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Workshops on Enabling Technologies: Infrastracture for Collaborative Enterprises 

About: Workshops on Enabling Technologies: Infrastracture for Collaborative Enterprises is an academic conference. The conference publishes majorly in the area(s): Collaborative software & Grid computing. Over the lifetime, 1595 publications have been published by the conference receiving 19470 citations.


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Proceedings ArticleDOI
20 Apr 1993
TL;DR: A key element of the work is a novel approach to representing processes at various levels of abstraction which allows users to explicity represent the similarities (and differences) among related processes and to easily find or generate sensible alternatives for how a given process could be performed.
Abstract: The paper describes a new project intended to provide a firmer theoretical and empirical foundation for such tasks as enterprise modeling, enterprise integration, and process re-engineering. The project includes: (1) collecting examples of how different organizations perform similar processes, and (2) representing these examples in an on-line 'process handbook' which includes the relative advantages of the alternatives. The handbook is intended to help: (a) redesign existing organizational processes, (b) invent new organizational processes that take advantage of information technology, and perhaps (c) automatically generate software to support organizational processes. A key element of the work is a novel approach to representing processes at various levels of abstraction. This approach uses ideas from computer science about inheritance and from coordination theory about managing dependencies. Its primary advantage is that it allows users to explicity represent the similarities (and differences) among related processes and to easily find or generate sensible alternatives for how a given process could be performed. >

600 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
09 Jun 2003
TL;DR: This paper analyzes commonalities and differences of both approaches and determines possible ways how agile software development can benefit from requirements engineering methods.
Abstract: This article compares traditional requirements engineering approaches and agile software development. Our paper analyzes commonalities and differences of both approaches and determines possible ways how agile software development can benefit from requirements engineering methods.

516 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
26 Jun 2006
TL;DR: The architecture and design principles of IkeWiki, a semantic Wiki developed at Salzburg research, are described, which has been developed primarily as a tool for ontology engineering, but can be used in a variety of application scenarios.
Abstract: This article describes the architecture and design principles of IkeWiki, a Semantic Wiki we developed at Salzburg Research. Outstanding features of IkeWiki are its support for collaborative knowledge engineering, its ease of use, its support for different levels of formalisation ranging from informal texts to formal ontologies, and its sophisticated, interactive user interface. While IkeWiki has been developed primarily as a tool for ontology engineering, it can be used in a variety of application scenarios. We briefly present some of these at the end of the article.

341 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
13 Jun 2005
TL;DR: An entropy-based approach is developed that determines and reports entropy contents of traffic parameters such as IP addresses that indicate a massive network event.
Abstract: Detecting massive network events like worm outbreaks in fast IP networks such as Internet backbones, is hard. One problem is that the amount of traffic data does not allow real-time analysis of details. Another problem is that the specific characteristics of these events are not known in advance. There is a need for analysis methods that are real-time capable and can handle large amounts of traffic data. We have developed an entropy-based approach that determines and reports entropy contents of traffic parameters such as IP addresses. Changes in the entropy content indicate a massive network event. We give analyses on two Internet worms as proof-of-concept. While our primary focus is detection of fast worms, our approach should also be able to detect other network events. We discuss implementation alternatives and give benchmark results. We also show that our approach scales very well.

273 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
04 Jun 2000
TL;DR: A conceptual framework that articulates the mechanics of collaboration for shared-workspace groupware: the low level actions and interactions that must be carried out to complete a task in a shared manner is introduced.
Abstract: We introduce a conceptual framework that articulates the mechanics of collaboration for shared-workspace groupware: the low level actions and interactions that must be carried out to complete a task in a shared manner. These include communication, coordination, planning, monitoring, assistance, and protection. The framework also includes three general measures of these mechanics: effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction. The underlying idea of the framework is that some usability problems in groupware systems are not inherently tied to the social context in which the system is used but rather are a result of poor support for the basic activities of collaborative work in shared spaces. We believe that existing low-cost evaluation methods-heuristic evaluation, walkthroughs, user observations and questionnaires-can be modified to include this framework in a way that helps a groupware evaluator uncover these usability problems.

253 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Conference in previous years
YearPapers
202051
201959
201851
201756
201653
201544