Analytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics [electronic resource] /

This volume presents a selection of the presentations from the first annual conference on Analytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics held at The MITRE Corporation in McLean, Virginia. The papers are representative of the issues that are of interest to researchers in the economics of information systems and software engineering economics. The 1990s are presenting software economists with a particularly difficult set of challenges. Because of budget considerations, the number of large new software development efforts is declining. The primary focus has shifted to issues relating to upgrading and migrating existing systems. In this environment, productivity enhancing methodologies and tools are of primary interest. The MITRE Software Engineering Analysis Conference was designed to address some of th,~ new and difficult challenges that face our profession. The primary objective of the conference was to address new theoretical and applications directions in Software Engineering Economics, a relatively new discipline that deals with the management and control of all segments of the software life-cycle. The discipline has received much visibility in the last twenty-five years because of the size and cost considerations of many software development and maintenance efforts, particularly in the Federal Government. We thank everyone who helped make this conference a success, especially those who graciously allowed us to include their work in this volume.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gulledge, Thomas R. editor., Hutzler, William P. editor., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1993
Subjects:Business., Operations research., Decision making., Information technology., Business, Software engineering., Computers., Business and Management., Operation Research/Decision Theory., IT in Business., Software Engineering., Information Systems and Communication Service.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-77795-0
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institution COLPOS
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
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En linea
databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Business.
Operations research.
Decision making.
Information technology.
Business
Software engineering.
Computers.
Business and Management.
Operation Research/Decision Theory.
IT in Business.
Software Engineering.
Information Systems and Communication Service.
Business.
Operations research.
Decision making.
Information technology.
Business
Software engineering.
Computers.
Business and Management.
Operation Research/Decision Theory.
IT in Business.
Software Engineering.
Information Systems and Communication Service.
spellingShingle Business.
Operations research.
Decision making.
Information technology.
Business
Software engineering.
Computers.
Business and Management.
Operation Research/Decision Theory.
IT in Business.
Software Engineering.
Information Systems and Communication Service.
Business.
Operations research.
Decision making.
Information technology.
Business
Software engineering.
Computers.
Business and Management.
Operation Research/Decision Theory.
IT in Business.
Software Engineering.
Information Systems and Communication Service.
Gulledge, Thomas R. editor.
Hutzler, William P. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Analytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics [electronic resource] /
description This volume presents a selection of the presentations from the first annual conference on Analytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics held at The MITRE Corporation in McLean, Virginia. The papers are representative of the issues that are of interest to researchers in the economics of information systems and software engineering economics. The 1990s are presenting software economists with a particularly difficult set of challenges. Because of budget considerations, the number of large new software development efforts is declining. The primary focus has shifted to issues relating to upgrading and migrating existing systems. In this environment, productivity enhancing methodologies and tools are of primary interest. The MITRE Software Engineering Analysis Conference was designed to address some of th,~ new and difficult challenges that face our profession. The primary objective of the conference was to address new theoretical and applications directions in Software Engineering Economics, a relatively new discipline that deals with the management and control of all segments of the software life-cycle. The discipline has received much visibility in the last twenty-five years because of the size and cost considerations of many software development and maintenance efforts, particularly in the Federal Government. We thank everyone who helped make this conference a success, especially those who graciously allowed us to include their work in this volume.
format Texto
topic_facet Business.
Operations research.
Decision making.
Information technology.
Business
Software engineering.
Computers.
Business and Management.
Operation Research/Decision Theory.
IT in Business.
Software Engineering.
Information Systems and Communication Service.
author Gulledge, Thomas R. editor.
Hutzler, William P. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Gulledge, Thomas R. editor.
Hutzler, William P. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Gulledge, Thomas R. editor.
title Analytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics [electronic resource] /
title_short Analytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics [electronic resource] /
title_full Analytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics [electronic resource] /
title_fullStr Analytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics [electronic resource] /
title_full_unstemmed Analytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics [electronic resource] /
title_sort analytical methods in software engineering economics [electronic resource] /
publisher Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg,
publishDate 1993
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-77795-0
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:2071322018-07-30T23:37:29ZAnalytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics [electronic resource] / Gulledge, Thomas R. editor. Hutzler, William P. editor. SpringerLink (Online service) textBerlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg,1993.engThis volume presents a selection of the presentations from the first annual conference on Analytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics held at The MITRE Corporation in McLean, Virginia. The papers are representative of the issues that are of interest to researchers in the economics of information systems and software engineering economics. The 1990s are presenting software economists with a particularly difficult set of challenges. Because of budget considerations, the number of large new software development efforts is declining. The primary focus has shifted to issues relating to upgrading and migrating existing systems. In this environment, productivity enhancing methodologies and tools are of primary interest. The MITRE Software Engineering Analysis Conference was designed to address some of th,~ new and difficult challenges that face our profession. The primary objective of the conference was to address new theoretical and applications directions in Software Engineering Economics, a relatively new discipline that deals with the management and control of all segments of the software life-cycle. The discipline has received much visibility in the last twenty-five years because of the size and cost considerations of many software development and maintenance efforts, particularly in the Federal Government. We thank everyone who helped make this conference a success, especially those who graciously allowed us to include their work in this volume.I. Plenary Presentation -- Economic Analysis of Software Technology Investments -- II. Software Economics -- Measuring the Development Performance of Integrated Computer Aided Software Engineering (I-CASE): A Synthesis of Field Study Results From the First Boston Corporation -- Returns-to-Scale in Software Production: A Comparison of Approaches -- An Economics Model of Software Reuse -- Experience With an Incremental Ada Development in Terms of Progress Measurement, Built-in Quality, and Productivity -- Recognizing Patterns for Software Development Prediction and Evaluation -- Calibration of Software Cost Models to DoD Acquisitions -- Estimating Software Size From Counts of Externals: A Generalization of Function Points -- CECOM’s Approach for Developing Definitions for Software Size and Software Personnel: Two Important Software Economic Metrics -- An Economic Analysis Model for Determining the Custom Versus Commercial Software Tradeoff.This volume presents a selection of the presentations from the first annual conference on Analytical Methods in Software Engineering Economics held at The MITRE Corporation in McLean, Virginia. The papers are representative of the issues that are of interest to researchers in the economics of information systems and software engineering economics. The 1990s are presenting software economists with a particularly difficult set of challenges. Because of budget considerations, the number of large new software development efforts is declining. The primary focus has shifted to issues relating to upgrading and migrating existing systems. In this environment, productivity enhancing methodologies and tools are of primary interest. The MITRE Software Engineering Analysis Conference was designed to address some of th,~ new and difficult challenges that face our profession. The primary objective of the conference was to address new theoretical and applications directions in Software Engineering Economics, a relatively new discipline that deals with the management and control of all segments of the software life-cycle. The discipline has received much visibility in the last twenty-five years because of the size and cost considerations of many software development and maintenance efforts, particularly in the Federal Government. We thank everyone who helped make this conference a success, especially those who graciously allowed us to include their work in this volume.Business.Operations research.Decision making.Information technology.BusinessSoftware engineering.Computers.Business and Management.Operation Research/Decision Theory.IT in Business.Software Engineering.Information Systems and Communication Service.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-77795-0URN:ISBN:9783642777950