Sciweavers

65 search results - page 3 / 13
» What's in a Feature: A Requirements Engineering Perspective
Sort
View
IUI
2004
ACM
13 years 10 months ago
What would they think?: a computational model of attitudes
A key to improving at any task is frequent feedback from people whose opinions we care about: our family, friends, mentors, and the experts. However, such input is not usually ava...
Hugo Liu, Pattie Maes
WSC
2007
13 years 7 months ago
What I wish they would have taught me (or that I would have better remembered!) in school
This panel reflects upon their experiences as simulation professionals and shares their thoughts regarding elements of their simulation education that they have found most helpful...
Charles R. Standridge, Daniel A. Finke, Carley Jur...
ICC
2009
IEEE
124views Communications» more  ICC 2009»
13 years 3 months ago
Routing Games for Traffic Engineering
Abstract--Current data network scenario makes Traffic Engineering (TE) a very challenging task. The ever growing access rates and new applications running on end-hosts result in mo...
Federico Larroca, Jean-Louis Rougier
CSMR
2005
IEEE
13 years 11 months ago
Correlating Features and Code Using a Compact Two-Sided Trace Analysis Approach
Software developers are constantly required to modify and adapt application features in response to changing requirements. The problem is that just by reading the source code, it ...
Orla Greevy, Stéphane Ducasse
SIGADA
2005
Springer
13 years 10 months ago
Modeling SPARK systems with UML
In this paper, we will consider two aspects of UML in order to assess how well suited it is for modeling SPARK systems. The first aspect is the ability to represent SPARK in UML f...
Xavier Sautejeau