Conference announcements

Call for Participation -
21st Australian Software Engineering Conference (ASWEC'2010)


From: Jens Dietrich <j.b.dietrich@massey.ac.nz>
Date: Wed, 17 Feb 2010 09:10:38 +1300
Subject: [SEWORLD] ASWEC 2010: Call for Participation
To: seworld@sigsoft.org

21st Australian Software Engineering Conference (ASWEC 2010)

6-9 April 2010, Hyatt Regency Auckland, New Zealand

** Register before 22nd February and save up to NZD310! **

http://aswec2010.massey.ac.nz


The 21st Australian Software Engineering Conference - ASWEC2010 - will
be held in the Central Business District of Auckland, New Zealand from
the 6th to the 9th of April 2010. Auckland is a unique conference and
event destination with beautiful natural surroundings. The "City of
Sails" sprawls between the sparkling waters of two harbours, rainforest
covered hills and dormant volcanos. Auckland is consistently ranked
among the top lifestyle cities in the world and provides a place where
people can think, learn and network in a stunning environment. With the
diverse cultural influences, friendly hospitality, world class
restaurants and a variety of attractions, Auckland is the ideal
location to mix business with entertainment.

Established in 1986, ASWEC is a leading technical forum for the
exchange of peer-reviewed research outcomes and industry best-practice
in software engineering. It attracts a wide range of participants
including software engineering researchers, practitioners and educators
for across Australia, its regional neighbours, and from other
international locations. The overall programme will provide numerous
opportunities for academic and industry participants to interact with
and learn from each other.


The full ASWEC 2010 Programme is now available on the ASWEC2010 web
site. Programme highlights include:

Keynote Speakers:
- Philippe Kruchten (University of British Columbia): Is agility a passing fad?
- K. Rustan M. Leino (Microsoft Research): Contracts, tools, verification
- Gareth Cronin (Kiwiplan): Hacking in FORTRAN in the 21st Century

13 Industry Presentations and 24 Research Presentations

Four Pre Conference tutorials and one workshop
- Software architecture and agile software development: an oxymoron? (Phillipe Kruchten)
- The delicate art of release planning (Phillipe Kruchten)
- Components of effective process definitions (Judy Bamberger)
- The "physics" of notations: A scientific approach to designing visual notations in software engineering (Daniel Moody)
- Software Engineering Education Workshop

Trade Exhibition, Poster and Demonstration Session and two networking functions

Extended Deadline -
21st Australian Software Engineering Conference (ASWEC'2010)


Date: Fri, 25 Sep 2009 09:32:49 +1200
From: Jens Dietrich <j.b.dietrich@massey.ac.nz>
To: ecoop-info@ecoop.org
Subject: [ecoop-info] Extended deadline: ASWEC 2010 - 21st Australian
	Software Engineering Conference

Due to some delays in the planning of some aspects of ASWEC 2010, we
have decided to extend the deadlines for research programme submissions
and tutorial and workshop proposals. The new time will be 11.59pm on
*16 October*, Apia, Somoa time. We apologise for any inconvenience
caused by this decision.


Call for Research Papers, Industry Papers, Workshops and Tutorials

21st Australian Software Engineering Conference - ASWEC 2010

Auckland, New Zealand

6-9 April 2010

WEB:http://aswec2010.massey.ac.nz/
RSS: http://groups.google.com/group/aswec2010/feed/rss_v2_0_msgs.xml

ASWEC 2010 Conference Theme

"Engineering software for economic growth"

The 21st Australian Software Engineering Conference - ASWEC2010 - will
be held in the Central Business District of Auckland, New Zealand from
the 6th to the 9th of April 2010. This is the first time that ASWEC is
being held in New Zealand, and reflects the synergies between the
Australian and NZ SE communities. Auckland, the "City of Sails", is the
gateway to New Zealand. It is also New Zealand's largest city and is
consistently ranked amongst the top lifestyle cities in the world. It
has a sub-tropical climate, the Waitemata and Manukau Harbours, and a
wide range of indoor and outdoor activities for visitors including
world class restaurants and accommodation.

Established in 1986, ASWEC is a leading technical forum for the
exchange of peer-reviewed research outcomes and industry best-practice
in software engineering. It attracts a wide range of participants
including software engineering researchers, practitioners and educators
from across Australia and New Zealand, and from other international
locations. The overall programme will provide numerous opportunities
for academic and industry participants to interact with and learn from
each other. Also for the first time, there will be a Doctoral Symposium
to give Phd students the opportunity to get feedback on their work from
research leaders.

Research Papers: Authors are invited to submit full papers describing
original research in all areas of software engineering. Papers
describing theoretical or empirical research, new techniques and tools,
and in-depth case studies are all welcome. Submissions should be
original and must not have been published previously or currently be
under consideration for publication elsewhere.

Research paper submissions will be peer reviewed (DEST Category E1)
based on originality, significance, clarity and relevance to the field
of software engineering. As in previous years, we hope the ASWEC
proceedings will be published by the IEEE Computer Society Press. One
author from each accepted paper is required to register as a full-fee
delegate and present the paper at the conference.

All submissions must be written in English and must be prepared in the
IEEE 8.5x11 inch two-column format
(http://www2.computer.org/portal/web/cscps). Manuscripts may not exceed
10 pages in length. Manuscript preparation in Latex is strongly
encouraged. Manuscripts are to be submitted electronically - see the
ASWEC 2010 submission page for further instructions.

