Title :
Splitting the difference: the historical necessity of synthesis in software engineering
Author_Institution :
Centre for Res. into Innovation, Culture & Technol., Brunel Univ., Uxbridge, UK
Abstract :
For the last quarter of a century, software technologists have worked to address the “software crisis” identified in the 1960s. Their efforts have focused on a number of different areas, but have often been marked by the search for singular “best” solutions. However, the fundamental nature of software-involving basic and poorly understood problem solving processes combined with unprecedented and multifaceted complexity-weighs heavily against the utility of singular approaches. Examination of the discourse of software technologists in a number of key professional and trade journals over the last 25 years illuminates various disputes central to the development of software engineering and highlights the necessity of a more pluralistic mind set revolving around synthesis and trade-offs
Keywords :
history; professional aspects; software engineering; historical necessity; history; multifaceted complexity; pluralistic mind set; problem solving processes; software crisis; software engineering; software synthesis; software technologists; trade journals; Costs; Hardware; History; Logic; Problem-solving; Programming; Software engineering; Software performance; Software tools; Turning;
Journal_Title :
Annals of the History of Computing, IEEE