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IEEE Software, Volume 16, 1999
Volume 16, Number 1, January/February 1999
- Terry Bollinger, Peter H. Beckman:

Linux on the Move - Guest Editors' Introduction. 30-35 - Evan Leibovitch:

The Business Case for Linux. 40-44 - Frank Hecker:

Setting Up Shop: The Business of Open-Source Software. 45-51 - Greg Perkins:

Culture Clash and the Road to World Domination. 80-84 - Jacob Hallén, Anders Hammarqvist, Fredrik Juhlin, Anders Chrigström:

Linux in the Workplace. 52-57 - Shahid H. Bokhari, Rafeequr Rehman:

Linux and the Developing World. 58-64 - Terry Bollinger:

Linux in Practice: An Overview of Applications. 72-79 - Juan-Mariano de Goyeneche, Elena Apolinario Fernández de Sousa:

Loadable Kernel Modules. 65-71
- Greg Wilson:

Soapbox - Is the Open-Source Community Setting a Bad Example? 23-25 - Roger Sessions:

Point - A Lesson from Palm Pilot. 36, 38 - Robert Young:

Counterpoint - Why Linux is Important to You. 37, 39 - Eric S. Raymond:

Interview - Linux and Open-Source Success. 85-89 - Robert L. Glass:

Loyal Opposition - Of Open Source, Linux...and Hype. 128
- Lawrence H. Putnam, Ware Myers:

Y2K Work Comes Down to the Wire. 90-96
- Andrew J. Nolan:

Learning from Success. 97-105 - Ryan Fleming:

A Fresh Perspective on Old Problems. 106-113
- Gerald M. Weinberg:

Egoless Programming (Excerpt from the Psychology of Computer Programming, Silver Anniversary Edition). 118-120
- Steve McConnell:

From the Editor - After the Gold Rush. 6-8 - Luke Hohmann:

Manager - Coaching the Rookie Manager. 16-19 - Larry Graham:

Softlaw - Legal Implications of Operating Systems. 20-22 - Karen Mackey:

Culture at Work - Give me a Break. 26-27 - Jeffrey M. Voas:

Quality Time - Protecting Against What? The Achilles Heel of Information Assurance. 28-29
Volume 16, Number 2, March/April 1999
- Karlheinz Kautz:

Making Sense of Measurement for Small Organizations. 14-20 - Ross Grable, Jacquelyn Jernigan, Casey Pogue, Dale Divis:

Metrics for Small Projects: Experiences at the SED. 21-29
- Peter Aiken, Ojelanki K. Ngwenyama

, Lewis Broome:
Reverse-Engineering New Systems for Smooth Implementation. 36-43 - Gilles Muller, Ulrik Pagh Schultz:

Harissa: A Hybrid Approach to Java Execution. 44-51 - Dror G. Feitelson

, Michael Naaman:
Self-Tuning Systems. 52-60 - Brian W. Kernighan, Rob Pike:

Excerpt from "The Practice of Programming": Finding Performance Improvements. 61-65
- Jørgen Bøegh, Stefano De Panfilis, Barbara A. Kitchenham

, Alberto Pasquini:
A Method for Software Quality Planning, Control, and Evaluation. 69-77
- Peter Sawyer, Ian Sommerville, Stephen Viller

:
Capturing the Benefits of Requirements Engineering. 78-85
- Brian W. Kernighan:

Interview: What Have You Learned Today? 66-68 - Dave Dorchester:

Soapbox - Why License Software Engineers? 101-103 - Robert L. Glass:

Loyal Opposition - On Design. 104-103
- Steve McConnell:

From The Editor - Software Engineering Principles. 6-8 - Joyce Statz:

Manager - Leverage Your Lessons. 30-32 - Larry Graham:

Softlaw - Act Quickly to Avoid Losing Patents. 33-35 - Johanna Rothman:

Culture At Work - Retrain Your Code Czar. 86-88 - Jeffrey M. Voas:

Quality Time - Does Untested Software Threaten Infrastructures? 89-90
Volume 16, Number 3, May/June 1999
- Andrew J. Bytheway:

