Difference between revisions of "ENASE 2009"

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==Advocatus Diaboli Forum (ADF)==
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There are no words to describe how boadciuos this is.
The Advocatus Diaboli Forum “court proceedings” play an important role in the mission of the ENASE conferences. The ADF is directly inspired by an ancient, now discarded, mechanism within the Catholic Church whereby a so-called "Devil's Advocate" (AD) would assemble a prosecution case against candidates for canonization to sainthood. The AD was not required to necessarily believe the prosecution case they prepared, but was required to list every possible reason to reject the candidate's elevation. Proponents for canonization would then mount a defense, addressing each of the points raised by the AD.
 
 
 
Consistently with the motivating philosophy of ENASE conferences, the main agenda for ADF-s is defined as to adversarially assess claims to novelty and utility for selected software engineering approaches. For ADF at ENASE 2009 the SE approach on trial is SOA (Service-Oriented Architecture).
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
==Submissions==
 
There will be:
 
* full papers presented to the conference by the authors
 
* poster papers available for viewing and discussions
 
* demo papers available for viewing and related to the demonstrations of software tools and products.
 
 
 
Full papers should be original research work, present analysis of data and discussion of research findings. Full papers must not have been previously published or submitted for publication. Full papers must not exceed 8 A4-size pages. As in previous ENASE conferences, the acceptance rate for full papers will at or below 30%.
 
 
 
Poster papers should relate to an ongoing research or experience. They must not exceed 4 A4-size pages.
 
Demo papers should describe non-for-profit software tools and products to be demonstrated at the conference. Normally, such tools and products will be expected to be in a prototype-, alpha-, or beta-version.
 
 
 
Papers should be submitted using the on-line submission procedure briefly described below. The guidelines for paper formatting provided at the conference website must be strictly used for all submitted papers. The submission format is the same as the camera-ready format. The Program Committee will review all papers and the contact author (the author who submits the paper) of each paper will be notified of the result, by e-mail.
 
 
 
The file to be uploaded must be in zip format and consist of two documents – the paper and the authors’ contact information (affiliation(s) and contact details). PDF format is preferred for the papers but LaTeX/PS/DOC formats will be also accepted. The web submission facility automatically sends an acknowledgement, by e-mail, to the contact author. Please contact the secretariat if no acknowledgement is received. If the author is unable to use the web-based procedure then he/she can send the paper by e-mail to the secretariat attaching an additional file with contact information.
 
 
 
Due to space limitations in the Proceedings, the camera-ready versions of accepted papers will be limited to 8 (eight) pages for full presentations and 4 (four) for poster and demo presentations. If absolutely needed, the number of pages may be increased up to a maximum of 12 pages (long presentations) and 6 pages (poster and demo presentations). However, for each page in excess of the maximum allowed, the author will have to pay an additional fee.
 
 
 
All ENASE full, poster and demo papers will be published in time for the conference in the proceedings, produced by INSTICC under an ISBN reference, in paper and in CD-ROM form (the CD-ROM will be shared with ICEIS). Proceedings will be indexed by ISI Proceedings, Inspec, and DBLP bibliographies. After the conference, a book containing all ENASE full papers (modified and extended) will be edited and published as post-proceedings by Springer in the CCIS (Communications in Computer and Information Science) series.  
 
 
 
  
 
==Venue==
 
==Venue==
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* The Conference Dates: May 6-10, 2009  
 
* The Conference Dates: May 6-10, 2009  
  
==Committees==
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Didn’t know the forum rules alwloed such brilliant posts.
 
