Chair: Shail Arora, IBM Object Technology Services
OOPSLA workshops are intensive collaborative sessions, where groups of object technologists meet to surface, discuss, and solve challenging problems facing the field. Workshops also provide the opportunity for representatives of a technical community to coordinate efforts and establish collective plans of action.
To ensure a sufficiently small group for effective interaction, workshop attendance is managed by the organizers. Prospective attendees typically are required to submit a short position paper outlining their opinions on an aspect of the workshop topic. Participants have been chosen based on the relevance of their position papers to the workshop theme.
Workshop presentations are at the discretion of the organizers but all attendees are expected to contribute to the discussion. After the workshop, the organizers are responsible for reporting results to the object community via a short paper in the Addendum of the proceedings.
Workshop organizers and participants must register for the conference for at least the day of their workshop. Workshop participants should check-in at the registration desk the evening before the workshop.
Sunday, 5 October 1997
(1) Java-based Paradigms for Mobile Agent
Facilities
(2) Exploring Large System Issues
(3) Reuse in the Classroom: Classifying and
Sharing O-O Course Materials
(4) Garbage Collection and Memory Management
(5) Overcoming Cultural Barriers to the Adoption
of Object Technology
(6) Dependable Distributed Object Systems
(7) Resources for Early Object Design Education
(8) System Envisioning
(9) Doing your first OO project: OO Education
Issues in Industry and Academia
(10) OO Process and Metrics for Effort Estimation
(11) Non-Software Examples of Software Design
Patterns
(12) Object-Oriented Design Quality
(13) Developing Successful Object-Oriented
Frameworks
(14) Bridging the Gap between Design and Implementation:
Object-Oriented Modeling with an Eye Towards Implementation
(15) OO Technology for the Insurance Industry
(16) Object Metrics and Estimation Process
Workshop
Monday, 6 October 1997
(17) Object Technology and Product Lines:
What's the Connection?
(18) CORBA and the WWW
(19) From Objects to Agents
(20) Collaboration in the object development
lifecycle
(21) Experiences Using Object Data Management
in the Real-World
(22) Patterns Mining - Domain Analysis (Where
Art and Science Meet?)
(23) OO Product Metrics
(24) Requirements Engineering: Use Cases and
More
(25) Object Oriented Technology for Service,
System and Network Management
(26) Object Technology, Architectures, and
Domain Analysis - What's the Connection? - Is there a Connection?
(27) OO behavioral Semantics (with an Emphasis
on Semantics of large OO Business Specifications)
(28) Business Modeling for OT systems
(29) Patterns in Software Architecture
(30) Business Object Design and Implementation
III
(31) Evolving Software in Large Scale Persistent
Systems
(32) Use Cases and Business Rules: Styles
of Documenting Business Rules in Use Cases
(33) OO Project Management
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