Computer, Network, Software, and Hardware Engineering with Applications
Book description
There are many books on computers, networks, and software engineering
but none that integrate the three with
applications
. Integration is important because, increasingly, software dominates the
performance, reliability, maintainability, and availability of complex
computer and systems. Books on software engineering typically portray
software as if it exists in a vacuum with no relationship to the wider
system. This is wrong because a system is more than software. It is
comprised of people, organizations, processes, hardware, and software.
All of these components must be considered in an integrative fashion
when designing systems. On the other hand, books on computers and
networks do not demonstrate a deep understanding of the intricacies of
developing software. In this book you will learn, for example, how to quantitatively
analyze the performance, reliability, maintainability, and availability
of computers, networks, and software in relation to the total system
. Furthermore, you will learn how to evaluate and mitigate the risk of
deploying integrated systems. You will learn how to apply many models
dealing with the optimization of systems. Numerous quantitative examples
are provided to help you understand and interpret model results. This
book can be used as a first year graduate course in computer, network,
and software engineering; as an on-the-job reference for computer,
network, and software engineers; and as a reference for these
disciplines. Norman F. Schneidewind
, PhD, is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Information Sciences
and the Software Engineering Group at the Naval Postgraduate School. Dr.
Schneidewind is a Fellow of the IEEE, elected in 1992 for his
"contributions to software measurement models in reliability and
metrics, and for leadership in advancing the field of software
maintenance." In 2001, he received the IEEE Reliability Society's
Engineer of the Year Award. Dr. Schneidewind was selected for an
IEEE-USA Congressional Fellowship in 2005, working with the Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs on issues of cyber security
and privacy.