Explore It

Explore It
Author: Elisabeth Hendrickson
Publsiher: Pragmatic Bookshelf
Total Pages: 252
Release: 2013-02-21
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9781680503500

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Uncover surprises, risks, and potentially serious bugs with exploratory testing. Rather than designing all tests in advance, explorers design and execute small, rapid experiments, using what they learned from the last little experiment to inform the next. Learn essential skills of a master explorer, including how to analyze software to discover key points of vulnerability, how to design experiments on the fly, how to hone your observation skills, and how to focus your efforts. Software is full of surprises. No matter how careful or skilled you are, when you create software it can behave differently than you intended. Exploratory testing mitigates those risks. Part 1 introduces the core, essential skills of a master explorer. You'll learn to craft charters to guide your exploration, to observe what's really happening (hint: it's harder than it sounds), to identify interesting variations, and to determine what expected behavior should be when exercising software in unexpected ways. Part 2 builds on that foundation. You'll learn how to explore by varying interactions, sequences, data, timing, and configurations. Along the way you'll see how to incorporate analysis techniques like state modeling, data modeling, and defining context diagrams into your explorer's arsenal. Part 3 brings the techniques back into the context of a software project. You'll apply the skills and techniques in a variety of contexts and integrate exploration into the development cycle from the very beginning. You can apply the techniques in this book to any kind of software. Whether you work on embedded systems, Web applications, desktop applications, APIs, or something else, you'll find this book contains a wealth of concrete and practical advice about exploring your software to discover its capabilities, limitations, and risks.

User s Manual for EXPLORE I

User s Manual for EXPLORE I
Author: Yasuo Onishi
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 140
Release: 1982
Genre: Hydraulic models
ISBN: UOM:39015104957702

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Let s Go Explore

Let s Go Explore
Author: Mimi Chao
Publsiher: Mimochai Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2018-04
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 0999779400

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Let's Go Explore is a picture book following two little explorers as they take on the adventure of life. Under a rock, up in a tree, they discover what it means to see and to be. From new beginnings and far adventures, this book makes a thoughtful gift for all children and adults who are young at heart. 8x8" lay-flat hardcover bookGold foil details on canvas-textured cover 50 pages of fully illustrated pages with premium matte finish

Working Equal

Working Equal
Author: Elizabeth Creamer
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 268
Release: 2014-04-08
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781135697907

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Working Equal exposes the myth of heroic individualism that is central to contemporary western thought. With more than 35% of full-time faculty with a spouse or partner in the same profession, dual career couples are a growing presence in higher education in the U.S.. This compelling and innovative volume examines and testifies to the contribution of intimate and familial relationships to artistic, literary, and scientific accomplishment. An original study of a growing phenomena in higher education, Working Equal presents a new and invaluable portrait of contemporary faculty life.

Exploring the Power of Nonviolence

Exploring the Power of Nonviolence
Author: Elavie Ndura,Randall Amster
Publsiher: Syracuse University Press
Total Pages: 342
Release: 2013-12-24
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780815652533

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The new millennium finds humanity situated at critical crossroads. While there are many hopeful signs of cross-cultural engagement and democratic dialogue, it is equally the case that the challenges of warfare and injustice continue to plague nations and communities around the globe. Against this backdrop, there exists a powerful mechanism for transforming crises into opportunities: the philosophy and practice of nonviolence. The expert authors brought together in this volume collectively deploy the essential teachings of nonviolence across a spectrum of contemporary issues. From considering the principles of the French Revolution and encouraging peace through natural resource management to exploring multiculturism and teaching peace in the elementary classroom, this work is broad in scope yet detailed in its approach to the fundamental principles of nonviolence.

Lighting Up

Lighting Up
Author: Mimi Nichter
Publsiher: NYU Press
Total Pages: 275
Release: 2015-02-13
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9780814758397

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While the past 40 years have seen significant declines in adult smoking, this is not the case among young adults, who have the highest prevalence of smoking of all other age groups. At a time when just about everyone knows that smoking is bad for you, why do so many college students smoke? Is it a short lived phase or do they continue throughout the college years? And what happens after college, when they enter the “real world”? Drawing on interviews and focus groups with hundreds of young adults, Lighting Up takes the reader into their everyday lives to explore social smoking. Mimi Nichter argues that we must understand more about the meaning of social and low level smoking to youth, the social contexts that cause them to take up (or not take up) the habit, and the way that smoking plays a large role in students’ social lives. Nichter examines how smoking facilitates social interaction, helps young people express and explore their identity, and serves as a means for communicating emotional states. Most college students who smoked socially were confident that “this was no big deal.” After all, they were “not really smokers” and they would only be smoking for a short time. But, as graduation neared, they expressed ambivalence or reluctance to quit. As many grads today step into an uncertain future, where the prospect of finding a good job in a timely manner is unlikely, their 20s may be a time of great stress and instability. For those who have come to depend on the comfort of cigarettes during college, this array of life stressors may make cutting back or quitting more difficult, despite one’s intentions and understandings of the harms of tobacco. And emerging products on the market, like e-cigarettes, offer an opportunity to move from smoking to vaping. Lighting Up considers how smoking fits into the lives of young adults and how uncertain times may lead to uncertain smoking trajectories that reach into adulthood.

The Oxford Handbook of Religion Conflict and Peacebuilding

The Oxford Handbook of Religion  Conflict  and Peacebuilding
Author: Atalia Omer,R. Scott Appleby,David Little
Publsiher: Oxford Handbooks
Total Pages: 737
Release: 2015
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780199731640

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This title provides a comprehensive, interdisciplinary account of the scholarship on religion, conflict, and peacebuilding. Extending that inquiry beyond its traditional parameters, the volume explores the legacies of colonialism, missionary activism, secularism, orientalism, and liberalism. While featuring case studies from diverse contexts and traditions, the volume is organised thematically.

Bereavement Narratives

Bereavement Narratives
Author: Christine Valentine
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2008-07-08
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781134049035

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Bereavement is often treated as a psychological condition of the individual with both healthy and pathological forms. However, this empirically-grounded study argues that this is not always the best or only way to help the bereaved. In a radical departure, it emphasises normality and social and cultural diversity in grieving. Exploring the significance of the dying person’s final moments for those who are left behind, this book sheds new light on the variety of ways in which bereaved people maintain their relationship with dead loved ones and how the dead retain a significant social presence in the lives of the living. It draws practical conclusions for professionals in relation to the complex and social nature of grief and the value placed on the right to grieve in one’s own way – supporting and encouraging the bereaved person to articulate their own experience and find their own methods of coping. Based on new empirical research, Bereavement Narratives is an innovative and invaluable read for all students and researchers of death, dying and bereavement.