CfP: First Workshop on Web 2.0 for Software Engineering (Web2SE) at ICSE 2010
CALL FOR PAPERS
Web2SE: First Workshop on Web 2.0 for Software Engineering at ICSE 2010
http://sites.google.com/site/web2se/
May 4, 2010
Cape Town, South Africa
Submission deadline: January 27, 2010
ABSTRACT
Social software is built around an "architecture of participation" where
user data is aggregated as a side-effect of using Web 2.0 applications.
Web 2.0 implies that processes and tools are socially open, and that
content can be used in several different contexts. Web 2.0 tools and
technologies support interactive information sharing, data
interoperability and user centered design. For instance, wikis, blogs,
tags and feeds help us organize, manage and categorize content in an
informal and collaborative way. One goal of this workshop is to
investigate how these technologies can improve software development
practices. Some of these technologies have made their way into
collaborative software development processes such as Agile and Scrum, and
in development platforms such as Rational Team Concert which draw their
inspiration from Web 2.0. These processes and environments are just
scratching the surface of what can be done by incorporating Web 2.0
approaches and technologies into collaborative software development. This
workshop aims to improve our understanding of how Web 2.0, manifested in
technologies such as mashups or dashboards, can change the culture of
collaborative software development.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
- Current use of Web 2.0 mechanisms by software developers
- Role of Web 2.0 technologies in software development
- Adaption of Web 2.0 tools by software developers
- Software development as a "socially open" process
- Using Web 2.0 tools to support informal communication in distributed teams
- Enhancements of development environments with regard to Web 2.0
- Tools that bring Web 2.0 into software development
- Mining Web 2.0 data from software repositories
- Informal processes in software engineering supported by Web 2.0
- Emergent Web 2.0 work practices in software development
WORKSHOP GOALS
- Summarize state-of-the-art research on the use of Web 2.0 technologies
such as wikis, facebook, blogs, and tags in software development
- Explore how Web 2.0 technologies in software development could be
further leveraged, in particular to support distributed and team-based
development
- Investigate to which extent the "socially open" attitude of Web 2.0
applies to software development.
- Explore how Web 2.0 technologies can be incorporated into software
engineering processes and methods
SUBMISSION AND PUBLICATION
Both research papers (max. 6 pages) and poster papers as well as position
papers (max. 2 pages) will be accepted. The final version of the accepted
papers will be published in the ICSE Companion and will also be made
available during the workshop. Papers must follow the ACM conference
format and must not exceed the page limits mentioned above, including
figures and references. All submissions must be in English. Papers must be
submitted electronically, in PDF format, using the submission website.
IMPORTANT DATES
Submissions: January 27, 2010
Author notification: February 17, 2010
Camera-ready copy: March 3, 2010
Workshop: May 4, 2010
WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS
Christoph Treude, University of Victoria, Canada, ctreude@uvic.ca
Margaret-Anne Storey, University of Victoria, Canada, mstorey@uvic.ca
Kate Ehrlich, IBM TJ Watson Research Center, Cambridge MA, USA,
katee@us.ibm.com
Arie van Deursen, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands,
arie.vandeursen@tudelft.nl
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Gina Venolia, Microsoft Research
Jean-Marie Favre, U. Joseph Fourier, Grenoble
Li-Te Cheng, IBM Watson Research Center
Thomas Zimmermann, Microsoft Research
Harald Gall, University of Zurich
Frank Maurer, University of Calgary
Markus Strohmaier, TU Graz
Andrew Begel, Microsoft Research
Uri Dekel, Carnegie Mellon University
Jorge Aranda, University of Toronto
Jonathan Sillito, University of Calgary
Michele Lanza, University of Lugano
Labels: call for papers, cfp, conf, conference, conferences, research

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