Jump to content

Philippe Kruchten: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Umawera (talk | contribs)
grammar and wording fixes
Line 4: Line 4:
In 1975, Kruchten received a bachelors degree in [[mechanical engineering]] at the [[École_centrale_de_Lyon|Ecole Centrale de Lyon]] in France, an MA in [[Software Engineering]] in 1978 at the [[École nationale supérieure des télécommunications]] in Paris, and a PhD in [[computer science]] from the [[ENST|French Institute of Telecommunications]] in 1986. In the new millennium in Canada he received a Certificate in Intercultural Studies from the [[University of British Columbia]] in 2002.<ref name="CV09"> [http://philippe.kruchten.com/KruchtenCV.htm Philippe Kruchten CV] Accessed Oct 27, 2009.</ref>
In 1975, Kruchten received a bachelors degree in [[mechanical engineering]] at the [[École_centrale_de_Lyon|Ecole Centrale de Lyon]] in France, an MA in [[Software Engineering]] in 1978 at the [[École nationale supérieure des télécommunications]] in Paris, and a PhD in [[computer science]] from the [[ENST|French Institute of Telecommunications]] in 1986. In the new millennium in Canada he received a Certificate in Intercultural Studies from the [[University of British Columbia]] in 2002.<ref name="CV09"> [http://philippe.kruchten.com/KruchtenCV.htm Philippe Kruchten CV] Accessed Oct 27, 2009.</ref>


In 1974, Krucher started working as a FORTRAN programmer in a French computer firm, stationed for three months at IBM in London. In 1976, he became an assistant professor at the Ecole Nationale Supérieure Des Télécommunications, Paris for yeard, and has kept switching between the academic world and the computer industry ever since. In that time, he experienced the development of large, software-intensive systems in the areas such as telecommunication, defense, aerospace, transportation, and software development tools.<ref>[http://www.informit.com/authors/author_bio.aspx?ISBN=9780321197702 Philippe Kruchten] at informit.com. Accessed 4 Nov 2008.</ref> From 1996, he was Director of Process Development (RUP) at [[Rational Software]], and kept this position when Rational was acquired by [[IBM]] in 2003. Since 2004, he holds a position as Professor of Software Engineering at the [[University of British Columbia]] in [[Vancouver]], [[Canada]].<ref name="CV09"/>
In 1974, Kruchten started working as a FORTRAN programmer in a French computer firm, stationed for three months at IBM in London. In 1976, he became an assistant professor at the Ecole Nationale Supérieure Des Télécommunications, Paris for yeard, and has kept switching between the academic world and the computer industry ever since. In that time, he experienced the development of large, software-intensive systems in the areas such as telecommunication, defense, aerospace, transportation, and software development tools.<ref>[http://www.informit.com/authors/author_bio.aspx?ISBN=9780321197702 Philippe Kruchten] at informit.com. Accessed 4 Nov 2008.</ref> From 1996, he was Director of Process Development (RUP) at [[Rational Software]], and kept this position when Rational was acquired by [[IBM]] in 2003. Since 2004, he holds a position as Professor of Software Engineering at the [[University of British Columbia]] in [[Vancouver]], [[Canada]].<ref name="CV09"/>


== See also ==
== See also ==

Revision as of 22:47, 12 January 2010

Philippe Kruchten (1952) is a Canadian software engineer, and Professor of Software Engineering at University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, known as Director of Process Development (RUP) at Rational Software, and developer of the 4+1 view model.

Biography

In 1975, Kruchten received a bachelors degree in mechanical engineering at the Ecole Centrale de Lyon in France, an MA in Software Engineering in 1978 at the École nationale supérieure des télécommunications in Paris, and a PhD in computer science from the French Institute of Telecommunications in 1986. In the new millennium in Canada he received a Certificate in Intercultural Studies from the University of British Columbia in 2002.[1]

In 1974, Kruchten started working as a FORTRAN programmer in a French computer firm, stationed for three months at IBM in London. In 1976, he became an assistant professor at the Ecole Nationale Supérieure Des Télécommunications, Paris for yeard, and has kept switching between the academic world and the computer industry ever since. In that time, he experienced the development of large, software-intensive systems in the areas such as telecommunication, defense, aerospace, transportation, and software development tools.[2] From 1996, he was Director of Process Development (RUP) at Rational Software, and kept this position when Rational was acquired by IBM in 2003. Since 2004, he holds a position as Professor of Software Engineering at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada.[1]

See also

Publications

  • 1998. The Rational Unified Process-An Introduction, Addison-Wesley
  • 2003. Rational Unified Process Made Easy-A Practitioner's Guide to the RUP, with Per Kroll, Addison-Wesley.

Articles, a selection:

  • 2002. Agility with the RUP [1] The Rational Unified Process was designed with agility and flexibility in mind.

References

  1. ^ a b Philippe Kruchten CV Accessed Oct 27, 2009.
  2. ^ Philippe Kruchten at informit.com. Accessed 4 Nov 2008.