IEEE Software
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
IEEE Software is a broad-based practitioner-oriented magazine of IEEE Computer Society targeting software professionals, including business analysts, requirements engineers, designers, architects, developers, process improvement experts, testers, quality engineers, and project managers. It features peer-reviewed articles, special focus sections, regular columns by prominent authors, technology news, experience reports, and opinion pieces. The topics it covers include software processes and practices, software project management, development tools and infrastructure, requirements engineering, software design and architecture, empirical evaluations of software technologies and techniques, human and social aspects of software development, programming languages and paradigms, development of distributed and enterprise software, software testing and software quality.
The following individuals have served the magazine as the editor in chief:[1]
- Bruce Shriver, 1983–1986
- Ted Lewis, 1987–1990
- Carl Chang, 1991–1994
- Alan M. Davis, 1995–1998
- Steve McConnell, 1999–2002
- Warren Harrison, 2003–2006
- Hakan Erdogmus, 2007-2010
[edit] Notes and References
- ^ Warren Harrison (2003). "Our 20th Anniversary". IEEE Software 20 (6): 5–7. http://csdl2.computer.org/comp/mags/so/2003/06/s6005.pdf.
- ^ Scott Laningham (2007). "developerWorks Interviews: IEEE Software Magazine's Hakan Erdogmus". IBM developerWorks podcast. http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/podcast/dwi/cm-int120507.html.
- ^ Hakan Erdogmus (2009). "IEEE Software's 25th-Anniversary Top Picks". IEEE Software 26 (1): 9–11. doi:. http://www2.computer.org/cms/Computer.org/ComputingNow/archive/software/SoftwareTopPicks.pdf.

