Sonntag, 29. November 2009

[OOP 2010] Top International Speakers at the OOP

The OOP is very special because it offers you a whole range of practially-oriented international software experts easily accessible in Munich.

Robert Martin will hold a keynote and session on Thursday.

Philippe Kruchten holds a full-day tutorial on Software Architecture on Monday.

Michael Mah holds a full-day tutorial on measurement and estimation and a session in the management & metrics track on Tuesday reporting on data from agile projects.

Eoin Woods holds a night school on Monday on Agile Software Architecture and a session on Tuesday on the top 10 software architecture mistakes.

Gary McGraw holds a keynote on software security on Tuesday.

Diomidis Spinellis holds a talk on performance issues and a full-day tutorial open Open Source on Friday.

Kevlin Henney on Unit Testing in C++ and Modelling in the Age of Agility both on Thursday and in full-day tutorial with Frank Buschmann on "Beyond the Gang of Four" on Friday.

Jan Bosch holds the opening session of the Product-Line-Engineering (PLE) track on Wednesday and also has a talk in the Architekturtag on Thursday.

Nenad Medvidovic has two presentations, one in PLE-Track on a framework for modeling product lines and the other (on non-functional properties) in the architecture track.

Eric Evans on Domain-Driven Design in 2 half-day workshops (morning basic, afternoon strategy) on Friday.

Gregor Hohpe has a presentation in the architecture track on Distributed Computing the Google Way and one in the SOA track on Coupling, Messaging, and Conversations.

Don't miss taking advantage of this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to have these experts here in Germany!

Frances Paulisch

Sonntag, 11. Oktober 2009

[OOP 2010] Software Reuse and Product Line Engineering

Quote of the Day:
"Software and cathedrals are much the same –
first we build them, then we pray."

Samuel T. Redwine

It is clear that it is essential to have a solid foundation when building a complex software-based system and this is particularly true when using this foundation as the common basis of a set of products or systems.
But the benefits in terms of reduced effort, reduced time-to-market and increased quality are high -- if one is able to do it right. And that is what you can learn at the OOP.

At the OOP we have a 2-day track, organized and moderated by Christa Schwanninger, on Product Line Engineering (PLE) headed by an opening track-keynote by Jan Bosch on Software Product Lines. The second day of the track focusses on the modelling aspects and includes presentations by Markus Völter, Peter Manhart (Daimler), and Neno Medvidovic, a software architecture specialist from the University of Southern California. In the night school on Wednesday night we offer a PLE-Tutorial by Prof. Klaus Schmid. In this track we address many aspects of PLE including the technology, the business case, concrete examples, and future directions of this important topic area.

Sonntag, 27. September 2009

[OOP 2010] Welcome to OOP 2010 TechChair Blog

The OOP 2010 conference program is now online.

The conference motto is "Productivity: People, Process, and Technology" and we will show how many of the topics this conference addresses relate to increased productivity. The OOP also has many sessions on current topics like dynamic languages, cloud computing, and multicore.

This year we have a particularly interesting set of international speakers on the program. Stay tuned for more details.

Frances Paulisch
Technical Chair of the OOP software engineering and management conference

Sonntag, 1. Februar 2009

[OOP 2009] Teamwork Prevails

TEAM: -- Together Everyone Achieves More

The pressure that built up before the OOP is finally gone and I am looking forward to the next one. We took some risks with different formats of presentations and also extending the conference into the area of "soft skills", but (judging by the feedback) both of those were well accepted.

I really appreciate the teamwork-atmosphere of the OOP. Not only of the speakers and the SIGS-DATACOM team but also of the attendees. There is such an open and trustful atmosphere at the OOP -- it is a real pleasure to be a part of it and feel comfortable enough to try new ideas there.

In particular, I hope the participants benefitted from the "soft skills" topics so that they learned some techniques how to convince their colleagues and management to try new ("hard skills") technology ideas.

Best regards,
Frances Paulisch