Guest Editor's Introduction: Successful Software Projects and How to Achieve Them. 15-17 - John S. Reel:

Critical Success Factors in Software Projects. 18-23 - Shirley A. Becker, Mitchell L. Bostelman:

Aligning Strategic and Project Measurement Systems. 46-51 - Buford D. Tackett, Buddy Van Doren:

Process Control for Error-Free Software: A Software Success Story. 24-29 - Christopher P. Holland, Ben Light

:
A Critical Success Factors Model for ERP Implementation. 30-36 - Brian Fitzgerald

, Tom O'Kane:
A Longitudinal Study of Software Process Improvement. 37-45
- Wolfgang Strigel:

Guest Editor's Introduction: What's the Problem: Labor Shortage or Industry Practices? 52-54 - Capers Jones:

The Euro, Y2K, and the US Software Labor Shortage. 55-61 - Subroto Bagchi:

India's Software Industry: The People Dimension. 62-65 - Ahmed Seffah:

Training Developers in Critical Skills. 66-70
- Jörg Noack, Bruno Schienmann:

Introducing OO Development in a Large Banking Organization. 71-81 - Soumitra Dutta, Michael Lee, Luk N. Van Wassenhove:

Software Engineering in Europe: A Study of Best Practices. 82-90
- Ivar Jacobson, Grady Booch, James E. Rumbaugh:

Excerpt from "The Unified Software Development Process": The Unified Process. 96-102
- Robert L. Glass:

Loyal Opposition - A Snapshot of Systems Development Practice. 110-112
- Steve McConnell:

From the Editor - Y2K Countdown to Certification. 4-7 - Elisabeth Hendrickson:

Culture at Work - Signs of a Healthy Startup. 13-14 - Sue Petersen:

Manager - The Manager's Dance. 91-93 - Jeffrey M. Voas:

Quality Time - A US Government-Regulated Software Industry. 94-95 - Trinidad Arriola-Kern:

SoftLaw - Protecting Yourself from Y2K Questionnaires. 103-104
Volume 16, Number 4, July/August 1999
- Article Summaries. 4

- Steve McConnell:

From the Editor. 6-11
- Letters. 12-14

- Laszlo A. Belady:

Global R&D: How to Break Barriers. 15-17
- Alan W. Brown:

Mastering the Middleware Muddle. 18-21
- Jeffrey M. Voas:

Guest Editor's Introduction: Certification-Reducing the Hidden Costs of Poor Quality. 22-25
- Carolina Cruz-Neira, Robyn R. Lutz

:
Using Immersive Virtual Environments for Certification. 26-30
- Patricia Rodríguez-Dapena:

Software Safety Certification: A Multidomain Problem. 31-38
- Shukri Wakid, D. Richard Kuhn, Dolores R. Wallace:

Toward Credible IT Testing and Certification. 39-47 - Jeffrey M. Voas:

Certifying Software for High-Assurance Environments. 48-54
- William T. Councill:

Third-Party Testing and the Quality of Software Components. 55-57
- Timothy J. Shimeall, John J. McDermott:

Software Security in an Internet World: An Executive Summary. 58-61 - John R. Michener:

System Insecurity in the Internet Age. 62-69
- Robert J. Ellison, Richard C. Linger, Thomas A. Longstaff, Nancy R. Mead

:
Survivable Network System Analysis: A Case Study. 70-77 - Karl E. Wiegers:

Software Process Improvement in Web Time. 78-86
- Gregory Aharonian:

Does the Patent Office Respect the Software Community? 87-89
- Karen Mackey:

Stages of Team Development. 90-91
- Jonathan Lee, Nien-Lin Xue:

Analyzing User Requirements by Use Cases: A Goal-Driven Approach. 92-101 - Barry Keepence, Mike Mannion

:
Using Patterns to Model Variability in Product Families. 102-108
- In the News. 109-113

- George B. Durham:

Bookshelf. 114-117
- Robert L. Glass:

Cobol: A Historic Past, A Vital Future? 118-120
Volume 16, Number 5, September/October 1999
- Article Summaries. 4

