Introduction

author: Seth Bullock, University of Southampton
published: Feb. 25, 2007,   recorded: March 2006,   views: 9179
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Description

Continuing advances in information and communications technology (ICT) are increasing the scale and connectivity of today's engineered systems. Managing the resultant complexity is becoming the central challenge for UK industry and government: from software, to cities and even stock exchanges. Across the UK, a wide range of internationally leading research groups are addressing this challenge. In many cases they draw inspiration from biology, which provides innumerable examples of systems that cope with complexity. From cells to ecosystems, biology achieves scalability, adaptability, self-repair, and robustness, often by exploiting "emergent" system-level behaviours. Achieving equivalent success in engineered systems is the root problem that we face.
In the first of our short courses, we introduce the core concepts of complexity in the context of both natural and engineered systems, and explore the ways in which new computational systems, models, and simulations are taking part in complexity science through a series of lectures and workshop activities.

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Reviews and comments:

Comment1 internet, May 9, 2007 at 7:42 a.m.:

(this is a rant about the video player, so skip it if you are looking for meaningful comments about the content.)

worst flash player ever. it's like i'm in the 90's wrestling with real player. spontaneous pauses, buffering for minutes at a time -- why does it rebuffer when i unpause? why is it not buffering in the background? please study the video players at google video, dailymotion, youtube, etc. notice how they continually buffer, caching the entire video in the client, thus making for a delayed, yet smooth experience when the host serves video slowly. as it stands, i have to rip the wmv and view it locally.


Comment2 Victor MacGill, September 9, 2007 at 12:18 a.m.:

When I first looked at this, it was like the first comment. Now it's great!

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