 
* Steering Committee
 
** [[has OC member::Joaquim Filipe]], Polytechnic Institute of Setúbal / INSTICC, Portugal
 
** [[has OC member::Cesar Gonzalez-Perez]], IEGPS, Spanish National Research Council, Spain
 
** [[has OC member::Peri Loucopoulos]], Loughborough University, UK             
 
** [[has OC member::Leszek A.Maciaszek]], Macquarie University ~ Sydney, Australia
 
 
 
 
 
* Conference Chairs
 
** [[has general chair::Joaquim Filipe]], Polytechnic Institute of Setúbal / INSTICC, Portugal, http://ltodi.est.ips.pt/jfilipe/
 
** [[has general chair::Leszek A. Maciaszek]], Macquarie University ~ Sydney, Australia, http://www.comp.mq.edu.au/~leszek/
 
 
 
 
 
* Program Chairs
 
** [[has program chair::Mehmet Aksit]], University of Twente, The Netherlands,.http://www3.cs.utwente.nl/~aksit/
 
** [[has program chair::Stefan Jablonski]], University of Bayreuth, Germany, http://www.ai4.uni-bayreuth.de/en/
 
 
 
* Advocatus Diaboli Forum (ADF) Chair
 
** [[has OC member::Cesar Gonzalez-Perez]], IEGPS, Spanish National Research Council, Spain, http://www.verdewek.com/work/
 
 
 
 
 
