| Starts: | Tuesday May 05, 2009 at 4:30pm |
|---|---|
| Ends: | Tuesday May 05, 2009 at 6:00pm |
| Event Type: | Training/Seminar |
| Region: | Greater Pittsburgh Area |
| Location: |
Radisson Greentree 101 Radisson Dr Pittsburgh, PA 15205 US |
| Price: | |
| Website: | http://www.sei.cmu.edu/architecture/saturn/2009/seminar.html |
| Industry: | research |
| Keywords: | Evaluating Software Architecture, Software Architecture Training, Software Engineering, Software Engineering Institute, Software Architecture |
| Intended For: | software architects, chief architects, enterprise architects, IT architects, senior developers, project managers |
| Organization: | Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute |
Software architecture is critical for business success. Think about it. Solid architecture prevents defects and system failures. It saves money and gets quality products to the market faster.
Most software-reliant systems are required to be modifiable and dependable. Frequently, they need to be secure, interoperable, and portable. How do you know whether your software architecture is suitable or at risk relative to its target system qualities?
The Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute (SEI), a world leader in architecture technology, is hosting an information seminar to discuss how using the Architecture Tradeoff Analysis Method® (ATAM®) — practical and proven architecture-centric evaluation techniques — can identify risks early in the life cycle. The SEI ATAM is used widely in many different settings. The ATAM is a tested process that has been used in many evaluations over the past ten or more years. If executed as defined, good results can almost be guaranteed.
But different situations may require you to configure the ATAM process and this creates the risk of failure. How will you know what changes are safe to make and which ones are dangerous? In this session we discuss the basic principles that make the ATAM work. Changing or violating those principles carries a high risk of failure. The purpose of this session is to give you the understanding of the ATAM principles so that you can configure ATAM as the situation requires and successfully perform the architecture evaluation. After attending the seminar you will be able to understand the key ATAM principles to create and successfully perform an architecture evaluation.
Felix H. Bachmann will lead this seminar. (http://www.sei.cmu.edu/staff/fb/)
Registration: This event is being held in conjunction with SATURN 2009 - http://www.sei.cmu.edu/architecture/saturn/2009/. There is no charge to attend this information seminar, but you must register through this LinkedIn event notice.