| |
| Tom
Gilb |
 |
Tom Gilb was born in Pasadena
in 1940, emigrated to London 1956, and to
Norway 1958, where he joined IBM for 5 years,
and where he resides when not traveling. He
has mainly worked within the software engineering
community, but since 1983 with Corporate Top
Management problems, and 1988 with large-scale
systems engineering. He is an independent
teacher, consultant and writer. He has published
eight books, including the early coining of
the term "Software Metrics" (1976) which is
the basis for SEI CMM Level 4. He wrote "Principles
of Software Engineering Management" (1988,
now in 13th printing), and "Software Inspection"
(1993). Both titles are really systems engineering
books in software disguise. His pro-bono systems
engineering activities include several weeks
a year for US DoD and Norwegian DoD, and Environmental
(EPA) and Third-World Aid charities and organizations.
|
Clients:
Recent Clients: Nokia (many countries),
WebVan, Planning Research Corporation Litton
(PRC) , Quidnunc (London), Datastream (London),
Ericsson (many countries) , Alcatel (many
countries), Erisoft, Natwest Bank, British Airways, British Aerospace, Synopsys (CA),
Pitney Bowes, Sun Microsystems, PhillipsHolland,
Nortell Canada & UK, Hewlett-Packard, United
Defense (MN), AMRO Bank (London) Jernbaneverket
(Norway).
Past Clients: IBM, ICL-
International Computers, Shell, NCR, AT&T,
Apple, Microsoft, Genrad, Texas Instruments
and many more Pro Bono Clients: US Department
of Defense, Stratcom, Software Program Managers
Network (SPMN), Norwegian Church Aid, Norwegian
National Heritage Director, Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA, USA), The Art of Living
Foundation (multinational), GAP Global Action
Plan (multinational), India (3SE), Norwegian
Army, India Tata Consultancy.
Listen to Tom
Gilb lecturing on the subject of Measuring
Quality Requirements. This talk is a part
of a one day seminar on Requirements Driven
Management hosted by Quality Forum, June 1997.
Or download the talk as a file for listening
off-line. (920kb zip file, requires RealPlayer).
Web site:http://www.result-planning.com
E-mail£ºGilb@ACM.org.
|
|