WEBINAR
This Webinar is related to the following area(s) of work:
ResearchPublished: April 2012
About the Presentation
The Architecture-Centric
Engineering team at the Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute
(SEI) has been extending its research from software architectures into
the realms of software reliant system architectures, and
system-of-systems and enterprise architectures. This work has focused on
extending the principles of the SEI Quality Attribute Workshop and the
SEI Architecture Tradeoff Analysis Method (ATAM) to develop methods
applicable to larger scale architectures. We believe that enterprise
architecture is critical to achieving business goals and that
architectures are shaped by quality attribute requirements. So in this
presentation we consider the following questions: How do we efficiently
translate business goals into quality attribute requirements? How do we
ensure that these quality attribute requirements are reflected in the
tradeoffs and decisions that shaped the EA? We will begin by reviewing
the SEI perspective on architecture-centric engineering. Next, we
discuss how that approach scales from its original software context
through systems and systems of systems. Lastly, we review the SEI
methods applicable to systems and systems of systems, and finally
propose how those methods can be extended to apply to enterprise
architectures.
About the Speaker
John has
over 20 years experience developing systems and software. He joined SEI
in 2008. Before joining SEI, John was a chief architect at Avaya, Inc.
There his responsibilities included development of multimodal agents,
architectures for communication analytics, and the creation and
enhancement of the Customer Interaction Software Product Line
architecture. Prior to that, John was a software architect at Quintus,
where he designed the first commercially successful multi-channel
integrated contact center product and led the technology integration of
the product portfolio as Quintus acquired several other companies.
Before joining Quintus, John worked for several companies in the video
conferencing and video networking industry. He began his professional
career at Raytheon, where he developed hardware and software solutions
for radar signal processing, multi-spectral image processing, and
parallel processing architectures and algorithms.
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