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...n since March 2000. From an open, somewhat anarchic, web of networked computers - it has evolved into a territorial, commercial, corporate exten... ... reviewers. The Internet was suppose to change all that. Originally, a computer network for the exchange of (restricted and open) research result... ...m this phase which ended only a few years ago. It started with a complete computer anarchy manifested in ad hoc networks, local networks, networks of... ...ibute contents and software to educational institutions, collaborate with researchers and social scientists and engineers. In short: encourage the v... ...nd then in color), tables, detailed maps and anatomical charts, and other graphics to their books. Battles fought between publishers-librarians over ... ...nlarge their serials (journal) budgets, or both. One result is that even researchers at the wealthiest institutions do not have access to all the j... ...th the movement created by Napster. The all-important difference is that researchers give away their journal articles and musicians don't give away... ...not be bought. We will adapt by doing the entire public domain, including graphics, music, movies, sculpture, paintings, photographs, etc. . . . Q.... ...he Web. Dell Computer has agreed with the FTC to refrain from enforcing a graphics patent having failed to disclose it to the standards committee in ...
...nt of information one can transfer through a single fiber optic swelled 100 times. Computer storage catapulted 80,000 times. Broadband and cable mo... ...ends, or earnings. Yet, this finding is hotly disputed. Some scholarly studies of researchers such as Stephen LeRoy and Richard Porter offer suppo... ...one involved grows - the very concept of risk is under attack. Value-at-Risk (VAR) computer models - used mainly by banks and hedge funds in "dynam... ...each others and are aptly termed "natural hedges". Enron pioneered the use of such computer applications in the late 1990's - to little gain it wou... ...n, innovation is systematically and methodically pursued by teams of scientists and researchers in the labs of mega-corporations and endowed academi... ...ement of the Web. Dell Computer has agreed with the FTC to refrain from enforcing a graphics patent having failed to disclose it to the standards co... ...failed to disclose it to the standards committee in its deliberations of the VL-bus graphics standard. "Wired" reported yesterday that the Munich Up... ...lent of the Bayh-Dole Act of 1980. The statute made both academic institutions and researchers the owners of inventions or discoveries financed by ... ... govern mathematics. Then came the Macintosh and its emulation, the windows GUI (Graphics User Interface). I remember geeks and hackers sneering ...
...ctor can be constrained to collapse to the most order-enhancing event. If we had a computer the size of the Universe that could infallibly model it... ...have been compared to the latest technological innovation in every generation. The computer metaphor is now in vogue. Computer hardware metaphors w... ... "brain-children", the results of "brain-storming", conceived by "minds". What is a computer, a software application, a communications network if no... ...n, innovation is systematically and methodically pursued by teams of scientists and researchers in the labs of mega-corporations and endowed academi... ...ht of love. In results published in February 2007 in the Journal of Neuroscience, researchers at the University of California at Berkeley demonstr... ... therefore, fraught with many of the difficulties that bedevil the work of psychic researchers. IV. The Problem of Human Subjects Can Parapsychol... ...o if all the copies are manufactured at the same instant. Replicated works of art (graphics or caricatures) are originals and copies simultaneously...
...n particular. I was also inspired and informed by colleagues and students in computer science, English, history, and political science. But the work I... ...a colleague—helped in more ways than I can count. A number of scientists and computer scientists made me see things I other- wise would not have—Drew ... ...nt filmmaker has put up on his home page. Perhaps you want to adapt the nifty graphics that a high school teacher in Hawaii created Chapter 1 14 -1 ___... ...le of thought. Today, though, I am viewing his letter over the Internet on a computer screen. (You can too. The details are at the back of the book.) ... ...ng private property rights to “sources” would slow the freewheeling practice researchers have of sharing their cell lines with all and sundry. 15 The ... ...n journals it subscribed to, and paid for, in order to circulate them to its researchers. 38 If a conservative Web site reposted news articles from li... ...t a search engine that catalogued and displayed in framed format the digital graphics found on the Internet would be sued for infringing the copyright... ...e making of things that can be used as fence-cutters—a prospect that worries researchers on encryption. In the long run, we must get rid of the troubl...