Standards for Systems and Software Engineering: What Works?
The virtualization and digitization of our global system of systems depends on, yet constantly resists, standardization. This webinar explores the need for standards in systems and software engineering, how they differ from IT product specifications, and how they help solve long-standing problems and enable new capabilities. From the extensive portfolio of 53 active S2ESC standards, with 26 under development and in revision, we'll dive into how key standards work. S2ESC has the earliest standards from the IEEE-CS that are still actively maintained (IEEE 730, Software Quality Assurance) and continues to seek new areas where standards have practical benefits. Foundational standard ISO/IEC/IEEE 12207:2017, Software life cycle processes, and the widely used IEEE 1012, System, Software and Hardware Verification and Validation, have changed since their initial publication over 25 years ago. New standard IEEE/IEC 82079-1, Preparation of Information for Use, has widespread applicability as a horizontal standard. We'll also preview two soon-to-be published standards with immediate applicability: IEEE 7000, Model Process for Addressing Ethical Concerns During System Design, and IEEE 2675, DevOps -- Standard for Building Reliable and Secure Systems Including Application Build, Package and Deployment.
Event Registration: https://event.on24.com/wcc/r/
Sponsor: IEEE CS Standards Activity Board (SAB)
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- Orlando, Florida
- United States
Speakers
Annette Reilly, Ph.D. of Lockheed Martin
Standards for Systems and Software Engineering: What Works?
Biography:
Annette Reilly, Ph.D., IEEE Senior Life Member and Computer Society Golden Core, CSEP-ACQ, PMP, STC Fellow, has served on the IEEE-CS Standards Activity Board since 2010 and the Systems and Software Engineering Standards Committee (S2ESC) since 2001. She has been the IEEE-CS Representative to ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC7, Systems and Software Engineering, since 2013. She has over 35 years of work in systems integration and system and software engineering standards development. Dr. Reilly is project lead, editor, or co-editor for a dozen standards, including ISO/IEC/IEEE 12207:2017 (software engineering processes), 15289 (four editions), 23026, 24765 [see ], 26511, 26512, 26513, 26514, 26515, 26531, 24774, 24748-3, IEEE P7000, and IEC/IEEE 82079-1, now a horizontal European standard. She retired in 2014 as a Senior Staff member from Lockheed Martin, where she held a variety of responsibilities for proposal management, engineering management, systems engineering, information management, and technical documentation. She received a B.A. from Rice University, a Ph.D. from Brandeis University, and an MIS from The George Washington University. She received the IEEE-CS Hans Karlsson Award in 2014.
Edward Addy of Northrop Grumman
Standards for Systems and Software Engineering: What Works?
Biography:
Edward Addy, PhD, PMP is an IEEE Senior Member and has been active in standards development since 2005. He is currently serving as Chair of the IEEE-CS Software and Systems Engineering Standards Committee (S2ESC) and as Chair of the P1012 Working Group (Standard for Verification and Validation for Systems, Software and Hardware). He is Vice-Chair of the IEEE-CS Member and Geographic Activities Awards and Recognition Committee and has recently been appointed as the IEEE Technical Activities Board representative to the IEEE-USA Awards and Recognition Committee. He has also served as IEEE-CS representative to the IEEE Systems Council. Dr. Addy is a Senior Staff Systems Engineer with Northrop Grumman, where he has worked for more than 30 years in a range of domain areas, including network communications, distributed training, weapon control systems, NASA space flight systems, and financial and information systems. Prior to joining Northrop Grumman he spent ten years in mathematics and physics education at secondary and undergraduate levels and as an officer in the U.S. Navy. He has published in the areas of system assurance, software product lines and software safety, including as co-author of Reuse-based Software Engineering: Techniques, Organization, and Measurement, John Wiley & Sons, 1999. He received a PhD in computer science from West Virginia University, an M.A. in mathematics from Wake Forest University, and a B.S. in mathematics education from Michigan State University.