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                    s  sssssss        rrrrr     rrrrr

         +===================================================+
         +======= Testing Techniques Newsletter (TTN) =======+
         +=======           ON-LINE EDITION           =======+
         +=======              June 1998              =======+
         +===================================================+

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 1998 by Software Research,
Inc.

========================================================================

INSIDE THIS ISSUE:

   o  Call for Participation, 2nd International Quality Week/Europe (9-
      13 November 1998, Brussels, Belgium)

   o  The Ultimate Y2K Defect

   o  SigADA Conference Announcement (November 1998, Washington, D.C.)

   o  The WebSite Quality Challenge, by E. Miller (Part 1 of 2)

   o  The Ph.D. Final Exam

   o  28th International Symposium on Fault-Tolerant Computing (June
      1998, Munich, Germany)

   o  Third International Congress in Quality and Reliability (March
      1999, Paris, France)

   o  TTN Submittal Policy

   o  TTN SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION

========================================================================

              C A L L   F O R   P A R T I C I P A T I O N

         2nd Annual International Software Quality Week/Europe

                           9-13 November 1998

                   Sheraton Hotel, Brussels, Belgium

          CONFERENCE THEME: EURO & Y2K: The Industrial Impact

QWE'98 is the second in the continuing series of International Software
Quality Week/Europe Conferences that focus on advances in software test
technology, quality control, risk management, software safety, and test
automation.  Software analysis methodologies, supported by advanced
automated software test methods, promise major advances in system
quality and reliability, assuring continued competitiveness.  QWE'98
papers are reviewed and selected by a distinguished International
Advisory Board.  The QWE'98 Conference is sponsored by Software
Research, Inc.

The mission of the QWE'98 Conference is to increase awareness of the
importance of Software Quality and the methods used to achieve it.  It
seeks to promote Software Quality by providing technological education
and opportunities for information and exchange of experience within the
software development and testing community.

ABOUT QWE'98's THEME: EURO & Y2K: The Industrial Impact

The QWE'98 theme "EURO and Y2K: The Industrial Impact" draws attention
to the implications of the EURO and Year 2000 (Y2K) conversion efforts
on the industry.  Many believe that the Year-2000 problem will bring
much-needed focus to all aspects of software quality, and may foster
very strong interest in software quality questions of all kinds in the
coming years.  Europe has a particular challenge by adding the EURO
Conversion effort to the already imposing Y2K problem.

QWE'98 OFFERS:

The QWE'98 program consists of four days of mini-tutorials, panels,
technical papers and workshops that focus on software test automation
and new technology. QWE'98 provides the Software Testing and QA/QC
community with:

*   Quality Assurance and Test involvement in the development process
*   Exchange of experience-based information among technologists
*   State-of-the-art information on software quality test methods
*   Analysis of effectiveness through case studies
*   Vendor Technical Presentations
*   Vendor Show & Exhibits

IMPORTANT DATES:

Abstracts and Proposals Due: 17 July 1998

Notification of Participation: 24 August 1998

Camera Ready Materials Due: 18 September 1998

FINAL PAPER LENGTH:  10 - 20 pages, including Slides and/or
Tranparencies.

QWE'98 is soliciting 45- and 90- minute presentations, half-day standard
seminar/tutorial proposals, 90- minute mini-tutorial proposals, or
proposals for participation in panel and "hot topic" discussions on any
area of testing and automation, including:

    Automated Inspection Methods
    CASE/CAST Technology
    Client-Server Computing
    Cost / Schedule Estimation
    Defect Tracking / Monitoring
    EURO Conversion Testing
    GUI Test Technology
    Integrated Environments
    ISO-9000
    Load Generation & Analysis
    Multi-Threaded Systems
    New and Novel Test Methods
    Object Oriented Testing
    Process Assessment / Improvement
    Productivity and Quality Issues
    Real-Time Software
    Real-World Experience
    Reliability Studies
    Risk Management
    Test Automation
    Test Data Generation
    Test Documentation Standards
    Test Management Automation
    Test Planning Methods
    Test Policies and Standards
    Web Testing & WebSite Quality
    Y2K Solutions

SUBMISSION INFORMATION:

Abstracts should be 1 - 2 pages long, with enough detail to give the
International Advisory Board an understanding of the final paper,
including a rough outline of its contents.  Indicate if your target
audience is:

o    Technical
o    Managerial
o    Application Oriented

Also, please indicate if the basis of your paper is:

o    Work Experience
o    Opinions/Perspectives
o    Academic Research

In addition, please include:

o   The paper title, complete mailing and e-mail address(es), and
    telephone and FAX number(s) of each author.
o   A list of keywords (or key phrases) describing the paper.
o   A brief biographical sketch of each author.
o   One photo.