* Program Committee
 
** [[has PC member::Ali Babar]], University of Limerick, Ireland         
 
** [[has PC member::Hernán Astudillo]], Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, Chile         
 
** [[has PC member::Colin Atkinson]], University of Mannheim, Germany
 
** [[has PC member::Giuseppe Berio]], Université de Bretagne Sud, France
 
** [[has PC member::Robert Biddle]], Carleton University, Canada
 
** [[has PC member::Maria Bielikova]], Slovak University of Technology, Bratislava, Slovak Republic
 
** [[has PC member::Dumitru Burdescu]], University of Craiova, Romania
 
** [[has PC member::Wojciech Cellary]], Poznan University of Economics, Poland
 
** [[has PC member::Panagiots Chountas]], University of Westminster, UK
 
** [[has PC member::Lawrence Chung]], University of Texas at Dallas, USA
 
** [[has PC member::Alex Delis]], University of Athens, Greece
 
** [[has PC member::Jens Dietrich]], Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand
 
** [[has PC member::Margaret Dunham]], Southern Methodist University, Dallas, USA
 
** [[has PC member::Schahram Dustdar]], Vienna University of Technology, Austria     
 
** [[has PC member::Jonathan Edwards]], MIT, USA
 
** [[has PC member::Ulrich Eisenecker]], University of Leipzig, Germany
 
** [[has PC member::Joerg Evermann]], Memorial University of Newfoundland in St. John's, Canada
 
** [[has PC member::Maria João Ferreira]], Universidade Portucalense, Porto, Portugal
 
** [[has PC member::Felix Garcia]], University of Castilla-La Mancha, Spain
 
** [[has PC member::Janusz Getta]], University of Wollongong, Australia
 
** [[has PC member::Tudor Girba]], University of Bern, Switzerland         
 
** [[has PC member::Hans-Gerhard Gross]], Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
 
** [[has PC member::Jarek Gryz]], York University, Toronto, Canada
 
** [[has PC member::Jo Hannay]], University of Oslo, Norway 
 
** [[has PC member::Brian Henderson-Sellers]], University of Technology, Sydney, Australia
 
** [[has PC member::Zbigniew Huzar]], Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland
 
** [[has PC member::Stan Jarzabek]], National University of Singapore
 
** [[has PC member::Wan Kadir]], Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
 
** [[has PC member::Xabier Larrucea]], European Software Institute, Spain
 
** [[has PC member::Kecheng Lie]], University of Reading, UK
 
** [[has PC member::Lech Madeyski]], Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland
 
** [[has PC member::Radu Marinescu]], Universitatea "Politehnica" Timisoara, Romania
 
** [[has PC member::Claudia Bauzer Medeiros]], University of Campinas, Brazil
 
** [[has PC member::Sascha Mueller]], Ansbach University of Applied Science, Germany
 
** [[has PC member::Anne Hee Hiong Ngu]], Texas State University - San Marcos, USA
 
** [[has PC member::Selmin Nurcan]], Université Paris 1 - Panthéon – Sorbonne, France
 
** [[has PC member::Antoni Olive]], Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain
 
** [[has PC member::Janis Osis]], Riga Technical University, Latvia
 
** [[has PC member::Mieczyslaw Owoc]], University of Economics, Wroclaw, Poland
 
** [[has PC member::Marcin Paprzycki]], Polish Academy of Science, Poland
 
** [[has PC member::Jeffrey Parsons]], Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada
 
** [[has PC member::Klaus Pohl]], University Duisburg-Essen, Germany
 
** [[has PC member::Naveen Prakash]], Galgotias College of Engineering & Technology, India
 
** [[has PC member::Lutz Prechelt]], Freie Universitaet Berlin, Germany
 
** [[has PC member::Gil Regev]], EPFL, Switzerland
 
** [[has PC member::Francisco Ruiz]], University of Castilla-La Mancha, Spain
 
** [[has PC member::Chris Sacha]], Warsaw University of Technology, Poland
 
** [[has PC member::Motoshi Saeki]], Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan
 
** [[has PC member::Stephen Schach]], Vanderbilt University, Nashville, USA
 
** [[has PC member::Heiko Schuldt]], University of Basel, Switzerland
 
** [[has PC member::Jan Seruga]], Australian Catholic University Sydney, Australia
 
** [[has PC member::Il-Yeol Song]], Drexel University Philadelphia, USA
 
** [[has PC member::Stephanie Teufel]], University of Fribourg, Switzerland
 
** [[has PC member::Dave Thomas]], Bedarra Research Labs, Ottawa, Canada
 
** [[has PC member::Rainer Unland]], University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany
 
** [[has PC member::Jean Vanderdonckt]], Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium     
 
** [[has PC member::Olegas Vasilecas]], Vilnius Gediminas Technical University, Lithuania
 
** [[has PC member::Igor Wojnicki]], AGH University of Science and Technology, Cracow, Poland
 

Latest revision as of 14:51, 27 December 2015

ENASE 2009
4th International Conference on Evaluation of Novel Approaches to
Event in series ENASE
Dates 2009/05/06 (iCal) - 2009/05/10
Homepage: www.enase.org
Location
Location: Milan, Italy
Loading map...

Important dates
Submissions: 2008/11/28
Notification: 2009/01/26
Camera ready due: 2009/02/09
Table of Contents


The mission of the ENASE (Evaluation of Novel Approaches to Software Engineering) series of working conferences is to be a prime international forum to discuss and publish research findings and IT industry experiences with relation to evaluation of novel approaches to software engineering. By comparing novel approaches with established traditional practices and by evaluating them against software quality criteria, ENASE conferences advance knowledge and research in software engineering, identify most hopeful trends and propose new directions for consideration by researchers and practitioners involved in large-scale software development and integration. An innovative idea and important highlight of all ENASE conferences is the Advocatus Diaboli Forum (ADF).


Topics

ENASE provides a yearly forum for researchers and practitioners to review and evaluate emerging as well as established SE methods, practices, architectures, technologies and tools. An important underpinning and assumption of ENASE is that in software engineering "novel" turns out frequently to be just new hype. An objective of ENASE is to reveal any such hype as soon as feasible. This means that ENASE does not exclude more traditional approaches to software development and integration. On the contrary, ENASE endeavors to compare novel with traditional, also to discover if novel is not just traditional in disguise. Consequently, ENASE accepts also papers concentrating on a critique of more traditional and entrenched SE approaches.

Against that background, ENASE undertakes to provide fast but careful scientific and empirical evaluation of new as well as more established approaches to software engineering. Of particular interest are experience reports and evaluations (qualitative and quantitative) of existing approaches as well as new ideas and proposals for improvements. The conference solicits experiments, case studies, surveys, meta-analyses, empirical studies, systematic reviews, conceptual explorations, innovative ideas, critical appraisals, etc. related to:

  • agile software development,
  • aspect-oriented software development,
  • agent-oriented software engineering,
  • multi-agent systems,
  • model-driven engineering,
  • component-based software engineering,
  • evolutionary design,
  • intentional software,
  • example centric programming,
  • meta programming systems,
  • knowledge management and engineering,
  • architectural design and meta architectures,
  • business process management, engineering and reengineering,
  • process-centric paradigms,
  • service-oriented architectures,
  • application integration technologies,
  • enterprise integration strategies and patterns,
  • e-business technologies,
  • requirements engineering frameworks and models,
  • collaborative requirements management systems,
  • business and software modeling languages,
  • software quality management,
  • software change and configuration management,
  • geographically distributed software development environments,
  • cross-feeding between data engineering and software engineering,
  • design thinking as a paradigm for software development,
  • formal methods,
  • software process improvement,
  • metamodelling,
  • software development methodologies


There are no words to describe how boadciuos this is.

