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270           PART THREE  CONVENTIONAL METHODS FOR SOFTWARE ENGINEERING


                       System Thinking, Wiley-Interscience, 1976 and On the Design of Stable Systems, Wiley-
                       Interscience, 1979) have become classics and provide an excellent discussion of "gen-
                       eral systems thinking" that implicitly leads to a general approach to system analysis
                       and design. More recent books by Weinberg (General Principles of Systems Design,
                       Dorset House, 1988 and Rethinking Systems Analysis and Design, Dorset House, 1988)
                       continue in the tradition of his earlier work.
                          A wide variety of information sources on system engineering and related subjects
                       is available on the Internet. An up-to-date list of World Wide Web references that are
                       relevant to system engineering, information engineering, business process engi-
                       neering, and product engineering can be found at the SEPA Web site:
                       http://www.mhhe.com/engcs/compsci/pressman/resources/syseng.mhtml
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