WELCOME TO PRACTICAL PRODUCT LINES 2009
October 20 & 21, Amsterdam NL
Update 22 October 2009 The conference is now over. Please contact us to be kept up to date on plans for next year's PPL conference.
Practical Product Lines 2009 is an ideal opportunity for software practitioners to learn how to create and operate Software Product Lines - families of similar-but-different software and embedded systems.
See the conference program. The conference language was English.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
This year's keynote speakers were Markus Völter (independent / itemis), Jan Bosch (Intuit Inc.), Dieter Rombach (Fraunhofer IESE) and Dirk-Jan Swagerman (FEI).
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Jan Bosch Software Product Lines: What got us here, won’t get us there Jan Bosch is VP, Engineering Process at Intuit Inc. Earlier, he was head of the Software and Application Technologies Laboratory at Nokia Research Center, Finland. Before joining Nokia, he headed the software engineering research group at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands, where he holds a professorship in software engineering. He received a MSc degree from the University of Twente, The Netherlands, and a PhD degree from Lund University, Sweden. His research activities include software architecture design, software product families, software variability management and component-oriented programming. He is the author of a book "Design and Use of Software Architectures: Adopting and Evolving a Product Line Approach" published by Pearson Education (Addison-Wesley & ACM Press), (co-)editor of several books and volumes in, among others, the Springer LNCS series and (co-)author of a significant number of research articles. He is editor for Science of Computer Programming, has been guest editor for journal issues, chaired several conferences as general and program chair, served on many program committees and organized numerous workshops. |
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Dieter Rombach Software Product Lines in Practice - A Fraunhofer Experience Report Dr. H. Dieter Rombach is a Full Professor in the Fachbereich Informatik (i.e., Department of Computer Science) at the Technische Universität Kaiserslautern, Germany. He holds a chair in software engineering, is executive and founding director of the Fraunhofer Institute for Experimental Software Engineering (IESE),. which aims at shortening the time needed for transferring research technologies into industrial practice. This Institute employs about 180 scientists, operates a sister institute at the University of Maryland, USA (about 25 scientists), and finances about 75% of its operating budget via industry projects. His research interests are in software methodologies, modeling and measurement of the software process and resulting products, software reuse, and distributed systems. In addition, he is a member of the board of the overall Fraunhofer organization. In that role he chairs the ICT group (13 institutes, 3000 scientists) of Fraunhofer. Results of his research are documented in more than 150 publications in international journals and conference proceedings. He is co-author of the book entitled “A Handbook of Software and Systems Engineering: Empirical Observations, Laws and Theories” published by Addison Wesley, 2003. |
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Dirk-Jan Swagerman Platform diversity and Innovation in electron microscopes Dirk-Jan Swagerman works as a director of software engineering at FEI Company. His focus is currently on people management, software processes, outsourcing and helping to rationalize business decisions by providing objective metrics. Dirk-Jan drove the introduction of a global software process for FEI based on a pragmatic but robust cocktail of RUP, Agile SCRUM and test-driven development. He hugely enjoys the multi-site, multi-disciplinary and multi-market environment at FEI. In nearly 20 years experience he has filled software engineering, architecture, team leading and project leading roles in several different software environments. |
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Markus Völter Language Workbenches and Software Product Lines Markus Völter works as an independent consultant and coach for software technology and engineering for itemis Stuttgart. He focuses on software architecture, model-driven software development and domain specific languages as well as on product line engineering. Markus is (co-) author of many magazine articles, patterns and books on middleware and model-driven software development. He is a regular speaker at conferences world wide. Markus can be reached at voelter at acm dot org or via www.voelter.de. Read Markus's interview (Dutch only) on Product Lines and Model-Driven Software Development for Bits&Chips magazine |
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WHO'S PPL2009 FOR?
PPL2009 is for people who want to successfully apply or just learn more about the following topics:- Migrating legacy systems to Product Lines
- Model-Driven Software Development for Software Product Lines
- Product Line evolution
- Domain Analysis and Domain Engineering
- Agile methods for Software Product Lines
- Product Line Scoping, Requirements Engineering for Product Lines, Testing Software Product Lines, Variability Management etc.
- Tool and technology development and adoption
- Other topics related to the practical realisation of Software Product Lines
The focus throughout the event is on practical experience of these tools and technologies with a range of sessions from beginner to expert.
WHAT PEOPLE SAID ABOUT OUR PREVIOUS EVENTS
"The combined—for that matter, individual—expertise present was remarkable, and presented a tremendous opportunity for knowledge exchange."
"The presentations were all top quality, making it often difficult to decide between the concurrently running sessions. The wealth of ... knowledge present at the event was impressive, not only from the presenters, but from the other delegates as well."
"I enjoyed the conference very much, it has been the best conference of the last years I’ve been to. A very good selection of speakers, but I also think that the level of expertise of the audience was very high, much higher than I expected. ... it gives the opportunity to dig much deeper."
"... this time this has been the highest-quality conference on this topic that I've been to - and I've been to a few."
"I'll definitely try to attend next year and will recommend this conference to my colleagues and customers."
"...exhausting but thoroughly enjoyable and very informative"
"[A] great opportunity to meet with influential practitioners in the field."













