Proceedings of the 2006 international workshop on Mining software repositories
Social media for software engineering
Proceedings of the FSE/SDP workshop on Future of software engineering research
Combining micro-blogging and IDE interactions to support developers in their quests
ICSM '10 Proceedings of the 2010 IEEE International Conference on Software Maintenance
How do developers blog?: an exploratory study
Proceedings of the 8th Working Conference on Mining Software Repositories
Recommending People in Developers' Collaboration Network
WCRE '11 Proceedings of the 2011 18th Working Conference on Reverse Engineering
Finding relevant answers in software forums
ASE '11 Proceedings of the 2011 26th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Automated Software Engineering
Tag recommendation in software information sites
Proceedings of the 10th Working Conference on Mining Software Repositories
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Microblogging has recently become a popular means to disseminate information among millions of people. Interestingly, software developers also use microblog to communicate with one another. Different from traditional media, microblog users tend to focus on recency and informality of content. Many tweet contents are relatively more personal and opinionated, compared to that of traditional news report. Thus, by analyzing microblogs, one could get the up-to-date information about what people are interested in or feel toward a particular topic. In this paper, we describe our microblog observatory that aggregates more than 70,000 Twitter feeds, captures software-related tweets, and computes trends from across topics and time points. Finally, we present the results to the end users via a web interface available at http://research.larc.smu.edu.sg/palanteer/swdev.