Part I Variability Management.- Software Product Line Engineering.- Variability Modeling.- Variability Scope.- Binding Time and Evolution.- Variability Implementation.- Variability Realization Techniques and Product Derivation.- Visualizing Software Variability.- Variability in the Software Product Line Lifecycle.- Part II Research and Commercial Tools.- COVAMOF.- PLUM - Product Line Unified Modeller Tool.- FaMa.- pure::variants.- Part III Industry Experiences.- Philips Healthcare Compositional Diversity Case.- Variability in Power Plan Control Software.- Second Generation Product Line Engineering - A Case Study at General Motors.- Part IV Emerging and Research Topics in Software Variability.- Dynamic Software Product Lines.- Variability in Autonomic Computing.- Variability in Web services.- Service-Oriented Product Lines.- Software Variability and Design decisions.- Variability and Aspect Orientation.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Rafael Capilla is a tenured assistant professor at the Rey Juan Carlos University of Madrid (Spain) where he heads the Software Architecture & Internet Technologies research group. Prior to that, he worked in the software industry as a software analyst and Unix and network system manager. His current research interest focuses on software architectures, product line engineering and software variability management, and Web service technologies.
Jan Bosch is professor of software engineering and director of the software research center at Chalmers University Technology in Gothenburg, Sweden. Earlier, he worked as Vice President Engineering Process at Intuit Inc where he also lead Intuit's Open Innovation efforts and headed the central mobile technologies team. Before Intuit, he was head of the Software and Application Technologies Laboratory at Nokia Research Center, Finland. Before joining Nokia, he headed the software engineering research group at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands, where he holds a professorship in software engineering.
Kyo Chul Kang is a professor at the Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH) in Korea. Before joining POSTECH, he worked at the University of Michigan, at Bell Communications Research and AT&T Bell Laboratories, and at the Software Engineering Institute (SEI), Carnegie Mellon University. His current research areas include software reuse and product line engineering, requirements engineering, and computer-aided software engineering.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.