Advances in software inspections
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Splitting the organization and integrating the code: Conway's law revisited
Proceedings of the 21st international conference on Software engineering
Rebel code: Linux and the open source revolution
Rebel code: Linux and the open source revolution
On the criteria to be used in decomposing systems into modules
Communications of the ACM
Commitment development in software process improvement: critical misconceptions
ICSE '01 Proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on Software Engineering
An empirical study of global software development: distance and speed
ICSE '01 Proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on Software Engineering
Investigating the cost-effectiveness of reinspections in software development
ICSE '01 Proceedings of the 23rd International Conference on Software Engineering
Open Source Development with CVS
Open Source Development with CVS
The Cathedral and the Bazaar
Surviving Global Software Development
IEEE Software
Leveraging Resources in Global Software Development
IEEE Software
IEEE Software
Toward an understanding of the motivation Open Source Software developers
Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Software Engineering
Repository mining and Six Sigma for process improvement
MSR '05 Proceedings of the 2005 international workshop on Mining software repositories
A case study of open source tools and practices in a commercial setting
5-WOSSE Proceedings of the fifth workshop on Open source software engineering
A case study of a corporate open source development model
Proceedings of the 28th international conference on Software engineering
Using an information retrieval system to retrieve source code samples
Proceedings of the 28th international conference on Software engineering
MUDABlue: an automatic categorization system for open source repositories
Journal of Systems and Software - Special issue: Selected papers from the 11th Asia Pacific software engineering conference (APSEC 2004)
Global Software Engineering: The Future of Socio-technical Coordination
FOSE '07 2007 Future of Software Engineering
Achieving Quality in Open Source Software
IEEE Software
Managing a corporate open source software asset
Communications of the ACM
Information and Software Technology
Through the looking glass of immaterial labor
Proceedings of the FSE/SDP workshop on Future of software engineering research
Journal of Systems and Software
A comparative study of challenges in integrating Open Source Software and Inner Source Software
Information and Software Technology
Impact of Internal Open Source Development on Reuse: Participatory Reuse in Action
Journal of Management Information Systems
Free/Libre open-source software development: What we know and what we do not know
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
PROFES'05 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Product Focused Software Process Improvement
Key factors for adopting inner source
ACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology (TOSEM)
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The success of several Open Source™ software systems, e.g., Apache, Bind, Emacs, and Linux, has recently sparked interest in studying and emulating the software engineering principles underlying this innovative development and use model. Certain aspects of the Open Source development method, e.g., community building, open discussions for requirements and features, and evolvable and modular designs are having fundamental and far reaching consequences on general software engineering practices.To leverage such Open Source methods and tools, we have defined an innovative software engineering paradigm for large corporations: Progressive Open Source (POS). POS leverages the power of Open Source methods and tools for large corporations in a progressive manner: starting from completely within the corporation, to include partner businesses, and eventually complete Open Source. In this paper we present the design goals and principles for POS. We illustrate POS with two programs in HP: Corporate Source and the Collaborative Development Program (CDP). We present early results from both these programs suggesting the power and necessity of POS for all modern large corporations.