You can complete your submission in a number of ways:

o   Print out the Speaker Data Sheet from the QWE'98 WebSite
    <http://www.soft.com/QualWeek/speakers.html> and fax it to
    SR/Institute [+1] (415) 550-3030.
o   Email your abstract and other information to qw@soft.com. The
    material should be either an ASCII file or a Word document.  Be sure
    to include all of your contact information.
o   FAX a hard copy of the abstract to SR/Institute [+1] (415) 550-3030.
    Be sure to include all of your contact information.
o   Mail your abstract (or send any other questions you may have) to:

    Ms. Rita Bral
    Software Research Institute
    901 Minnesota Street
    San Francisco, CA 94107 USA USA

For Exhibits and Vendor Registration for the QWE'98 Conference, E-mail
your request to the attention of the QWE'98 Event Manager at:
qw@soft.com or phone SR/Institute at [+1] (415) 550-3020, or FAX
SR/Institute at [+1] (415) 550-3030.  You should contact the QWE'98 team
as early as possible because exhibit space is strictly limited.

TWO-DAY VENDOR EXHIBIT

Products and services that support software test methodologies and
techniques will be displayed November 6 and 7 in the conference hotel.

This year's vendor showcase brings you the latest technology and tools.
You'll have the opportunity to:

*   Visit exhibitors representing today's most advanced solutions for
    your software process needs.  You can do all your product
    investigation at one time.

*   Heighten your industry knowledge.  Learn how you can effectively
    implement the proven techniques immediately.

*   Gain a competitive edge.  You can see live demonstrations of the
    products that will dominate the decade!

*   Vendor Presentation Track: Listen to selected vendors present their
    solutions.

*   Past QW exhibitors have included: AONIX, Aqueduct Software, AZOR,
    BDM, Bellcore, CenterLine Software, CEDITI, Compuware, Coopers &
    Lybrand, Direct Technology, Dynamic Software Technology, Eastern
    Systems, ErgoLight, E2S, Hall Kinion, IEEE, International Software
    Automation, KPMG Peat Marwick, Mercury Interactive, Metamata, Inc.,
    Microsoft, Odyssey Research Associates, Performance Awareness,
    Performance Software, Precision Software GmbH, Performance Research
    S.r.l., Qualit, Quality Checked Software, QA Systems International
    BV, Rational, Reliable Software Technologies, RSW Software, Segue
    Software, Silicon Valley Networks, Soffront Software, SoftBridge,
    Software Development Technology, Software Quality Engineering,
    Software Research, TakeFive Software, Technology Builders, Inc.,
    Teradyne, TechExcel, Vermont Creative Software, and John Wiley &
    Sons, and many more.

FOR EXHIBIT REGISTRATION AND INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:

Rita Bral at [+1] (415) 550-3020.  For prior Conference Programs and
information, please visit the web at

<http://www.soft.com/QualWeek>

========================================================================

                        THE ULTIMATE Y2K DEFECT

LONDON (June 4, 1998 8:26 p.m. EDT http://www.nando.net) - The oldest
time machine in the world destined to suffer from the millennium bug has
been found in a museum in Liverpool in northwest England, it was
reported Friday.

The 400-year-old instrument, which predicts the position of the planets,
will stop working at the dawn of the new millennium, unable to accept
the date of January 1, 2000, like many unadjusted computers around the
world, museum curators said.

The equatorium, built by an unknown craftsman in 1600, predicts the
position of the Sun, Moon, other planets and even eclipses through a
system of rotating discs and arms.  But the last date inscribed was
1999.

"It must have seemed like an eternity at the time," said curator Martin
Suggett.

