The future of Java-based simulation
Proceedings of the 30th conference on Winter simulation
Embracing Insanity: Open Source Software Development
Embracing Insanity: Open Source Software Development
Silk and Taylor ED: open-source SML and silk for Java-based, object-oriented simulation
Proceedings of the 33nd conference on Winter simulation
The Cathedral and the Bazaar
Silk and Taylor ED: open-source SML and silk for Java-based, object-oriented simulation
Proceedings of the 33nd conference on Winter simulation
A two-stage modeling and simulation process for web-based modeling and simulation
ACM Transactions on Modeling and Computer Simulation (TOMACS)
Web-based discrete event simulation models: current states and possible futures
Simulation and Gaming - Special issue: Simulation & gaming
Silk: object-oriented simulation with Java, Silk, and open SML .NET languages
Proceedings of the 34th conference on Winter simulation: exploring new frontiers
Proceedings of the 34th conference on Winter simulation: exploring new frontiers
Proceedings of the 35th conference on Winter simulation: driving innovation
XML-based supply chain simulation modeling
WSC '04 Proceedings of the 36th conference on Winter simulation
SIMSOLUTION: an open simulation environment founded on extreme multitasking
WSC '05 Proceedings of the 37th conference on Winter simulation
Assessment of the NIST shop data model as a neutral file format
Proceedings of the 38th conference on Winter simulation
A metamodel-based representation method for reusable simulation model
Proceedings of the 39th conference on Winter simulation: 40 years! The best is yet to come
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The Simulation Modeling Language (SML™) is an open source, web-based, multi-language simulation development project guided by a consortium of industrial, academic and government simulation consultants, practitioners and developers. The vision of an open source simulation software initiative is to leverage the unique communication and distribution opportunities created by the internet to open the development of simulation software to a worldwide community of talented software developers, researchers and modelers. For the simulation community, the open source movement represents an opportunity to improve the quality of common core simulation functions, improve the potential for creating reusable modeling components from those core functions, and improve the ability to merge those components using XML, HLA and other simulation community standards. This paper describes the SML software, the goals of the SML organization and relates the origins, philosophy and procedures of the open source movement to the objectives and needs of the simulation community.