VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social) (@vamosconf) 's Twitter Profile
VaMoS 2025 (@[email protected])

@vamosconf

19th International Working Conference on Variability Modelling of Software-Intensive Systems
4-6 february 2025 in Rennes.

ID: 1267799204321206274

linkhttps://familiar-project.github.io/VaMoS2025/ calendar_today02-06-2020 12:44:26

412 Tweet

382 Followers

500 Following

Mathieu Acher (@acherm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The complexity of managing variability spaces in software-based systems. Huge, colossal. More variants than in physics problems... #VaMoS2025

The complexity of managing variability spaces in software-based systems. Huge, colossal. More variants than in physics problems... #VaMoS2025
VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social) (@vamosconf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Teams basically disagree, calling to deeply understand analytical variability. There is unwanted variability (eg numerical uncertainty, different implementation). There is data induced variability (eg assumption violations). And there is variability of interest. #VaMoS2025

VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social) (@vamosconf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Variability across neuroimaging software (collaboration with Oxford University). Do different software packages (AFNI, FSL, SPM) lead to variability in results? #VaMoS2025

VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social) (@vamosconf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Open questions to the #variability community: How many variants in the brain imaging pipeline space? Which proportion of the pipeline space is used by the community? Are there variants that a very small impact on the results? How well do intuitions from expert fit? #VaMoS2025

VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social) (@vamosconf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Birte Friesel presenting "Performance-Aware Behaviour Models for Feature-Dependent Runtime Attributes in Product Lines". Variability in hardware, workload, and software affects performance #VaMoS2025

VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social) (@vamosconf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Teaching variability, yes sure, but how to? A modern perspective. Elias Kuiter starts with the link between education, research, and industry (and how it can benefit individually and each other) #VaMoS2025

VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social) (@vamosconf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

After a talk about security, vulnerabilities, and variability by Richard May, we have a tool demonstration of flamapy.ide ide.flamapy.org an UVL Web editor with reasoning operations (presentation by JosƩ Galindo) #VaMoS2025

Laboratorio de Bases de Datos (@lbdudc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

āœˆļø Our PhD student VĆ­ctor Lamas presents his work "Experiences on using UVL in the JavaScript Ecosystem" at VaMoS 2025 (@[email protected]). šŸ¤This work has been developed in collaboration with the University of Sevilla (ETS Ing. InformĆ”tica). #VAMOSLAMAS

VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social) (@vamosconf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

For #VaMoS2025 the Best Research Paper goes to... Elias Kuiter, Thomas Thüm and Timo Kehrer - Teach Variability! A Modern University Course on Software Product Lines Elias calls to further teach variability! cc Juliana A. Pereira Clément Quinton Thomas Thüm Elias Kuiter

VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social) (@vamosconf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

At #VaMoS2025 we want to acknowledge the crucial role of reviewers. And the Best Paper Reviewer award goes to... Sandra Greiner - University of Bern, Switzerland

VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social) (@vamosconf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

At #VaMoS2025, we want to highlight the essential role of reviewers in ensuring the quality of our research. We especially recognize Philippe Collet Philippe Collet (University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, France) as the Best Artifact Evaluation Reviewer for his outstanding contributions.

Juliana A. Pereira (@_jualvespereira) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Congratulations to Wolfram Fenske and Sandro Schulze for winning the MIP Award for their paper ā€˜Code Smells Revisited: A Variability Perspective’ ⁦VaMoS 2025 (@[email protected])⁩ ⁦⁦Sandro Schulze⁩

Congratulations to Wolfram Fenske and Sandro Schulze for winning the MIP Award for their paper ā€˜Code Smells Revisited: A Variability Perspective’ ⁦<a href="/vamosconf/">VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social)</a>⁩ ⁦⁦<a href="/Sanschul/">Sandro Schulze</a>⁩
VaMoS 2025 (@vamosconf@mastodon.social) (@vamosconf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Existence of proposed smells largely confirmed. Sandro mentions several impacts related to program comprehension, variability debt, etc. #VaMoS2025