Submissions due           16 Oct 2009
Acceptance notification   7 Dec 2009
Final versions due       11 Jan 2010

Industry Papers: The objective of industry papers is to discuss
experiences (both good and bad), obstacles, and lessons learned when
applying innovative software development practices in the 'real world'.
Experiences from practitioners provide valuable input into future
research directions and allow others to learn from successes and
failures. Industry papers are an important way of sharing experiences
between practitioners and of helping the software industry improve its
work practices.

Authors are invited to submit either extended abstracts (minimum 2
pages) or full papers (maximum 10 pages) describing practical
experiences in all areas of software engineering. Industry papers
should be based on actual practice, and should cover all aspects of the
experience - strengths and weaknesses, successes and challenges.
Submissions will be assessed on originality, clarity, significance and
relevance.

One author from each accepted industry paper is required to register as
a full-fee delegate and present the paper at the conference.
Manuscripts are to be submitted electronically - see the ASWEC 2010
submission page for further instructions.

Submissions due           7 Dec 2009
Acceptance notification  11 Jan 2010
Final versions due        8 Mar 2010

Tutorials and Workshops: Tutorial and Workshop proposals that have wide
appeal to the software engineering community are sought for ASWEC 2010.
Tutorials and workshops (half or full day) will run on the first day of
the conference. Please submit your proposals detailing the topic,
background, intended audience, anticipated number of attendees and
justification for this estimate, presenters and their affiliations,
along with anticipated time requirements following the guidelines on
the ASWEC 2010 tutorials and workshops page.

Proposals due             5 Oct 2009
Acceptance notification   7 Dec 2009
Confirmation of programme 8 Feb 2010
Final versions due        8 Mar 2010


Doctoral Symposium: The objective of the Doctoral Symposium is to give
doctoral students the opportunity to present their research and receive
advice and constructive feedback from research leaders. Current PhD
students are invited to submit their proposals and preliminary results.
The symposium will use a workshop format with a formal presentation by
students followed by discussion with the panel. Details for submission
are available from the ASWEC 2010 website.

Submissions due           7 Dec 2009
Acceptance notification  11 Jan 2010
Final versions due        8 Mar 2010


Topics of Interest: The Australian Software Engineering Conference is
dedicated to all aspects of software engineering. We welcome
contributions that address the theme "Engineering software for economic
growth" and other topics of interest including, but not limited to:

* Agile Methods in Practice
* Application-Specific Software for Logistics, Finance, Manufacturing, Defence, etc.
* Computer Supported Cooperative Software Engineering
* Configuration Management
* Empirical Research in Software Engineering
* Formal Methods
* Health Informatics System Development
* Knowledge-Based Software Engineering
* Large-Scale Distributed Software Engineering
* Legacy Systems and Software Maintenance
* Measurement, Metrics, Experimentation
* Model Driven Architectures
* Object and Component-Based Software Engineering
* Open Source Software Development
* Quality Assurance
* Real-Time and Embedded Software
* Requirements Engineering
* Software Architecture
* Software Design and Patterns
* Software Documentation
* Software Engineering Education
* Software Engineering Ontologies
* Software Engineering of Multi-Agent Systems
* Software Engineering of Web Services
* Software Inspection Approaches
* Software Modelling Approaches
* Software Performance Engineering
* Software Processes and Quality
* Software Project Management
* Software Re-use and Product Development
* Software Reverse Engineering
* Software Risk Management
* Software Security, Safety and Reliability
* Software Verification and Validation
* Software Vulnerabilities
* Standards and Legal Issues
* Testing, Analysis and Verification
* Tools and Processes for Distributed Multi-Site Software Engineering
* Usability
* Web Application Development
* Web Based Collaborative Environment

--
Organising Committee

General Chairs
Ewan Tempero, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Ian Warren, University of Auckland, New Zealand

Research Program Chairs
James Noble, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Colin Fidge, Queensland University of Technology, Australia

Industry Program Chairs
John Hosking, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Brad Long, Mincom Ltd, Australia

Tutorial Chairs
Brendon Woodford, University of Otago, New Zealand
Nigel Stanger, University of Otago, New Zealand

Workshop Chairs
Neville Churcher, Canterbury University, New Zealand
Warwick Irwin, Canterbury University, New Zealand

Doctoral Symposium Chair
Steve Reeves, University of Waikato, New Zealand

Local Arrangements Chair
Gillian Dobbie, University of Auckland, New Zealand

Publicity Chairs
Jens Dietrich, Massy University, New Zealand
Stuart Charters, Lincoln University, New Zealand

Sponsorship Chairs
Stephen McDonnell, AUT, New Zealand
Tony Clear, AUT, New Zealand

--
*******************************************
Dr Jens Dietrich
Senior Lecturer Computer Science
School of Engineering and Advanced Technology
Massey University
Palmerston North, New Zealand
Phone: +64 6 350 5799 ext 2212
Email: J.B.Dietrich@massey.ac.nz
Web: http://www-ist.massey.ac.nz/JBDietrich/
*******************************************

Call for Papers -
21st Australian Software Engineering Conference (ASWEC'2010)


Date: Fri, 17 Jul 2009 00:13:06 -0400
From: James Noble <kjx@ECS.VUW.AC.NZ>
Subject: [SEWORLD] CFP ASWEC 2010 - 21st Australian Software Engineering Conference
To: SEWORLD@LISTSERV.ACM.ORG

[ 207 lines deleted; see updated version above -- dc ]

[Ada-Belgium] To the Ada-Belgium home page.

Last update: 2010/03/05.

Dirk Craeynest