Call for action: Software Engineering Method and Theory

Una nueva iniciativa para refundar la disciplina de la ingeniería del software:

From: Ivar Jacobson
Date: November 27, 2009 11:38:24 AM GMT+01:00
To: Ivar Jacobson
Subject: SEMAT – SOFTWARE ENGINEERING METHOD AND THEORY

Hello,

You may have heard that the three of us have been quietly planning a “revolution”. The goal is to re-found software engineering as a rigorous discipline. We recognize that the natural tendency in our field is to perturb systems minimally into approximate correctness, but this path cannot be sustained any longer if we are to support the computing industry and help it meet the demands of society. We need to restart on a solid basis, taking advantage of all that has been learned in software engineering theory and practice over the past five decades.

The effort is underway, It is now public at www.semat.org . On this site you will find the Call for Action statement and the people & companies that have agreed to become signatories.

CALL FOR ACTION STATEMENT: SOFTWARE ENGINEERING METHOD AND THEORY

  • Software engineering is gravely hampered today by immature practices. Specific problems include:
    • The prevalence of fads more typical of fashion industry than of an engineering discipline.
    • The lack of a sound, widely accepted theoretical basis.
    • The huge number of methods and method variants, with differences little understood and artificially magnified.
    • The lack of credible experimental evaluation and validation.
    • The split between industry practice and academic research.
  • We support a process to refound software engineering based on a solid theory, proven principles and best practices that:
    • Include a kernel of widely-agreed elements, extensible for specific uses
    • Addresses both technology and people issues
    • Are supported by industry, academia, researchers and users
    • Support extension in the face of changing requirements and technology

Some of the well-known signatories to this Call for Action include
Pekka Abrahamsson, Scott Ambler, Victor Basili, Jean Bézivin, Dines Bjorner, Barry Boehm, Alistair Cockburn, Larry Constantine, Erich Gamma, Tom Gilb, Ellen Gottesdiener, Sam Guckenheimer, Brian Henderson-Sellers, Watts Humphrey, Martin Griss, Ivar Jacobson, Philippe Kruchten, Stephen Mellor, Bertrand Meyer, James Odell, Meilir Page-Jones, Bob Martin, Ken Schwaber, Alec Sharp, Richard Soley.

Note that so far we have intentionally just identified a serious problem in the software community, we have not provided any solution. This much harder work will start soon. In the meantime, we have started to make the “SEMAT” initiative much more widely known through an article in well-known publications. If you are interested in following this initiative, please go to our web site and show support by pressing the “sign up” button.

Most welcome

— Ivar Jacobson, Bertrand Meyer, Richard Soley

If you enjoyed this post you can subscribe to this Software Modeling blog and/or follow me on twitter or through the portal’s mailing list . AND if you really liked it help me pass it ON TO others by bookmarking AND sharing the post USING the links below:

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Call for action: Software Engineering Method and Theory

An initiative to re-found the software engineering discipline:

From: Ivar Jacobson
Date: November 27, 2009 11:38:24 AM GMT+01:00
To: Ivar Jacobson
Subject: SEMAT – SOFTWARE ENGINEERING METHOD AND THEORY

Hello,

You may have heard that the three of us have been quietly planning a “revolution”. The goal is to re-found software engineering as a rigorous discipline. We recognize that the natural tendency in our field is to perturb systems minimally into approximate correctness, but this path cannot be sustained any longer if we are to support the computing industry and help it meet the demands of society. We need to restart on a solid basis, taking advantage of all that has been learned in software engineering theory and practice over the past five decades.

The effort is underway, It is now public at www.semat.org . On this site you will find the Call for Action statement and the people & companies that have agreed to become signatories.

CALL FOR ACTION STATEMENT: SOFTWARE ENGINEERING METHOD AND THEORY

  • Software engineering is gravely hampered today by immature practices. Specific problems include:
    • The prevalence of fads more typical of fashion industry than of an engineering discipline.
    • The lack of a sound, widely accepted theoretical basis.
    • The huge number of methods and method variants, with differences little understood and artificially magnified.
    • The lack of credible experimental evaluation and validation.
    • The split between industry practice and academic research.
  • We support a process to refound software engineering based on a solid theory, proven principles and best practices that:
    • Include a kernel of widely-agreed elements, extensible for specific uses
    • Addresses both technology and people issues
    • Are supported by industry, academia, researchers and users
    • Support extension in the face of changing requirements and technology

Some of the well-known signatories to this Call for Action include
Pekka Abrahamsson, Scott Ambler, Victor Basili, Jean Bézivin, Dines Bjorner, Barry Boehm, Alistair Cockburn, Larry Constantine, Erich Gamma, Tom Gilb, Ellen Gottesdiener, Sam Guckenheimer, Brian Henderson-Sellers, Watts Humphrey, Martin Griss, Ivar Jacobson, Philippe Kruchten, Stephen Mellor, Bertrand Meyer, James Odell, Meilir Page-Jones, Bob Martin, Ken Schwaber, Alec Sharp, Richard Soley.

Note that so far we have intentionally just identified a serious problem in the software community, we have not provided any solution. This much harder work will start soon. In the meantime, we have started to make the “SEMAT” initiative much more widely known through an article in well-known publications. If you are interested in following this initiative, please go to our web site and show support by pressing the “sign up” button.

Most welcome

— Ivar Jacobson, Bertrand Meyer, Richard Soley

If you enjoyed this post you can subscribe to this Software Modeling blog and/or follow me on twitter or through the portal’s mailing list . AND if you really liked it help me pass it ON TO others by bookmarking AND sharing the post USING the links below:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

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