Winston W. Royce

Winston W. Royce (1929 – 1995) was an American computer scientist, director at Lockheed Software Technology Center in Austin, Texas, and one of the leaders in software development in the second half of the 20th century.[1] He was the first who described the Waterfall model for software development, although Royce did not use the term "waterfall" in that article, [2] nor advocated the waterfall model as a working methodology.[3]

Contents

Biography

Royce was born in 1929. He studied at the California Institute of Technology, where he received a BS in physics and an MS in aeronautical engineering and finally a PhD in aeronautical engineering under Julian David Cole. He worked over 35 years in management, engineering, research, and teaching. Since the 1970s he was director at Lockheed Software Technology Center in Austin, Texas. In 1995 on June 7, he died at his home in Clifton, Virginia.[4] In 1975 he had received the AIAA Information Systems Award.

His son is Walker Royce, Chief Software Economist of IBM's Rational division, and author of "Software Project Management, A Unified Framework", and a principal contributor to the management philosophy inherent in the IBM Rational Unified Process.[5]

See also

Publications

Royce published several books and articles.[6] Books

Articles, a selection:

References

  1. ^ Dr. Winston W. Royce (1929 - 1995) at www.informatik.uni-bremen.de. Retrieved 27 Oct 2008.
  2. ^ Wasserfallmodell : Entstehungskontext, Markus Rerych, Institut für Gestaltungs- und Wirkungsforschung, TU-Wien. Accessed on line November 28, 2007.
  3. ^ Winston W. Royce at interaction-design.org. Retrieved 27 Oct 2008.
  4. ^ Alan M. Davis, "Tracing: A Simple Necessity Neglected," in: IEEE Software, vol. 12, no. 5, pp. 6-7, Sept., 1995
  5. ^ Meet our thought leaders at IBM Rational. Retrieved 27 October 2008.
  6. ^ Royce Winston and W. W. Royce List of publications from the DBLP Bibliography Server.