Venue

Milan (Milano), situated on the flat plains of the Po Valley, is the capital of Lombardy and thoroughly enjoys its hard earned role as Italy's richest and second largest city. Wealthy and cosmopolitan, the Milanesi enjoy a reputation as successful businesspeople, equally at home overseas and in Italy. Embracing tradition, sophistication and ambition in equal measure, they are just as likely to follow opera at La Scala as their shares on the city's stock market or AC or Inter at the San Siro Stadium. Three times in its history, the city had to rebuild after being conquered. Founded in the seventh century BC by Celts, the city, then known as Mediolanum ('mid-plain'), was first sacked by the Goths in the 600s (AD), then by Barbarossa in 1157 and finally by the Allies in World War II, when over a quarter of the city was flattened. Milan successively reinvented herself under French, Spanish and then Austrian rulers from 1499 until the reunification of Italy in 1870. It is a miracle that so many historic treasures still exist, including Leonardo da Vinci's Last Supper, which survived a direct hit in World War II. The Milanesi's appreciation of tradition includes a singular respect for religion; they even pay a special tax towards the Cathedral maintenance. It is therefore fitting that the city's enduring symbol is the gilded statue of the Virgin, on top of the Cathedral (Il Duomo). Milan is founded around a historic nucleus radiating from the Cathedral, with a star-shaped axis of arteries spreading through modern suburbs to the ring road. The modern civic center lies to the northwest, around Mussolini's central station, and is dominated by the Pirelli skyscraper, which dates from 1956. The trade and fashion fairs take place in the Fiera district, west of the nucleus around the Porta Genova station. Milan's economic success was founded at the end of the 19th century, when the metal factories and the rubber industries moved in, replacing agriculture and mercantile trading as the city's main sources of income. Milan's position at the heart of a network of canals, which provided the irrigation for the Lombard plains and the important trade links between the north and south, became less important as industry took over - and the waterways were filled. A few canals remain in the Navigli district near the Bocconi University, a fashionable area in which to drink and listen to live music. Since the 1970s, Milan has remained the capital of Italy's automobile industry and its financial markets, but the limelight is dominated by the fashion houses, who, in turn, have drawn media and advertising agencies to the city. Milan remains the marketplace for Italian fashion - fashion aficionados, supermodels and international paparazzi descend upon the city twice a year for its spring and autumn fairs. Valentino, Versace and Armani may design and manufacture their clothes elsewhere but Milan, which has carefully guarded its reputation for flair, drama and creativity, is Italy's natural stage.


Important Dates

  • Paper Submissions: November 28, 2008
  • Acceptance Notifications: January 26, 2009
  • Camera-ready Submissions: February 9, 2009
  • Registrations: February 9, 2009
  • The Conference Dates: May 6-10, 2009

Didn’t know the forum rules alwloed such brilliant posts.

Facts about "ENASE 2009"
AcronymENASE 2009 +
Camera ready dueFebruary 9, 2009 +
End dateMay 10, 2009 +
Event in seriesENASE +
Event typeConference +
Has coordinates45° 27' 51", 9° 11' 23"Latitude: 45.464194444444
Longitude: 9.1896333333333
+
Has location cityMilan +
Has location countryCategory:Italy +
Homepagehttp://www.enase.org +
IsAEvent +
NotificationJanuary 26, 2009 +
Start dateMay 6, 2009 +
Submission deadlineNovember 28, 2008 +
Title4th International Conference on Evaluation of Novel Approaches to +