|
|
Einladung
zur Ringvorlesung n_space der Informatik der Uni
Potsdam
"Medienkonsum im Wandel" (öffentlich und kostenlos) - Sie und Ihre Freunde sind herzlich eingeladen, Mittwoch, 8. Juni 2011, 16:00-17:30, Hörsaal 01 im Gebäude 3.06, Campus Griebnitzsee Jan Bosch, Ph.D, Professor für
Software Engineering an der Chalmers University of Technology in
Göteborg, Schweden
Abstract:(Begrüßung: Prof. Dr.-Ing. Tiziana Margaria-Steffen, Informatik, Universität Potsdam) "Open Innovation through Speed and Customer Intimacy in an Online World" ![]() The world is changing at an increasing rate and companies need to respond to the constant acceleration. Three trends stand out, i.e. the transition from products to services, the increasing role of the customer (Capitalism 3.0) and the adoption of open, collaborative innovation approaches. For companies that build software-intensive solutions, this requires significant changes in the ways of working around R&D. These changes include the adoption of end-to-end agile development and deployment at the customer, the use of customer data collected by deployed systems to influence product development and the increasing use of ecosystem partners to increase the value proposition for customers through customization. This talk discusses the aforementioned trends and consequent implications and illustrates these with industrial examples from the Web 2.0 and mobile industries. CV ![]() Jan Bosch is professor of software engineering and co-director of the software research center at Chalmers University Technology in Gothenburg, Sweden. Earlier, he worked as Vice President Engineering Process at Intuit Inc where he also lead Intuit's Open Innovation efforts and headed the central mobile technologies team. Before Intuit, he was head of the Software and Application Technologies Laboratory at Nokia Research Center, Finland. Before joining Nokia, he headed the software engineering research group at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands, where he holds a professorship in software engineering. He received a MSc degree from the University of Twente, The Netherlands, and a PhD degree from Lund University, Sweden. His research activities include compositional software engineering, software ecosystems, software architecture, software product families and software variability management. He is the author of a book "Design and Use of Software Architectures: Adopting and Evolving a Product Line Approach" published by Pearson Education (Addison-Wesley & ACM Press), (co-)editor of several books and volumes in, among others, the Springer LNCS series and (co-)author of a significant number of research articles. He is editor for Science of Computer Programming, has been guest editor for journal issues, chaired several conferences as general and program chair, served on many program committees and organized numerous workshops. As a consultant, as a professor and as an employee, Jan has worked with and for many companies on strategic reuse in general and software product lines specifically, including Philips, Thales Naval Netherlands, Robert Bosch GmbH, Siemens, Nokia, Ericsson, Tellabs, Avaya, Tieto Enator and Det Norska Veritas. Around software product lines, he has published on, advised and implemented specific techniques and methods around, among others, software architecture, software variability management, the link to business strategy, organizational models, assessment frameworks, adoption frameworks and quality attributes. More information about his background can be found at his website: www.janbosch.com. When not working, Jan divides his time between his family, a spouse and three young boys, reading science fiction and sports, preferably long distance running, swimming, biking and horseback riding. "My main research interests are in software architecture assessment, design and representation, software product lines, including variability management, organizational approaches and product family architecture design, design erosion, component-oriented software engineering, object-oriented frameworks and design patterns." see http://www.janbosch.com Vortragsfolien hier bzw. sehen Sie seine Links und Publikationen.Hier die komplette Vorlesung als Stream. Sehen und hören Sie mal hin :-) . (Diesen Text finden Sie unter http://www.medienengineering.de/Ringvorlesungen/SS2011/ringevent_n_space.htm und nachfolgenden Links )
Veranstaltungsort:
Falls Sie im Verteiler regelmäßig einmal wöchentlich im Semester informiert werden wollen, Mail an mich mit Vermerk im „Betreff“. |
|
|