Four categories of contributions will be considered in the context of R2oSE 2010 workshop.
Regular papers (up to 10 pages) giving a full treatment of a technical or non technical Research 2.0 subject.
Short position paper (up to 5 pages). Novel and controversial ideas related to the current state or future of research are very welcome.
Short demonstration paper (up to 5 pages) of exiting R2.o tools.
The three categories mentioned above, which follow the research 1.0 tradition, will be carefully evaluated by at least three members of the program committee, as in any other traditional research R1.0 events. In the context of this Research 2.0 event, we also solicit and strongly encourage
On-line submissions through the web site of the workshop and the planet-research20.org portal, and this before and after the workshop.
These on-line submissions will be commented and rated by participants of the workshop and registered members of the research20 community. In particular, authors who do not have the budget or time to attend in flesh the workshop but still want to participate on-line before and after the workshop will be able to submitted blog posts addressing the topics of the workshop or comment existing posts. A summary of the blog posts/comments will be presented at the workshop, on behalf of the authors that where unable to join. A special prize will attributed to the authors of the best on-line contribution. We envision to produce a collaborative publication in the form of a manifesto for Research 2.0 in Software Engineering.
Yes we are right. We definitively need public access to software repositories of all kinds, whether they contain software language artefacts, software...
Here are the slides that were used at CASCON: http://planet-research20.org/ser2009/index.php?option=com_myblog&show=share-slides-for-cascon.html&Itemi...
Hi Ian,
great comment. This was exactly my hope for this. I personally, do not like the term integrated environments, as they have exactly that legac...