Special Thanks to:

John Favaro,
Intecs Sistemi S.p.A,
Via Gereschi 32-34,
56127 Pisa - Italy:
Tel. +39 50 545 234 (direct),
favaro@pisa.intecs.it

========================================================================

             SIGAda '98 (formerly Tri-Ada): Ada in Context

               ACM SIGAda Annual International Conference

                          OMNI SHOREHAM HOTEL
                WASHINGTON, DC, USA, NOVEMBER 8-12, 1998

                        SPONSORED BY ACM SIGADA,
          IN COOPERATION WITH: SIGAPP, SIGBIO, SIGCAS, SIGCSE,
     SIGPLAN, SIGSOFT, DC SIGADA, BALTIMORE SIGADA, and ADA-EUROPE.

                 <http://www.acm.org/sigada/conf/sa98>

The ACM Special Interest Group on Ada (SIGAda) is dedicated to the
technical, business and educational issues related to the Ada
programming language. SIGAda '98, the successor to the annual Tri-Ada
exposition, will be this year's largest Ada-focused conference and is
being organized to attract participants from all segments of the
software engineering community. The SIGAda '98 conference proceedings
will be published as an issue of Ada Letters.

This year we are hoping to increase significantly the participation of
educators and students in the conference, both as authors and conference
registrants.

Ada features a proven track record in large-scale system development and
full support for object orientation, and facilitates writing portable
source programs. Ada's support for sound software engineering is
bringing the language increased attention in computing education and
across a broad range of application areas in government and industry.
Ada's unique ability to interface with software written in other
languages makes it a viable candidate for developing systems in a
multi-language environment. Current Ada projects span a spectrum that
encompasses finance, the Internet, and the Java Virtual Machine,
complementing the language's traditional context of hard real-time,
embedded systems in defense, space, industrial process control, medical
applications, commercial aviation, and ground transportation.

The Conference Theme

We are soliciting conference contributions on the theme "Ada in
Context", pertinent to Ada or of general interest to the Ada community,
from authors inside and outside this community, in industry, government,
research, and education. Topics may include, but are not limited to, Ada
in the context of

  * the Internet, the Web, and the National Information Infrastructure
  * safety-critical and high-integrity applications
  * multilanguage programming (e.g., Ada and Java or C++ in
    collaboration)
  * defense and non-defense applications
  * object technology
  * undergraduate, graduate, and secondary-school computing education
  * pure and applied research
  * software engineering practice
  * the spectrum of programming languages and historical trends
  * reengineering and maintenance of legacy systems
  * making reuse real
  * hybrid technology and COTS systems
  * process improvement and the Capability Maturity Model
  * software quality management
  * the tension between better/cheaper/faster and reality
  * the tradeoff between short-term gains and long-term quality

EXPERIENCE REPORTS

Experience reports present timely results on the success or failure of
the application of Ada in real-world projects. Such reports will be
selected on the basis of the interest of the experience presented to the
community of Ada practitioners. You are invited to submit a 1-2 page
description of the project and the key points of interest of project
experiences. Descriptions may be published in the final program or
proceedings, but a paper will not be required.

Conference Grants for Educators

As in past years, SIGAda is offering grants to educators to attend the
conference. Grants cover the registration and tutorial fees; travel
funds are not available. More details on the grant program are available
at:

        <http://www.acm.org/sigada/conf/sa98/grants.html>

Conference Officers

  * Ed Seidewitz, General Co-Chair
    DHR Technologies (seidewitz@acm.org)
  * Bill Thomas, General Co-Chair
    MITRE (bthomas@mitre.org)
  * Michael Feldman, Program Chair
    The George Washington University (mfeldman@seas.gwu.edu)
  * Ben Brosgol, Exhibits Chair,
    Aonix (brosgol@aonix.com)
  * Currie Colket, SIGAda Vice Chair for Meetings and Conferences
    (colket@acm.org)
  * David Cook, Tutorial Chair
    C.S. Draper Laboratory (cookd@software.hill.af.mil)
  * David Harrison, Publicity Chair
    Harris Technical Services Corp. (dharrison@acm.org)
  * Hal Hart, Conference Treasurer
    TRW (hal.hart@acm.org)
  * Alok Srivastava, Workshops Chair
    TRW (alok.srivastava@trw.com)

