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Exploring the self-organizing nature of human systems 

complexOD sets the conditions for an emerging community of theorists and practitioners who explore the self-organizing nature of human systems. As a membership organization, ComplexOD provides:
* Information on innovative theory and practice that define the "differences that make a difference" to self-organizing human systems
* Conversation among theoreticians and practitioners to provide "transforming exchanges" that lead to new patterns of learning
* Opportunities for members to publish their own innovative work in a safe and constructive "container"

Hail the power of the command line! 

I always used to use command prompt tools but in recent years I've got lazy, and its not a good type of lazy. Its the lazy of living with a broken window, of learning 'just enough to solve the current problem and no more'. The command line takes that little bit more effort to get right initially, but what I'd forgotten was that with a decent command line application you are repaid your efforts later. Combine that with a little scripting knowledge and you can start plugging tools together and really start becoming truely lazy, the good lazy of being able to sit back and drink your coffee while a computer does all the repetitive work that you would normally do repeatedly yourself. Amen! (From Mike Roberts)

A Course In Black Box Testing 

Black box testing is the craft of testing a program from the external view. We look at how the program operates in its context, getting to know needs and reactions of the users, hardware and software platforms, and programs that communicate with it.
This course is an introduction to black box testing. It is a superset of the Software Testing 1 introductory courses that Florida Tech requires in its undergraduate (CSE 3411) and graduate (SWE 5411) software engineering degree programs. The full set of materials are equivalent to about a two-semester course.

(Referred from Bret Pettichord's blog)

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