Difference between revisions of "Publications/verna.11.onward"
From LRDE
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
| booktitle = Onward! 2011 |
| booktitle = Onward! 2011 |
||
| lrdeprojects = Software |
| lrdeprojects = Software |
||
− | | pages = |
+ | | pages = 167 to 176 |
| abstract = In biology, evolution is usually seen as a tinkering process, different from what an engineer does when he plans the development of his systems. Recently, studies have shown that even in biology, there is a part of good engineering. As computer scientists, we have much more difficulty to admit that there is also a great deal of tinkering in what we do, and that our software systems behave more and more like biological realms every day. This essay relates my personal experience about this discovery. |
| abstract = In biology, evolution is usually seen as a tinkering process, different from what an engineer does when he plans the development of his systems. Recently, studies have shown that even in biology, there is a part of good engineering. As computer scientists, we have much more difficulty to admit that there is also a great deal of tinkering in what we do, and that our software systems behave more and more like biological realms every day. This essay relates my personal experience about this discovery. |
||
| lrdepaper = http://www.lrde.epita.fr/dload/papers/verna.11.onward.pdf |
| lrdepaper = http://www.lrde.epita.fr/dload/papers/verna.11.onward.pdf |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
| type = inproceedings |
| type = inproceedings |
||
| id = verna.11.onward |
| id = verna.11.onward |
||
+ | | identifier = doi:10.1145/2089131.2089140 |
||
| bibtex = |
| bibtex = |
||
@InProceedings<nowiki>{</nowiki> verna.11.onward, |
@InProceedings<nowiki>{</nowiki> verna.11.onward, |
||
Line 18: | Line 19: | ||
(Want To) Think About Them<nowiki>}</nowiki>, |
(Want To) Think About Them<nowiki>}</nowiki>, |
||
booktitle = <nowiki>{</nowiki>Onward! 2011<nowiki>}</nowiki>, |
booktitle = <nowiki>{</nowiki>Onward! 2011<nowiki>}</nowiki>, |
||
+ | isbn = 9781450309417, |
||
+ | doi = <nowiki>{</nowiki>10.1145/2089131.2089140<nowiki>}</nowiki>, |
||
year = 2011, |
year = 2011, |
||
+ | month = jan, |
||
pages = <nowiki>{</nowiki>167--176<nowiki>}</nowiki>, |
pages = <nowiki>{</nowiki>167--176<nowiki>}</nowiki>, |
||
abstract = <nowiki>{</nowiki>In biology, evolution is usually seen as a tinkering |
abstract = <nowiki>{</nowiki>In biology, evolution is usually seen as a tinkering |
Latest revision as of 10:22, 3 April 2023
- Authors
- Didier Verna
- Where
- Onward! 2011
- Type
- inproceedings
- Projects
- Software"Software" is not in the list (Vaucanson, Spot, URBI, Olena, APMC, Tiger, Climb, Speaker ID, Transformers, Bison, ...) of allowed values for the "Related project" property.
- Keywords
- Software engineering
- Date
- 2011-01-01
Abstract
In biology, evolution is usually seen as a tinkering process, different from what an engineer does when he plans the development of his systems. Recently, studies have shown that even in biology, there is a part of good engineering. As computer scientists, we have much more difficulty to admit that there is also a great deal of tinkering in what we do, and that our software systems behave more and more like biological realms every day. This essay relates my personal experience about this discovery.
Documents
Bibtex (lrde.bib)
@InProceedings{ verna.11.onward, author = {Didier Verna}, title = {Biological Realms in Computer Science: the Way You Don't (Want To) Think About Them}, booktitle = {Onward! 2011}, isbn = 9781450309417, doi = {10.1145/2089131.2089140}, year = 2011, month = jan, pages = {167--176}, abstract = {In biology, evolution is usually seen as a tinkering process, different from what an engineer does when he plans the development of his systems. Recently, studies have shown that even in biology, there is a part of good engineering. As computer scientists, we have much more difficulty to admit that there is also a great deal of tinkering in what we do, and that our software systems behave more and more like biological realms every day. This essay relates my personal experience about this discovery.} }