Program Committee will include

  * Elizabeth Adams, Richard Stockton College
  * Ted Baker, Florida State University
  * Brad Balfour, Objective Interface Systems
  * Shan Barkataki, California State University, Northridge
  * John Beidler, University of Scranton
  * Jim Briggs, University of Portsmouth
  * Deborah Cerino, Rome Laboratory
  * Norman Cohen, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center
  * David Cook, C.S. Draper Laboratory
  * James Cross, Auburn University
  * Jerry van Dijk, Ordina Finance BV
  * Dennis Frailey, Raytheon and Southern Methodist University
  * Maretta Holden, Boeing
  * James Hopper, SAIC
  * Judy Kerner, Aerospace Corporation
  * Robert Leif, AdaMed
  * Karlotto Mangold, ATM Computer GmbH
  * John McCormick, University of Northern Iowa
  * Allen Parrish, University of Alabama
  * Jean-Pierre Rosen, Adalog
  * Erhard Ploedereder, University of Stuttgart
  * Frances van Scoy, West Virginia University
  * Edmond Schonberg, Ada Core Technologies and New York University
  * Jag Sodhi, U.S. Army
  * Alok Srivastava, TRW
  * Alfred Strohmeier, University of Lausanne
  * S. Tucker Taft, Intermetrics
  * Joyce L. Tokar, DDC-I
  * Debora Weber-Wulff, Technische Fachhochschule Berlin
  * David Wood, Aonix
  * Anna Yu, North Carolina A&T University

========================================================================

                     The WebSite Quality Challenge

                             Edward Miller

ABSTRACT

Because of its possible instant worldwide audience a WebSite's quality
and reliability are crucial.  The very special nature of the WWW and
WebSites pose unique software testing challenges.  Webmasters, WWW
applications developers, and WebSite quality assurance manages need
tools and methods that can match up to the new needs.  Mechanized
testing via special purpose WWW testing software offers the potential to
meet these challenges.

INTRODUCTION

WebSites are something entirely new in the world of software quality!

Within minutes of going live, a WWW application can have many thousands
more users than a conventional, non-WWW application.  The immediacy of
the WWW creates an immediate expectation of quality and rapid
application delivery, but the technical complexities of a WebSite and
variances in the browser make testing and quality control more
difficult, and in some ways, more subtle.  Automated testing of WebSites
is both an opportunity and a challenge.

DEFINING WEBSITE QUALITY & RELIABILITY

A WebSite is like any piece of software: no single quality measure
applies, and even multiple quality metrics may not apply.  Yet,
verifying user-critical impressions of "quality" and "reliability" take
on new importance.

Dimensions of Quality.

There are many dimensions of quality, and each measure will pertain to a
particular WebSite in varying degrees.

Here are some of them:

o   TIME:

    WebSites change often and rapidly?

    How much has a WebSite changed since the last upgrade?

    How do you highlight the parts that have changed?

o   STRUCTURAL:

    How well do all of the parts of the WebSite hold together.

    Are all links inside and outside the WebSite working?

    Do all of the images work?

    Are there parts of the WebSite that are not connected?

o   CONTENT:

    Does the content of critical pages match what is supposed to be
    there?

    Do key phrases exist continually in highly-changeable pages?

    Do critical pages maintain quality content from version to
    version?

    What about dynamically generated HTML pages?

o   ACCURACY AND CONSISTENCY:

    Are today's copies of the pages downloaded the same as
    yesterday's?  Close enough?

    Is the data presented accurate enough?  How do you know?

o   RESPONSE ITEM AND LATENCY:

    Does the WebSite server respond to a browser request within
    certain parameters?

    In an E-commerce context, how is the end to end response time
    after a SUBMIT?

    Are there parts of a site that are so slow the user declines to
    continue working on it?

o   PERFORMANCE:

    Is the Browser-Web-WebSite-Web-Browser connection quick enough?

    How does the performance vary by time of day, by load and usage?

    Is performance adequate for E-commerce applications?

    Taking 10 minutes to respond to an E-commerce purchase is
    clearly not acceptable!
         Impact of Quality.

Quality is in the mind of the user.  A poor-quality WebSite, one with
many broken pages and faulty images, with Cgi-Bin error messages, etc.
may cost in poor customer relations, lost corporate image, and even in
lost sales revenue.  Very complex WebSites can sometimes overload the
user.

