@article{citeulike:844703, title = {Merging project planning and Web enabled dynamic workflow technologies}, author = {F. Maurer and B. Dellen and F. Bendeck and S. Goldmann and H. Holz and B. Kotting and M. Schaaf}, journal = {Internet Computing, IEEE}, number = 3, pages = {65--74}, volume = 4, year = 2000, url = {http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=845392}, id = {844703}, priority = {0}, description = {Cites from CiteULike}, abstract = {The MILOS system supports dynamic coordination of distributed software development teams by integrating project planning and workflow technologies over the Internet. The three-tiered Java architecture enables plan refinements to be made on the fly, and a change management component automatically creates traceability relationships between project entities}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/265c0be285618042715a5d9a8c07eeba4/fcalefato}, keywords = {distributed-software-development, gsd, project-change-management, milos, workflow} } @inproceedings{citeulike:1022639, title = {Identification of coordination requirements: implications for the Design of collaboration and awareness tools}, address = {New York, NY, USA}, author = {Marcelo Cataldo and Patrick A. Wagstrom and James D. Herbsleb and Kathleen M. Carley}, booktitle = {CSCW '06: Proceedings of the 2006 20th anniversary conference on Computer supported cooperative work}, journal = {Computer Supported Cooperative Work, 2006, CSCW '06. 20th anniversary Conference on}, pages = {353--362}, publisher = {ACM Press}, year = 2006, url = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1180875.1180929}, id = {1022639}, priority = {5}, isbn = {1595932496}, doi = {10.1145/1180875.1180929}, description = {Cites from CiteULike}, abstract = {Task dependencies drive the need to coordinate work activities. We describe a technique for using automatically generated archi-val data to compute coordination requirements, i.e., who must coordinate with whom to get the work done. Analysis of data from a large software development project revealed that coordina-tion requirements were highly volatile, and frequently extended beyond team boundaries. Congruence between coordination re-quirements and coordination activities shortened development time. Developers, particularly the most productive ones, changed their use of electronic communication media over time, achieving higher congruence. We discuss practical implications of our technique for the design of collaborative and awareness tools.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/22f4651cdfbbaeee8257d84de9296032c/fcalefato}, keywords = {gsd, ditributed, coordination, collaboration, reticollab0607 awareness,} } @inproceedings{citeulike:1122776, title = {Sysiphus: Enabling informal collaboration in global software development}, author = {B. Bruegge and A. H. Dutoit and T. Wolf}, journal = {Global Software Engineering, 2006. ICGSE '06. International Conference on}, pages = {139--148}, year = 2006, url = {http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=4031754}, id = {1122776}, priority = {3}, description = {Cites from CiteULike}, abstract = {In global software projects, informal communication across sites is severely hampered, making it difficult to disseminate implicit knowledge. Participants have a partial view of the overall organization, do not have access to the complete rationale behind decisions, and when changes arise, participants from other sites are surprised. Consequently, issues that could be clarified almost immediately require days until the relevant stakeholders are identified, the issues are understood, and a resolution is agreed upon. We focus on the specific problem of externalizing issues with their context, stakeholders, and organizational roles in distributed settings. The challenge is to capture sufficient knowledge as a side effect of development, while structuring it for long-term use. We describe SYSIPHUS, a distributed environment providing a uniform framework for system models, collaboration artifacts, and organizational models. SYSIPHUS encourages participants to make communication and issues explicit in the context of system models and become aware of relevant stakeholders.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2837d9fafa7be40070a00ccb600aa3c92/fcalefato}, keywords = {gsd, reticollab0607} } @article{citeulike:1204890, title = {An exploratory study of facilitation in distributed requirements engineering}, author = {Daniela E. Damian and Armin Eberlein and Mildred L. G. Shaw and Brian R. Gaines}, journal = {Requirements Engineering}, month = {February}, number = 1, pages = {23--41}, volume = 8, year = 2003, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00766-002-0164-7}, id = {1204890}, priority = {0}, doi = {10.1007/s00766-002-0164-7}, description = {Cites from CiteULike}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2889b19b8ee40f36b9aa92e5fe0d7e70a/fcalefato}, keywords = {cmc groupware, distributed-software-development, re, gsd, requirements, ditributed-teams,} }