SIGSOFT Annual Report
July 2000 - June 2001
Submitted by: David Notkin, Chair
SIGSOFT has had another strong year, and we are well-positioned to hand
off the leadership to our newly elected slate of officers.
On the awards front, we continued to make our annual service and research
awards. This year's ACM SIGSOFT Distinguished Service Award was presented
to Kouichi Kishida, who has served the software engineering community
in many ways (including opening up many of the relationships between Japan
and the remainder of the software engineering community). This year we
awarded the Outstanding Research Awards to Michael Jackson. The awards
were announced at ICSE 2001 in Toronto, with the presentation to Mr. Kishida
taking place; Mr. Jackson will receive his award at ESEC/FSE in September
2001 as part of his keynote address. We also continued to award the Most
Influential Paper from ICSE N-10, which this year went to the ICSE-11
paper "Tolerating Inconsistency", authored by Bob Balzer. We made a number
of awards to students for travel support to SIGSOFT-sponsored conferences,
under our CAPS program; indeed, for ICSE 2001 in Toronto we increased
our awards to handle much more of the demand. As is common, several of
the new ACM Fellows are members of SIGSOFT.
We have one specific issue with respect to awards that needs to be handled.
Several years ago the SIGSOFT Executive Committee agreed to have Program
Committees name up to 10% of the papers from conferences as Distinguished
Papers; we have, however, never put this decision into action. We plan
to do so this year, also understanding that we need to clear this through
the ACM awards committee. We have made significant progress on making
the award nomination process more visible and active: indeed, the research
award was awarded in part due to a well-prepared and effective nomination
that was received.
We have been involved this year in a number of significant and innovative
programs.
--Our major conferences continue to be strong. FSE 2000 was held in
San Diego, with a leadership team of John Knight (general chair) and David
Rosenblum (program chair). ICSE 2001 was held in Toronto --- our first
time in Canada --- with a leadership team of Hausi Mueller (general chair)
and Mary Jean Harrold and Wilhelm Schaefer (program co-chairs). ISSTA
2000 was held in Portland, Oregon, with Debra Richardson as general chair
and Mary Jean Harrold as program chair. All three conferences were highly
successful both programmatically and financially.
--FSE 2001 will be joint with the European Software Engineering Conference
(ESEC) in Vienna in September 2001, as the first of our three negotiated
conferences under our Joint Sponsorship Agreement. Volker Gruhn is the
program chair, and A. Min Tjoa is the general chair. FSE 2002 will be
in Charleston, S.C., with Mary Lou Soffa as general chair and Bill Griswold
as program chair.
--ICSE 2002 will be in Buenos Aires Argentina, with Will Tracz as general
chair and Michal Young and Jeff Magee as program co-chairs. ICSE 2003
will be in Portland, with Lori Clarke as general chair and Laurie Dillon
and Walter Tichy as program co-chairs. ICSE 2004 will be in Edinburgh
Scotland, with Anthony Finkelstein as general chair and David Rosenblum
and Jacky Estublier as program co-chairs.
--We held our third joint PASTE (Program Analysis for Software Tools
and Engineering) workshop jointly with SIGPLAN, with the workshop collocated
with PLDI '01 in Snowbird. We have also identified a set of SIGSOFT and
SIGPLAN conferences that have been set up for ongoing in-cooperation-with
status.
--Will Tracz has continued to make our newsletter, SEN, stronger
and stronger. With new columns, new blood, and lots of energy, SEN
is a great member benefit for SIGSOFT.
--We worked closely with the publications board and staff, ensuring
an orderly transition of the editor-in-chief of ACM Transactions on
Software Engineering and Methodology from Axel van Lamsweerde's to
Carlo Ghezzi.
One major goal in the next year is to simultaneously increase interactions
with other SIGs while also trying to regularize our conferences and conference
schedule. Another major goal, which we share with other SIGs and the ACM
overall, is to continue to try to understand what value we should provide
to our members to ensure that SIGSOFT is an organization that people want
to be members of. |