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Sustainable embedded software lifecycle planning

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journal contribution
posted on 2012-08-09, 11:21 authored by Dong-Hyun Lee, Hoh Peter In, Keun Lee, Sooyong Park, Mike Hinchey
Time-to-market is a crucial factor in increasing market share in the consumer electronics (CE) market. Furthermore, fierce competition in the market tends to sharply lower the prices of brand-new CE products as soon as they are released. Software-intensive embedded system design methods such as hardware/software co-design have been studied with the goal of reducing development lead-time by designing hardware and software simultaneously. Many researchers, however, concentrate on static design methods—in which design remains unchanged once determined. To survive this deadly market competition, a dynamic design strategy that takes various market conditions into account is needed for software-intensive embedded systems. In this paper, a sustainable embedded software lifecycle planning (SESLIP) process based on the evolution of embedded software is proposed. The SESLIP process provides a dynamic method for both selecting product lifecycle design alternatives and generating a profit-maximizing transition plan that covers the entire lifecycle of a product

History

Publication

IEEE Software;30(4), pp. 72-80

Publisher

IEEE Computer Society

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

Ministry of Knowledge Economy (MKE) Korea, Technology Research Center (ITRC), National IT Industry Promotion Agency (NIPA-2011-C1090-1131-008), Basic Science Research Program National Foundation of Korea (NRF), SFI

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“© 2013 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.”

Language

English

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