Abstract
Every organisation from the scale of whole countries down to small companies has a list of system developments which have ended in various forms of disaster. The nature of the failures varies but typical examples are: cost overruns; timescale overruns and sometimes, loss of life. The post-mortems to these systems reveal a wide range of reasons all the way from hardware failures, through software errors right to major system level mistakes. More importantly a large number of these systems share one attribute: complexity. This paper presents a fresh look at the nature of complexity in the building of computer based systems.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Keepence, B., & Mannion, M. (1997). Complex systems. In Proceedings of the International Symposium and Workshop on Engineering of Computer Based Systems (pp. 324–326). IEEE. https://doi.org/10.5117/9789462988088-19
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