4 | -- | 0 | . Article Summaries |
5 | -- | 7 | Steve McConnell. I Know What I Know |
8 | -- | 12 | . Failure or Success? |
14 | -- | 15 | Donald J. Reifer. A Little Bit of Knowledge Is a Dangerous Thing |
16 | -- | 18 | Chris Rupp. Requirements and Psychology |
20 | -- | 21 | Martin Fowler. Yet Another Optimization Article |
22 | -- | 24 | Dave Thomas, Andy Hunt. Mock Objects |
26 | -- | 38 | Ioana Rus, Mikael Lindvall. Guest Editors Introduction: Knowledge Management in Software Engineering |
40 | -- | 42 | Jay Liebowitz. A Look at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center s Knowledge Management Initiatives |
43 | -- | 45 | Andreas Birk, Torgeir Dingsøyr, Tor Stålhane. Postmortem: Never Leave a Project without It |
46 | -- | 49 | Kurt Schneider, Jan-Peter von Hunnius, Victor R. Basili. Experience in Implementing a Learning Software Organization |
50 | -- | 52 | Balasubramaniam Ramesh. Process Knowledge Management with Traceability |
53 | -- | 55 | Shivram Ramasubramanian, Gokulakrishnan Jagadeesan. Knowledge Management at Infosys |
56 | -- | 59 | Chih-Ping Wei, Paul Jen-Hwa Hu, Hung-Huang Chen. Design and Evaluation of a Knowledge Management System |
60 | -- | 62 | Seija Komi-Sirviö, Annukka Mäntyniemi, Veikko Seppänen. Toward a Practical Solution for Capturing Knowledge for Software Projects |
63 | -- | 69 | Sheila Guilford, Gordon Rugg, Niall Scott. Pleasure and Pain: Perceptual Bias and Its Implications for Software Engineering |
70 | -- | 77 | Gerald Ebner, Hermann Kaindl. Tracing All Around in Reengineering |
78 | -- | 83 | Michael Guntersdorfer, David G. Kay. How Software Patents Can Support COTS Component Business |
84 | -- | 87 | Carlos H. C. Duarte. Brazil: Cooperative Development of a Software Industry |
88 | -- | 89 | John Steven. Putting Software Terminology to the Test |
90 | -- | 92 | Carol A. Long. Can Project Management Be Extreme Too? |
93 | -- | 95 | Ware Myers. Ivar Jacobson: Shaping Software Development |
98 | -- | 100 | Greg Goth. A New Era for Research and Development? |
103 | -- | 104 | Robert L. Glass. The Naturalness of Object Orientation: Beating a Dead Horse? |