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IWSECO 2012: The Fourth International
Workshop on Software Ecosystems
18th of June 2012 - Boston,
Massachusetts
Co-located with the Fourth
International Conference on Software Business
CALL FOR PAPERS
After three successful workshops (2009, 2010, 2011) IWSECO
continues its world tour to Boston, MA, in 2012. Due to its more
business oriented nature, this year we seek submissions
specifically geared towards governance and coordination mechanisms
for software ecosystems.
Software vendors no longer function as independent units, where
all customers are end-users, where there are no suppliers, and
where all software is built in-house. Instead, software vendors
have become networked, i.e., software vendors are depending on
(communities of) service and software component suppliers,
value-added-resellers, and pro-active customers who build and
share customizations. Software vendors now have to consider their
strategic role in the software ecosystem to survive. With their
role in the software ecosystems in mind, software vendors can
become more successful by opening up their business, devising new
business models, forging long-lasting relationships with
partnership networks, and overcoming technical and social
challenges that are part of these innovations.
The focus of the first workshop was the definition of the
research field. The second workshops focus was the ideal
architecture of a software platform. The third workshop on
software ecosystems focused on the modeling of software
ecosystems. This fourth workshop we intend to talk about managing
ecosystems, i.e., how to manage a network of partners, developers,
service deliverers, and other third parties that play a role in
the software ecosystem. Typically, software vendors have several
instruments available to them for managing their ecosystem, such
as the creation of partnership models or the introduction of
component and service certification. The effects of these
decisions on the software ecosystem have not yet been made
measurable, which can be considered one of the main challenges of
the field of software ecosystems. We welcome submissions that
specifically address this topic.
A software ecosystem is a set of actors functioning as a unit
and interacting with a shared market for software and services,
together with the relationships among them. These relationships
are frequently underpinned by a common technological platform or
market and operate through the exchange of information, resources
and artifacts. Several challenges lie in the research area of
software ecosystems. To begin with, insightful and scalable
modeling techniques for software ecosystems currently do not
exist. Furthermore, methods are required that enable software
vendors to transform their legacy architectures to accommodate
reusability of internal common artifacts and external components
and services. Finally, methods are required that support software
vendors in choosing survival strategies in software ecosystems.
The Workshop on Software Ecosystems aims to further increase
the body of knowledge in this specific area of software reuse and
software engineering by providing a forum to exchange ideas and
discuss state-of-the-art results. It will build and shape the
community of leading practitioners and research experts. Given the
relevance of software ecosystems, and the rather unexplored
scientific and industry contribution in this field, the workshop
will deliver a state-of-the-practice overview of the available
knowledge on software ecosystems, as well as an overview of
challenges for further research.
* Relevant Topics *
Submitted papers shall address topics of interest to software
ecosystems and software business. Topics of interest include, but
are certainly not limited to:
-Organizational openness
-Two and N-sided markets
-Application Stores
-Strategic benefits analyses of ecosystem management
-Partner management
-Software development governance
-Software ecosystem modeling
-Software ecosystem practices and experience
-Software business models
-Product software and software licensing
-Economic impact of software ecosystems
-Software ecosystem creation
-Keystone and niche player survival strategies
-Formal modeling of business models
-Architectural implications of reusability
-API development
-Publishing APIs
-Software product management
-Software product lines
-Software development community management
-Software ecosystem orchestration
-Market-specific domain engineering
-Open source software ecosystems
-Virtualized software enterprises
-API compatibility over subsequent releases
* Workshop proceedings *
We have no specific information about the publisher, but we are
looking for IEEE or ACM support. We are in search of a scientific
journal for publishing of extended and revised versions of the
best papers. In previous years papers have been published using
CEUR-WS or ACM.
* Paper preparation, submission and evaluation *
We welcome both research and industry papers to IWSECO. They
must be original and not submitted to or accepted by any other
conference or journal. To encourage industrial participation we
also welcome short industry papers and case studies. Papers should
be submitted in electronic form (PDF) using EasyChair at
https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=iwseco2012
. Papers must be formatted using the LNBIP style and can fill a
maximum of 12 pages.
* Objective *
IWSECO 2012 pursues the following objectives:
- Build upon the body of knowledge in software ecosystems, and
identify challenges and future avenues for research relevant for
both academia and industry.
- Establish software ecosystems as a research field within the
greater field of software engineering, software management, and
software reuse.
- Provide to software product managers and researchers a
dedicated forum for exchanging ideas and best practices and thus
foster industry-academia collaboration.
- The field of software ecosystems is rather unexplored both
from scientific and industrial perspectives. This mandates IWSECO
to participate in bringing researchers and industrial
representatives together, for the purpose of exchanging ideas, but
also to iteratively set the research agenda based on industry
needs. The IWSECO 2012 workshop aims at continuing to increase the
body of knowledge for software ecosystems by providing a forum to
exchange ideas and publish research results. It will build and
shape the community of leading practitioners and research experts.
* Organizing Committee *
Carina Frota Alves Federal University of Pernambuco, Brazil (
cfa@cin.ufpe.br)
* Steering Committee *
* Important dates *
15 April 2012: Deadline for workshop submissions
15 May 2012: Notification of authors
1 June 2012: Camera-ready papers due
18 June 2012: The International Workshop on Software
Ecosystems
All deadlines are 23:59 Apia, Samoa time
--
Slinger Jansen (Roijackers)
Utrecht University
http://www.slingerjansen.nl
0031 6 19 884 880