Features
- Cover Type: Hard Cover with 561 pages
- Published by: Springer
- Edition: 1st Edition August 30, 2007
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 3540716483
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-3540716488
-
Book Dimensions:
9.4 x 6.2 x 1.3 inches
- Weighs: 2.4 pounds
Product Review
"People who design and develop software like to call themselves software 'engineers'. Yet few organizations have really institutionalized measurement of their products and processes, surely the most basic requirement of any engineering discipline. A partial excuse is that the field of software metrics struggles to keep up with the fast-evolving field of software development. This book is bang up-to-date in both fields and packed with practical advice. For every software 'engineer'." - Charles R. Symons, SMS Ltd., London, UK
"Looking on the book contents, size, additional expert authors, etc. I think it will become 'the' great source for software metrics in the next years; my congrat's!" - Marek Leszak, Alcatel-Lucent, Nuremberg, Germany
"Congratulations for this great work - you did major improvements to the book which we used in our teaching in software measurement at our university." - Alain Abran, École de technologie supérieure, Montréal, Canada
"Your book on software measurement is one of the clearest, most concise, and most well written books on this subject. It is an invaluable contribution to the industry and it has been of great help to us in formulating IT Strategy." - Michael Milutis, Director CAI, Allentown, PA, USA
Product Description
Our world and our society are shaped and increasingly governed by software. Since
software is so ubiquitous and embedded in nearly everything we are doing, we need to stay in control. We have to make sure that the systems and their
software are running as we intend - or better.
software measurement is the discipline that assures that we stay in control.
In this volume, Ebert and Dumke provide a comprehensive introduction to
software measurement. They detail knowledge and experiences about
software measurement in an easily understood, hands-on presentation. Brief references are embedded from world-renown experts such as Alain Abran, Luigi Buglione, Manfred Bundschuh, David N. Card, Ton Dekkers, Robert L. Glass, David A. Gustafson, Marek Leszak, Peter Liggesmeyer, Andreas Schmietendorf, Harry Sneed, Charles Symons, Ruediger Zarnekow and Horst Zuse. Many examples and case studies are provided from Global 100 companies such as Alcatel-Lucent, Atos Origin, Axa, Bosch, Deloitte, Deutsche Telekom, Shell, Siemens and Vector Consulting.
This combination of methodologies and applications makes the book ideally suited for both professionals in the
software industry and for scientists looking for benchmarks and experiences. Besides the many practical hints and checklists readers will also appreciate the large reference list, which includes links to metrics communities where project experiences are shared. Further information, continuously updated, can also be found on the Web site related to this book: http://metrics.cs.uni-magdeburg.de/.
Reader ReviewsJust looking at the table of contents it is possible to observe a 360°view on Software Measurement, facing the process view as well as specific techniques for a real and effective software process improvement where different audiences can take each its own informative advantage. The 'experts' box' inserted in each chapter provided a further value, proposing some complementary issues for such contents. So, a 'must-have' book!