- Steve McConnell:

Update on Professional Development. 6-8
- Letters. 10-14

- Robert D. Austin

:
The Phantom Menace. 15-18
- Larry Graham:

Trademarks and Potholes on the Superhighway. 19-21
- Ali Mili, Sherif M. Yacoub, Edward A. Addy, Hafedh Mili:

Toward an Engineering Discipline of Software Reuse. 22-31 - Thomas C. Jepsen, Steven Wright

, Richard L. Klevans, Ze Zhang:
Linux Update: An Experimental ATM Network. 32-39
- James Coplien:

Guest Editor's Introduction: Reevaluating the Architectural Metaphor-Toward Piecemeal Growth. 40-44 - Louis Perrochon, Walter Mann:

Inferred Designs. 46-51 - Steven A. Stolper:

Streamlined Design Approach Lands Mars Pathfinder. 52-62 - James D. Herbsleb, Rebecca E. Grinter:

Architectures, Coordination, and Distance: Conway's Law and Beyond. 63-70 - Christopher Alexander:

The Origins of Pattern Theory: The Future of the Theory, and the Generation of a Living World. 71-82
- George Yamamura:

Process Improvement Satisfies Employees. 83-85
- Liping Zhao

, Ted Foster:
Modeling Roles with Cascade. 86-93 - Hermann Kaindl

:
Difficulties in the Transition from OO Analysis to Design. 94-102
- Jesus Bisbal

, Deirdre Lawless, Bing Wu, Jane Grimson:
Legacy Information Systems: Issues and Directions. 103-111
- Karen Mackey:

Conscious Conflict. 112-113
- Don Willerton:

After the Curtain Was Pulled Away. 114-117
- Jeffrey M. Voas:

Software Quality's Eight Greatest Myths. 118-120
- Jon Louis Bentley:

Excerpt from Programming Pearls: The Back of the Envelope. 121-125
- In the News. 126-130

- Bookshelf. 131-133

- David Budgen

:
Software Design Methods: Life Belt or Leg Iron? 133-136
Volume 16, Number 6, November/December 1999
- Article Summaries. 4

- Brooks' Law Repealed. 6-8

- Letters. 9-12

- Steve McConnell, Leonard L. Tripp:

Guest Editors' Introduction: Professional Software Engineering-Fact or Fiction? 13-18 - David Lorge Parnas:

Software Engineering Programs Are Not Computer Science Programs. 19-30 - Gerald L. Engel:

Program Criteria for Software Engineering Accreditation Programs. 31-34 - Pierre Bourque, Robert Dupuis, Alain Abran

, James W. Moore, Leonard L. Tripp:
The Guide to the Software Engineering Body of Knowledge. 35-44 - John R. Speed:

What Do You Mean I Can't Call Myself a Software Engineer? 45-50 - James W. Moore:

An Integrated Collection of Software Engineering Standards. 51-57 - Donald Gotterbarn

:
How the New Software Engineering Code of Ethics Affects You. 58-64
- Dennis J. Frailey, Tom DeMarco:

Software Engineering Grows Up / It Ain't Broke, so Don't Fix It (Point/Counterpoint). 66-69
- Tom L. Roberts Jr.:

Why Can't We Implement This SDM? 70-71
- Laying the Groundwork for Success. 72-75

- William T. Councill:

Third-Party Testing and Stirrings of the New Software Engineering. 76-79
- Carl K. Chang, Mark J. Christensen:

A Net Practice for Software Project Management. 80-88
- Sridhar Anandakrishnan:

Penguins Everywhere: GNU/Linux in Antarctica. 90-96
- Merlin Dorfman:

Commercial versus Aerospace Worlds: Comparing Software Engineering Cultures. 97-100
- Terunobu Fujino:

Traditional Japanese Architecture Blends Beauty and Rationale. 101-103
- In the News. 104-108

- Yannis Skulikaris:

European Software Patents. 109-111
- Bookshelf. 112-114

- Michael Jackson:

Specializing in Software Engineering. 119-121

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