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Making Sense of the Bazaar: 1st Workshop on Open Source Software Engineering
Making Sense of the Bazaar: 1st Workshop on Open Source Software Engineering was held on May 15, 2001 as part of The 23rd International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE 2001).
The goal of the workshop was to bring together interested researchers and practitioners to discuss, and better understand, the perhaps unique dynamics which are involved in Open Source Software Engineering. There were 30 participants, representing universities, companies, research centers and government organizations in Canada, Ireland, Germany, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States. The workshop was organized by Joseph Feller, Brian Fitzgerald and Andre van der Hoek.
The following position papers appear in the workshop proceedings:
- Making Sense of the Bazaar (Introduction to the Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Open Source Software Engineering)
by Joseph Feller, Brian Fitzgerald (University College Cork, Ireland) and Andre van der Hoek (University of California Irvine, USA)
- Software Architectures and Open Source Software – Where can Research Leverage the Most?
by Budi Arief, Cristina Gacek, Tony Lawrie (Centre for Software Reliability,
Department of Computing Science, University of Newcastle)
- Configuration Management for Open Source Software
by Ulf Asklund (Department of Computer Science, Lund Institute of Technology) and Lars Bendix (Department of Computer Science, Aalborg University)
- Software Engineering Lessons from Open Source Projects
by Jai Asundi (Department of Engineering and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon University)
- Creating a Free, Dependable Software Engineering Environment for Building Java Applications
by Marcus Bittman, Robert Roos and Gregory M. Kapfhammer (Department of Computer Science, Allegheny College)
- Open Source Development: An Arthurian Legend
by Jonathon E. Cook (Department of Computer Science, New Mexico State University)
- The ramp-up challenge in open-source software projects
by Davor Cubranic (Department of Computer Science, University of British Columbia)
- Corporate Source: Applying Open Source Concepts to a Corporate Environment
by Jamie Dinkelacker and Pankaj K. Garg (Hewlett-Packard Laboratories, Palo Alto, CA)
- Software Engineering Research in the Bazaar
by Ahmed E. Hassan, Michael W. Godfrey, and Richard C. Holt (Software Architecture Group (SWAG), Department of Computer Science, University of Waterloo)
- Open Source Software: The Other Commercial Software
by Scott A. Hissam and Charles B. Weinstock (Software Engineering Institute, Carnegie Mellon University)
- Conceptual Sociological Model for Open Source Software
by Kouichi Kishida (SRA Key Technology Lab, Inc.)
- Reputation Layers for Open-Source Development
by Hassan Masum (Department of Computer Science, Carleton University)
- Taxonomy of Open Source Software Development
by Kumiyo Nakakoji (Graduate School of Information Science,
Nara Institute of Science and Technology, and SRA Key Technology Laboratory Inc.) and Yasuhiro Yamamoto (Graduate School of Information Science, Nara Institute of Science and Technology)
- Open Source Software Developments in XP Style
by Yoshiyuki Nishinaka (SRA Key Technology Laboratory, Inc.)
- Introducing a “Street Fair” Open Source Practice Within Project Based Software Engineering Courses
by Dan Port (University of Southern California) and Gail Kaiser (Columbia University)
- Software Development Practices in Open Software Development Communities: A Comparative Case Study
by Walt Scacchi (Institute for Software Research, University of California, Irvine)
- Leveraging Open-Source Communities To Improve the Quality and Performance of Open-Source Software
by Douglas C. Schmidt (University of California, Irvine) and Adam Porter (University of Maryland)
- Open Source Development: A suitable method to introduce a standardized communication protocol?
by Achim Spangler (Technical University Munich, Germany)
Friday, November 17, 2006
Author: Joseph Feller