Home   
  Services   
    OpenVMS  
    Windows   
    Printers  
    PostScript  
    Architectures  
    Networks  
    Embedded Systems  
  Presentations  
    IEEE  
     Vermont  
      September 2005  
        Software Architecture  
  Publications  
  Articles  
  Bookstore  
 
Architectural Techniques for Interoperability and Coexistence

Ensuring long useful lives for hardware and software systems with the inevitable expansions, upgrades, and previously unconsidered interconnections to other systems is an architectural function. The results can be positive, resulting in long, low-cost system life, or negative leading to a system with significant limitations.

Often neglected are the architectural techniques and concepts, both in terms of what behaviors are specified, and in terms of what areas are left open. The impact of these areas on the longevity of the system life cycle is often not well appreciated.

We will examine how successful architectures have achieved longevity without major incompatible changes. In the end analysis, success for architecture is measured by its ability to assimilate changes in mission, implementation, interconnection, and scope without the need for incompatible changes. Put succinctly, 20 years into an architecture, success is measured by the ability of systems implemented on Day One to interoperate unchanged with systems implemented on Day 20369.

Speaker: Our speaker will be Robert Gezelter, a Senior Member of IEEE and a member of the IEEE Computer Society’s Distinguished Visitors Program. Mr. Gezelter holds BA and MS degrees in Computer Science from New York University. He is a contributor to the Computer Security Handbook (2002) and the Handbook of Information Security (2005). He has spoken and written extensively on operating systems, networks, performance, security, tools, and similar areas.

Mr. Gezelter is in private practice, and maintains his offices in Flushing, New York. He can be contacted via his firm’s www site at http://www.rlgsc.com.

Sponsors: IEEE Green Mountain Section and Computer Society
University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont
Venue: University of Vermont, Votey, Room 322
Date: Tuesday, September 27, 2005
Time: 12:20 PM to 1:20 PM
Press Release: http://www.rlgsc.com/ieee/Vermont/2005-09/PressRelease.pdf
Reservations: Byung Suk Lee bslee-at-cems.uvm.edu, Subject: IEEE DVP RSVP
Session Notes: http://www.rlgsc.com/ieee/Vermont/2005-09/swarch.html

Questions to: webmaster@removethis.rlgsc.com