Abstract

This paper presents a requirements engineering process for driving the design of new systems that will allow for enhancing 3D media productivity, for lowering the entry barrier in 3D media creation, and for innovative media forms across many media types. This work has been carried out with the perspective of enhancing recovery and transformation as the pandemic has driven many professionals in culture to zero income. Toward this goal, we perform a requirements engineering process based on the IEEE 830 standard for requirements specification. It allows us to elucidate system requirements through existing (AS-IS) and envisioned (TO-BE) scenarios affected by the latest trends on design methodologies and content promotion in social media. A total of 30 tools for content creation, promotion, and monetization are reviewed and 10 TO-BE scenarios were engineered and validated. The validation was performed through a survey of 24 statements on a 5 Likert scale by 47 individuals from the domains of Media, Fine arts, Architecture, and Informatics. Useful evaluation results and comments have been collected that can be useful for future systems design.

Highlights

  • DimoulasIn system engineering and development, the most crucial part is the definition of the requirements

  • The main goal of the electronic survey is to allow media content creators to evaluate and validate the proposed TO-BE scenarios and the requirements that were found during the Preparation and Elicitation phase

  • A total of 47 individuals participated in our survey who were reached from social media such as Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn

Read more

Summary

Introduction

DimoulasIn system engineering and development, the most crucial part is the definition of the requirements. This process lasted two years and it was only that the WebXR

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call