Coordination in software development
Communications of the ACM
Dogear: Social bookmarking in the enterprise
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Using Wikis in Software Development
IEEE Software
IT Professional
The role of blogging in generating a software product vision
CHASE '09 Proceedings of the 2009 ICSE Workshop on Cooperative and Human Aspects on Software Engineering
How Software Developers Use Tagging to Support Reminding and Refinding
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Codebook: discovering and exploiting relationships in software repositories
Proceedings of the 32nd ACM/IEEE International Conference on Software Engineering - Volume 1
A survey of social media use in software systems development
Proceedings of the 1st Workshop on Web 2.0 for Software Engineering
Workshop report from Web2SE: first workshop on web 2.0 for software engineering
ACM SIGSOFT Software Engineering Notes
Social media for software engineering
Proceedings of the FSE/SDP workshop on Future of software engineering research
IDE 2.0: collective intelligence in software development
Proceedings of the FSE/SDP workshop on Future of software engineering research
The impact of social media on software engineering practices and tools
Proceedings of the FSE/SDP workshop on Future of software engineering research
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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. Some of these technologies have made their way into collaborative software development processes and development platforms. 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. Web 2.0 opens up new opportunities for developers to form teams and collaborate, but it also comes with challenges for developers and researchers. Web2SE 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.