The theme of the November 1999 symposium deals with which technologies to take into the new millennium and which ones to leave behind. The 32 papers address software reliability techniques models, reliability and safety, object-oriented testing and modeling, quality, testing, and early quality prediction. Some of the topics are rare failure-state in a Markov chain model for software reliability, classification tree models of software quality over multiple releases, mutation testing applied to validate specifications based on statecharts, generating test cases from an OO model with an AI planning system, and requirements volatility and defect density. No subject index. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
Co-Sponsored by the ISA Aerospace Industries and Test Measurement Divisions, the conference proceedings include information about the latest developments in measurement uncertainty; computer applications; data acquisitions and processing; MEMS design, analysis and fabrication; pressure; blast and shock; and laser applications.
The theme for the 2019 conference is Novel Computing Architectures. Papers will include discussions on the advent of Artificial Intelligence and the promise of quantum computing that are driving disruptive computing architectures; Neuromorphic chip designs on one hand, and Quantum Bits on the other, still in R&D, will introduce new computing circuitry and memory elements, novel materials, and different test methodologies. These novel computing architectures will require further innovation which is best achieved through a collaborative Failure Analysis community composed of chip manufacturers, tool vendors, and universities.
Recent technological advances, particularly in microelectronics and telecommunications, biotechnology, and advanced materials, pose critical challenges and opportunities for developing countries, and for the development banks and other organizations that serve them. Those countries that fail to adapt to the transformations driven by new technologies in industry, agriculture, health, environment, energy, education, and other sectors may find it difficult to avoid falling behind. This book represents a joint effort by the World Bank and the National Research Council to survey the status and effect of technology change in key sectors and to recommend action by the development organizations, government, private sector and the scientific and technological community.
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