlighted by the presentation of high quality technical papers and the participation of important international researchers in Software Engineering. *** ACTIVITIES The symposium program includes the presentation of technical papers, invited talks, courses and demonstration of software tools. A preliminary list of satellite events (with their general chair) is shown below: - 6th Workshop of Thesis on Software Engineering (WTES) Jose Carlos Maldonado, ICMSC-USP-SC/BR - 7th Workshop on Software Quality (WQS) Fernanda Campos, UFJF/BR - 3rd Workshop on Formal Methods Roberto Bigonha, UFMG/BR - Tools Session Antonio Prado, UFSCar/BR - Tutorials Damires Fernandes, CEFET-PB/BR The Call for Papers for each satellite event will be published independently by the relevant organization committee. *** TOPICS OF INTEREST - Industrial applications of Software Engineering - Social aspects of Software Engineering - Component-based Software Engineering - Requirements Engineering - Theoretical Foundations of Software Engineering: Formal specification, refinement, software validation and verification - Methods, Techniques, Languages and Tools for Software Engineering - Software Maintenance - Software Process Modeling and Enaction - Software Engineering for the World Wide Web - Software Quality - Software Reengineering - Software Reuse - Development of CSCW tools *** INVITED SPEAKERS Prof. Cliff Jones, University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK Prof. Shari Pfleeger, University of Maryland, USA *** INSTRUCTIONS FOR AUTHORS Although submissions in Portuguese and in Spanish will be considered for evaluation, the recommended submission language is English; only papers in English will entitle to the BEST PAPER AWARD (see below). Papers submitted to SBES'2000 should not be under evaluation for publication elsewhere. We strongly encourage the submission of papers by e-mail. Before submitting a paper (see IMPORTANT DATES below), authors must send (in ASCII format) an e-mail message to sbes2000@di.ufpe.br containing the following information about the paper: title, abstract, authors' names and addresses, and the related theme (from the TOPICS OF INTEREST listed above). The paper itself should NOT have any identification of the authors. A separate cover page should be added to the original paper providing authors' identification. The submitted papers will be evaluated based on originality, relevance, technical quality, result validation, and presentation. Theoretical papers should emphasize their contribution to the practice of Software Engineering. Papers about practical experiments should describe the method used and interpret their qualitative and quantitative results. Each submission should stress its importance and contribution to Software Engineering, presenting a comparison with related work. The selected papers will be presented during the symposium and published at the SBES proceedings. BEST PAPER AWARD This award will be given to the best paper as selected by the steering committee. Only papers originally submitted in English will be considered by the committee for the award. PAPER FORMAT Papers must be no longer than 16 A4 pages (single column), including all the figures and references. Font: Tms Roman 12 pt (or similar) Margins: Up: 3.5 cm Down: 2 cm Left and Right: 2.5 cm Number of copies (for non-electronic submissions): original plus four copies. All electronic submissions must be either in ghostview-readable PostScript or Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) formats. *** STEERING COMMITTEE Augusto Sampaio, LMF-DI-UFPE/BR (Program Comittee Chair) Claudia Werner, COPPE-UFRJ/BR Daltro Nunes, UFRGS/BR Itana Gimenes, UEM-PR/BR Marcos Borges, NCE-UFRJ/BR *** ORGANISATION Centro Federal de Educacao Tecnologica da Paraiba (CEFET-PB) Gerencia de Informatica (http://www.gi.cefetpb.br) Adriano Augusto de Souza (General Chair) Email: sbes2000@gi.cefetpb.br *** ADDRESS FOR SUBMISSION OF PAPERS AND ABSTRACTS sbes2000@di.ufpe.br or Prof. Augusto Sampaio Universidade Federal de Pernambuco - UFPE Departamento de Informatica Caixa Postal 7851 50740-540 Cidade Universitaria Recife - PE - Brazil *** IMPORTANT DATES Submission of abstracts: 24 April 2000 Paper submission: 2 May 2000 Authors notification: 5 July 2000 Camera ready copy: 31 July 2000 ======================================================================== S e a s o n s ' s G r e e t i n g s We here at at SR and SR/Institute would like to wish everybody: A H a p p y a n d J o y o u s H o l i d a y S e a s o n and A P e a c e f u l a n d H a p p y N e w Y e a r ! ======================================================================== ------------>>> TTN SUBMITTAL POLICY <<<------------ ======================================================================== The TTN Online Edition is E-mailed around the 15th of each month to subscribers worldwide. 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