The Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute (SEI) announced that Terry W. Roberts recently joined the SEI in its Arlington, Va., office as executive director of the Acquisition Support Program (ASP)/Interagency & Cyber. Ms. Roberts leads SEI customer support for the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Intelligence Community, and the federal government, with a special focus on network security and acquisition in today's cyber environment and architecture areas.
SEI Celebrates 100,000th Student Trained in Introduction to CMMI
Today, the Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute (SEI) announced that Peta-Lee Wainer of Dariel Solutions in South Africa became the 100,000th individual trained in the Capability Maturity Model Integration, or CMMI. Wainer received her training from SEI Partners Barry Dwolatzky and Lance Stewart of the Johannesburg Centre for Software Engineering (JCSE) in South Africa.
CERT Releases New Tool to Reduce ActiveX Vulnerabilities
CERT announces the release of Dranzer, an open source tool that software developers can use to test code for certain kinds of ActiveX vulnerabilities before software products are released to the public.
SEI Announces Member Award Winners at SEPG North America 2009
The three members are the recipients of the Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute (SEI) Member Awards for leadership in the fields of software and systems engineering. The awards were presented Tuesday at the SEPG North America 2009 conference. The SEI is the only one of the 37 FFRDCs to offer membership to the public.
SEI and IBM Launch Smart Grid Framework
The SEI is now the steward of the Smart Grid Maturity Model. The model was developed by IBM, and its ownership has been transferred to the SEI for its ongoing development and dissemination.
SEI To Host Conference On Architecture At All Scales
Architecture practitioners and experts from around the world will convene at the fifth annual SEI Architecture Technology User Network (SATURN) Conference to exchange best architecture-centric practices in developing, acquiring, and maintaining software-intensive systems.