The combination of WebSite complexity and low quality is potentially
lethal. Unhappy users will quickly depart for a different site! And they
won't leave with any good impressions.

WEBSITE ARCHITECTURE

A WebSite can be complex, and that complexity -- which is what provides
the power, of course -- can be an impediment in assuring WebSite
Quality.  Add in the possibilities of multiple authors, very-rapid
updates and changes, and the problem compounds.

Here are the major parts of WebSites as seen from a Quality perspective.

Browser.

The browser is the viewer of a WebSite and there are SO many different
browsers and browser options that a well-done WebSite is probably
designed to look good on as many browsers as possible.  This imposes a
kind of DE FACTO standard:

The WebSite must use only those constructs that work with the MAJORITY
of browsers.  But this still leaves room for a lot of creativity, and a
range of technical difficulties.

Display Technologies.

What you see in your browser is actually composed from many sources:

o   HTML.

    There are various versions of HTML supported, and the WebSite
    ought to be built in a version of HTML that is compatible.  And
    this should be checkable.

o   JAVA, JAVASCRIPT, ACTIVEX.

    Obviously JavaScript and Java applets will be part of any
    serious WebSite, so the quality process much be able to support
    these.  On the Windows side, ActiveX controls have to be handled
    as well.

o   CGI-BIN SCRIPTS.

    This is link from a user action (typically, in a FORM in HTML,
    but possibly also with Java) back to the application.  All of
    the types of Cgi-Bin Scripts need to be handled, and tests need
    to check "end to end" operation.  This kind of a "loop" check is
    crucial for E-commerce situations.

o   DATABASE ACCESS.

    In E-commerce applications either you are building data up or
    retrieving data from a database? How does that interaction
    perform in real world use?

    Some access to information from the database may be appropriate,
    depending on the application, but this is typically found by
    other means.

o   MULTI-MEDIA.

    What about streaming video, audio, online chats, and other forms
    of WebSite use?  How is quality assessed here? What are the
    validation mechanisms? How do you know if the presentation is
    right?

NAVIGATION.

Users move to and from pages, click on links, click on images
(thumbnails), etc.  Navigation in a WebSite often is complex and has to
be quick and error free.

OBJECT MODE.

The display you see changes dynamically; the only constants are the
"objects" that make up the display.  These aren't real objects in the OO
sense; but they have to be treated that way.  So, the quality test tools
have to be able to handle URL links, forms, tables, anchors, buttons of
all types in a "object like" manner so that validations are independent
of representation.

SERVER RESPONSE.

How fast the WebSite host responds influences whether a user moves on or
continues.  Obviously, InterNet loading affects this too, but this
factor is often outside the Webmaster's control.  Yet, if a WebSite
becomes very popular -- this can happen overnight! -- loading and tuning
are real issues.

INTERACTION & FEEDBACK.

For passive, content-only sites the only issue is availability, but for
a WebSite that interacts with the user, how fast and how reliability
that interaction is can be a big factor.

CONCURRENT USERS.

Do multiple users interact on a WebSite?  Can they get in each others'
way?  While WebSites often resemble client/server structures, with
multiple users at multiple locations a WebSite can be much different,
and much more complex, than complex applications.

                           (To Be Continued)

========================================================================

                          THE Ph.D. FINAL EXAM

Note: Anyone who has taken a Ph.D. Final Exam will surely remember these
very standard kinds of questions.

INSTRUCTIONS:

      Read each question carefully.  Answer all questions.  Time limit:
      4 hours.  Begin immediately.

HISTORY:

      Describe the history of the papacy from its origins to the present
      day,concentrating especially, but not exclusively, on its social,
      political, economic, religious, and philosophica impact on Europe,
      Asia, America, and Africa.  Be brief, concise, and specific.

MEDICINE:

      You have been provided with a razor blade, a piece of gauze and a
      bottle of scotch. Remove your appendix.  Do not suture until your
      work has been inspected.  You have fifteen minutes.

PUBLIC SPEAKING:

      2500 riot-crazed aborigines are storming the classroom.  Calm
      them.  You may use any ancient language except Latin or Greek.

BIOLOGY:

      Create life.  Estimate the differences in subsequent human culture
      if this form of life had developed 500 million years earlier, with
      special attention to it probable effect on the English
      parliamentary system.  Prove your thesis.

