Features
- Cover Type: Hard Cover with 601 pages
- Published by: Wiley-IEEE Press January 28, 2008
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 0471274550
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-0471274551
-
Book Dimensions:
9.3 x 6.3 x 1.4 inches
- Weighs: 2.2 pounds
Product Review
"When Ed Yourdon says that this is possible the 'best
software engineering book' of the year, and possible the decade, one can hardly argue." (
Ubiquity, June 10-16, 2008)
Product Review
This book is a critically important, timely and exciting contribution to
software project management. In the last two decades, the application of System Dynamics to model and study the
software development process has added significantly to our understanding of the complexities of
software project dynamics. Transferring the lessons learned into practice has heretofore been hampered by the insufficiency of accessible teaching materials. Now, Ray Madachy has given us a major and much needed new textbook in his
software Process Dynamics.
Madachy's book is a comprehensive compilation of the wisdom and knowledge gathered over more than twenty years of research in the field, and contains a wealth of material covering all important aspects of
software project dynamics. Because many of the concepts are accompanied by example models, Madachy has provided the practitioner with the building blocks and the tools to move ahead. This book is a gift to
software project managers everywhere.
-Dr. Tarek Abdel-Hamid, Professor in the Graduate School of Business and Public Policy at the Naval Postgraduate School, author of software Project Dynamics and pioneer in the field. One of the best techniques for reasoning about the effects of complex interacting changes is the System Dynamics modeling framework that Ray Madachy presents in this book. As I’ve found in numerous applications of the method, it enables project personnel to model such effects and run the models to better understand the implications of candidate project strategies and decisions. His modeling experience as a technical leader in diverse organizations have given him a broad and deep perspective on the critical success factors for modeling various classes of
software decision situations, while his teaching and research has enabled him to develop an integrating framework that makes system dynamics modeling much easier and cost-effective to learn and apply.
Overall, the book brings together a awesome amount of useful process modeling material and experience in using it in practical
software decision situations. It organizes this material into a unifying framework that makes it easier to apply and explain, and illustrates it with a wide variety of useful examples. I believe that the book will serve as a standard reference for the
software process dynamics field and a great help to practitioners and researchers for a good long time.
-Dr. Barry Boehm, Professor in the Computer Science and Industrial and Systems Engineering Departments at the University of Southern California, Director of the USC Center for Systems and software Engineering, a member of the National Academy of Engineering, a Fellow of ACM and IEEE, and pioneer in several areas of systems and software engineering Ray Madachy's new book is not only the best
software engineering book of 2007, but quite possibly the most important book of this entire first decade of the 21st century. Many of us were excited by the possibilities of system dynamics modeling and simulation of
software projects and processes in 1991 based on the important book
Software Project Dynamics by Tarek Abdel-Hamid. But it was ahead of its time, and it didn't incorporate many of the real-world issues and problems confronted by today's project managers. Madachy updates Adbel-Hamid's initial work with discussions of object-oriented methods, agile processes, open-source development, and distributed global development; and he also incorporates the best thinking of
software cost models such as COCOMO II.
Project managers, IT executives, and CIO's often wring their hands and ask why
software development can't be more of an engineering discipline, rather than a completely unpredictable form of witchcraft. Now there's an answer, courtesy of Ray Madachy: serious, metrics-based modeling and simulation of
software development. Along with a few other gems like Fred Brooks' "The Mythical Man-Month," I predict that "Software Process Dynamics" is going to be one of those key books that
every software engineer, and
every IT manager, has on his or her desk.
-Ed Yourdon, internationally recognized consultant, author of Death March and over 27 other computer related books, IEEE and ACM member, and one of the most influential people in the software field
Reader ReviewsHaving been around software process engineering for over 15 years it is nice to see it presented with a dynamic view, instead of the common static view. It doesn't claim to be the next silver bullet, but it does do a great job of putting all the silver bullets to come about over the past several years in their place. It offers a refreshing realistic view on the state of software processes, and then moves into how to capture their essence with simulation software and system dynamics. The author makes it clear that the book defines system dynamics as a methodology to implement systems thinking and leverage learning efforts. The book also discusses discrete-event simulation, and the trade-offs throughout. SEI just published a good paper on discrete-event simulation and using it to gauge CMMI levels of a given process. Google for "Moving Up the CMMI Capability and Maturity Levels Using Simulation". The book also does a great job of relating simulation to the CMM levels. The overall theme is not one of predictions, but rather one of learning and deeper insight into software processes. The author clearly defines and explains the different contexts of process model. He explains it as it is used for simulation, life-cycles (waterfall, RUP, WinWin, MBASE, agile, etc.), and frameworks (CMMI, Six Sigma, etc.). The first chapter of the book is available on the Wiley web site. It contains a lot of great information. The author also has a book site that I have noticed being updated over the past couple of weeks. The book is very well written and it has a nice logical flow to it. I would recommend this book to anyone involved with software engineering. Project Managers, Architects, and Developers all stand to gain from it's insight.