Search for dissertations about: "Jan Carlson"
Showing result 6 - 10 of 19 swedish dissertations containing the words Jan Carlson.
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6. Advancing Continuous Model-Based Development in Industry
Abstract : For the development of complex software systems, two prominent paradigms have become popular in the industry: model-based development and agile software development. Model-based development holds the promise of improving the productivity of software development through abstraction, by focusing on the problem domain and capturing it in models. READ MORE
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7. Lightweight consistency checking for advancing continuous model-based development in industry
Abstract : For the development of modern software-intensive systems, a large number of development artifacts are created and maintained to design and implement their intended structure and behavior. In this thesis, we consider continuous model-based development settings in which models and other development artifacts are developed incrementally, in short development cycles. READ MORE
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8. Software and hardware models in component-based development of embedded systems
Abstract : As modern embedded systems grow in complexity component-based development is an increasingly attractive approach to make the development of such systems simpler and less error prone. In this approach software systems are built by composing them out of prefabricated software components. READ MORE
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9. Automating Reuse in Web Application Development
Abstract : Web applications are one of the fastest growing types of software systems today. Structurally, they are composed out of two parts: the server-side, used for data-access and business logic, and the client-side used as a user-interface. READ MORE
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10. Improving the Schedulability of Real Time Systems under Fixed Preemption Point Scheduling
Abstract : During the past decades of research in Real-Time systems, non-preemptive scheduling and fully preemptive scheduling have been extensively investigated, as well as compared with each other. However, it has been shown that none of the two scheduling paradigms dominates over the other in terms of schedulability. READ MORE