Second International Workshop on Managing Technical Debt Collection
• Collection
Publisher
Software Engineering Institute
Topic or Tag
Abstract
This collection includes presentations from the Second Workshop on Managing Technical Debt, which took place as part of the 33rd International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE 2011). The technical debt metaphor is gaining significant traction in the software development community as a way to understand and communicate about issues of intrinsic quality, value, and cost. The goal of this second workshop was to discuss the management of technical debt: to assess current practice in industry and to further refine a research agenda for software engineering in this area.
The workshop summary was published as Managing technical debt in software development: report on the 2nd international workshop on managing technical debt, held at ICSE 2011, ACM SIGSOFT Software Engineering Notes, Volume 36, Issue 5, September 2011, pages 33-35.
The proceedings are available in the ACM digital library.
The presentation slides are linked below.
Collection Items

Managing Technical Debt in Software Development: Report on the 2nd International Workshop on Managing Technical Debt
• Article
By Ipek Ozkaya, Philippe Kruchten, Robert Nord, Nanette Brown
This article reports on the Second International Workshop on Managing Technical Debt, where participants discussed current practiced and a research agenda.
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A Cost Model and Tool to Support Quality Economic Trade-off Decisions
• Presentation
By Bill Nichols
This presentation was part of the Second International Workshop on Managing Technical Debt, held in conjunction with ICSE 2011.
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Quantifying the Value of Architecting Within Agile Software Development via Technical Debt Analysis
• Presentation
By Nanette Brown, Robert Nord, Ipek Ozkaya, Philippe Kruchten
This presentation was part of the Second International Workshop on Managing Technical Debt, held in conjunction with ICSE 2011.
Learn MoreThis content was created for a conference series or symposium and does not necessarily reflect the positions and views of the Software Engineering Institute.