MUSIC:

      Write a piano concerto.  Orchestrate and perform it with a flute
      and drum.  You will find a piano under your seat.

PSYCHOLOGY:

      Based on your knowledge of their works, evaluate the emotional
      stability, degree of adjustment, and repressed  frustrations of
      each of the following: Alexander of Aphrodisias, Rameses II,
      Gregory of Nicia, Hammurabi.  Support your evaluation with
      quotations from each man's work, making appropriate references. It
      is not necessary to translate.

SOCIOLOGY:

      Estimate the sociological problems which might accompany the end
      of the world. Construct an experiment to test your theory.

ENGINEERING:

      The disassembled parts of a high-powered rifle have been placed on
      your desk.  You will also find an instruction manual, printed in
      Swahili.  In 10 minutes a hungry Bengal tiger will be admitted to
      the room.  Take whatever action you feel appropriate.  Be prepared
      to justify your decision.

ECONOMICS:

      Develop a realistic plan for refinancing the national debt.  Trace
      the possible effects of your plan in the following areas: Cubism,
      the Donatist controversy, the wave theory of light. Outline a
      method from all possible points of view, as demonstrated in your
      answer to the last question.

POLITICAL SCIENCE:

      There is a red telephone on the desk beside you.  Start World War
      III.  Report at length on its socio-political effects, if any.

EPISTEMOLOGY:

      Take a position for or against truth.  Prove the validity of your
      stand.

PHYSICS:

      Explain the nature of matter.  Include in your answer an
      evaluation of the impact of the development of mathematics on
      science.

PHILOSOPHY:

      Sketch the development of human thought, estimate its
      significance.  Compare with the development of any other kind of
      thought.

GENERAL KNOWLEDGE:

      Describe in detail.  Be objective and specific.

========================================================================

                     28th International Symposium
                      on Fault-Tolerant Computing

                            Munich, Germany
                            23-25 June 1998

We invite you to the 28th International Symposium on Fault-Tolerant
Computing, the premier conference in dependabilty, sponsored by the IEEE
Computer Society.  The conference runs June 23-25, 98 in Munich, Germany
and is preceded by a workshop on dependability in Automotive systems.
This year, FTCS also introduces a new mechanism called FastAbstracts - a
two pager that reports current work, with a short talk.  Highlights are:

> Kickoff:
   *  Dependability trends and Issues for the Information Society Head
   Software Technology ESPRIT Program
   *  Vision on High Availability - Panel by the Industrial Council with
   CTO/VP representation from major IT companies
> 47 refereed papers, including 12 Practical Experience Reports
> 48 FastAbstracts - available on the web
> Panel on Cyber Threats
> Panel on Integrated Dependable Systems
> Three Tutorials:
   (1) Object Orientation and Fault-Tolerant Systems
   (2) Paranoid Programming: Techniques for Robust Software
   (3) Highly Reliable SDH/ATM Networks
> An associated workshop: Dependability of Automotive Systems

Our Website contains over 200 pages of information about FTCS, lists of
papers from past years, and the complete FastAbstracts online.  Check it
out at:  <http://www.chillarege.com/ftcs>.

Contacts:
Ernst Schmitter, General Chair
Jean Arlat, Ram Chillarege, Program Co-chairs

========================================================================

                            Call for Papers:
        Third International Congress in Quality and Reliability
                             Paris - France
                            March 25-26 1999
                  <http://www.paris.ensam.fr/rufereq>

Today, every company must take into account two essential values of our
society: Quality and Reliability .The congress takes place at the
forefront of progress, as it emphasizes on the latest results of
research, and their implementation in Quality and Reliability fields. It
is a prime opportunity for professionals and academics to share views.
This year, it also focuses on international participation.  To
contribute to the transfer of research toward industry, we ask you to
communicate with us, by  proposing an article to the scientific
committee on one of the following topics:

- Optimization and control of industrial processes - Quality management
and control, human factors - Systems reliability (product, software...)
- Quality, health and safety, and environment - Quality and Reliability:
Case studies

This congress is organized by:

L'Ecole Nationale Superieure de Arts et Metiers
Laboratoire Conception de Produits Nouveaux
Le Reseau Universitaire Francais pour l'Enseignement
        et la Recherche en Quality

========================================================================


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