The Hillside Group

The Hillside Group is an educational nonprofit organization founded in August 1993[1] to help software developers analyze and document common development and design problems as software design patterns. The Hillside Group supports the patterns community through sponsorship of the Pattern Languages of Programs conferences.[2]

The Hillside Group
Formation1993
Membership
121
Official language
English
President
Joseph Yoder
Websitewww.hillside.net

History

In August 1993, Kent Beck and Grady Booch sponsored a mountain retreat in Colorado where a group converged on foundations for software patterns. Ward Cunningham, Ralph Johnson, Ken Auer, Hal Hildebrand, Grady Booch, Kent Beck and Jim Coplien struggled with Alexander's ideas and our own experiences to forge a marriage of objects and patterns. The Group agreed that we were ready to build on Erich Gamma's foundation work studying object-oriented patterns, to use patterns in a generative way in the sense that Christopher Alexander uses patterns for urban planning and building architecture. We then used the term generative to mean creational to distinguish them from Gamma patterns that captured observations. The Group was meeting on the side of a hill when all this occurred, hence the name.[3]

Since then, the Hillside Group has been incorporated as an educational non-profit. It currently sponsors and helps run various PLoP (Pattern Languages of Programming) conferences[4] such as PLoP, EuroPlop, ChiliPlop, GuruPLoP, Asian PLoP, Scrum PLoP, Viking PLoP and Sugarloaf PLoP. Following are a list of historical PLoP conferences sponsored by The Hillside Group: ParaPLoP, KoalaPLoP, Mensore PLoP, ParaPLoP, Meta PLoP and UP97) The Hillside Group has also been responsible for getting the Pattern Languages Of Program Design series of books put together and published.[5]

Activities

The Hillside Group sponsors the Pattern Languages of Programs conferences in various countries, including the U.S., Brazil, Norway, Germany, Australia, and Japan. The Hillside Group assisted in publishing the Pattern Languages of Program Design book series until 2006.[6][7][8] Since 2006, The Hillside Group has published patterns and conference proceedings through the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) Digital Library.[9]

Patterns Library

The Hillside Patterns Library contains a comprehensive archive of patterns developed by the community, either directly or indirectly through the PLoP conferences.[10]

Conferences

The Hillside Group sponsors the conferences listed.[11] The conferences focus on writing patterns, workshops, and invited talks related to pattern development. Most of the conferences are held annually and encourage attendees to submit papers pre-conference for inclusion in the writer's workshops. The papers undergo a shepherding process, where they are analyzed and evolved before conference attendance.

  • PLoP: Pattern Languages of Programs
  • ChiliPLoP: Southwestern Conference on Pattern Languages of Programs
  • EuroPLoP: European Conference on Pattern Languages of Programs
  • AsianPLoP: Japanese Conference on Pattern Languages of Programs
  • SugarLoafPLoP: Latin American Conference on Pattern Languages of Programming
  • VikingPLoP: Nordic Conference on Pattern Languages of Programs
  • ScrumPLoP: Conference on Pattern Languages of Scrum
  • EduPLoP: Educational Patterns Writing Workshop

The Hillside Group Board

The President of The Hillside Group for 20102014 is Joseph Yoder of The Refactory, Inc.

The Hillside Group is led by a Board consisting of the President, Vice-President, Chief Operating Officer, Treasurer, two Directors, Secretary, two Editors in Chief and four Members.

Current board

PositionName
President[12] Joseph Yoder
Vice-President Ademar Aguiar
Treasurer Rebecca Wirfs-Brock
Directors Richard P. Gabriel and Neil Harrison
Secretary Lise B. Hvatum
Editors in Chief James Noble and Ralph Johnson
Members Bob Hanmer, Robert Biddle, Christian Kohls, and Christian Köppe
Emeritus Members Grady Booch, Linda Rising and Dirk Riehle

Founding members

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.