A pragmatic formal method for computer system definition
A pragmatic formal method for computer system definition
Systems engineering environments of ATMOSPHERE
Proceedings of the European symposium on Software development environments and CASE technology
Systems engineering: principles and practice of computer-based systems engineering
Systems engineering: principles and practice of computer-based systems engineering
First meeting of Task Force on Computer-Based Systems Engineering
Computer - Distributed computing systems: separate resources acting as one
Computer Based Systems Engineering Workshop
Proceedings of the SEI Conference on Software Engineering Education
CODES '96 Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Hardware/Software Co-Design
Engineering of Software-Intensive Systems: State of the Art and Research Challenges
Software-Intensive Systems and New Computing Paradigms
ECBS'99 Proceedings of the 1999 IEEE conference on Engineering of computer-based systems
Engineering of computer based-systems enhancement courses-proposed course outlines
ECBS'99 Proceedings of the 1999 IEEE conference on Engineering of computer-based systems
Engineering of computer-based systems-a proposed curriculum for a degree program at Master level
ECBS'97 Proceedings of the 1997 international conference on Engineering of computer-based systems
Staffing and organization in the engineering of systems
ECBS'97 Proceedings of the 1997 international conference on Engineering of computer-based systems
Towards an open framework for conceptual knowledge in ECBS domain and information modelling
ECBS'97 Proceedings of the 1997 international conference on Engineering of computer-based systems
Hi-index | 4.10 |
This report from the State of Practice Working Group of the IEEE Computer Society Task Force on Engineering of Computer-Based Systems (ECBS) advocates a new discipline at the systems engineering level. The report addresses the need for an ECBS discipline, identifies current practice and needed research, and suggests improvements that are achievable today. It addresses problem areas: the ECBS process itself, requirements definition, design, interfaces, management, process automation, and documentation. The report concludes that an improved ECBS discipline is necessary for improving processes and for fostering research and training.