This is an excellent question. Thanks, Steve.
First, do you truly think it is possible or useful to have a balance between
Faber, Sapiens, and Ludens?
Then what would it be?
My vote would be for a Taoist approach, responding to the needs of the moment
with the appropriate way of being.
Rather
IN the long run it is more profitable, and much less arrogant.
Tory Hughes
victo...@toryhughes.com
505-301-9142
On Feb 15, 2015, at 10:39 AM, peggy miller wrote:
> Steve Smith and Marcus wrote of GMO's and their concerns related to how we
> seem to construct only worse disasters as we en
,
sustaining or intelligent activities.
Mebbe we get the god we deserve.
Mebbe we get the belief we have faith in.
Whence can cometh growth?
Tory
Now!
> On Jan 8, 2015, at 9:30 PM, Victoria Hughes wrote:
>
> So any belief other than one's own is a delusion?
> How convenient.
&
So any belief other than one's own is a delusion?
How convenient.
I do not believe that our technology is sophisticated / adept / precise /
subtle enough to answer any of these open ended philosophical queries. I
believe that believing our technology- and our ability to be responsible and
appro
I've used Pages for years, and find it very responsive, comprehensive and
robust- do all my graphics, flyers, desktop publishing, etc etc with it. In the
iWork suite. There are lots of smaller apps as well for selected idiosyncratic
goals although I don't use them. Comic Life, or TypeTwister, et
"Every US president since George Washington has issued executive orders, and Mr
Obama has not stood out in the modern era for the number he has signed.
In his six years in office Mr Obama has issued 183 executive orders, compared
to 291 across George W Bush's eight years and 381 for Ronald Reaga
Damn.
Yep.
Tory
On Apr 5, 2014, at 10:02 AM, Owen Densmore wrote:
> Holy Cow! Nailed it.
>
>-- Owen
>
>
> On Sat, Apr 5, 2014 at 9:47 AM, Tom Johnson wrote:
> I think this guy pretty well nailed it. So what can we do?
> -Tom
>
> http://chriscervini.com/2014/04/01/oh-sad-new-mexico-we
Ah….
This and Steve's preceeding note are the most useful, humane comment so far in
this thread.
Thanks, Robert.
Tory
On Apr 25, 2013, at 2:44 PM, Robert Holmes wrote:
> Steve's post made me think of the Roger McGough poem "Let me die a youngman's
> death":
>
> Let me die a youngman's death
creased knowledge.
I'm signing off for today, pleasure to bounce ideas back and forth as always.
Tory
On Mar 26, 2013, at 12:44 PM, glen wrote:
> Victoria Hughes wrote at 03/26/2013 11:27 AM:
>> 1. The discussion also references non-European, non-white-male models for
>> aw
Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 12:11 PM, Victoria Hughes
> wrote:
>> Jeees Louise.
>> … I've been trying so hard to curb my addiction to taking time to respond to
>> the continuously intriguing things that show up at the Friam…. but I must
>> say, Doug, that the phrase &q
Jeees Louise.
… I've been trying so hard to curb my addiction to taking time to respond to
the continuously intriguing things that show up at the Friam…. but I must say,
Doug, that the phrase "violently disinterested" is a classic, even for you.
And as long as I'm at it, Sas, I laughed out loud
Arlo, Sarbajit, Steve- thanks for these leads, I'll check into them. Steve, yes
indeed, your assumptions about what I want are on the money.
Knew this was the right place to ask.
Tory
On Mar 9, 2013, at 7:42 PM, Arlo Barnes wrote:
> Tineye has an image analysis program (separate from their f
Hello all-
Mebbe the amassed brain and experience power here can help me:
Do any of you have a good lead on an effective image-sorting program that sorts
by visual characteristics?
I have thousands of images, many of them different sizes and duplicates of art
photos: so a single object in a w
This from Rob Breszny, (whom some of you may secretly read without ever
acknowledging it)
"Sapiosexual" is a relatively new word that refers to a person who is
erotically attracted to intelligence. Urbandictionary.com gives an example of
how it might be used: "I want an incisive, inquisitive, i
Fascinating. The future got here before we did.
On Nov 8, 2012, at 8:43 AM, Stephen Guerin wrote:
Awesome article, Steven. Congratulations!
-S
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's C
http://www.thesadbastardbar.com/2012/10/have-you-all-lost-your-goddamn-minds.html?m=1
Tory
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at ht
It's your honesty I've always loved about you, Steve.
I'm going with the weasel.
T
On Sep 26, 2012, at 2:40 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
Tory -
Why is the idea of two differing but synergistic approaches so
challenging to so many on this list? Or are you arguing for the fun
of the game?
I'm pr
(A post script to my frustrated rant replying to this thread (not to
this post, Roger))
None of what I said precludes the table pounding and the whiskey.
Need to go on record about that.
Tory
On Sep 26, 2012, at 2:02 PM, Roger Critchlow wrote:
http://www.nature.com has provoked its own
Gentlemen and Ladies-
There is a big question in this endless and reiterative loop about
faith and science that no one mentions.
So I will. Seems to be one of my functions.
To wit:
Even our brains have two primary and differing sections, the
hemispheres: for best health and growth of the in
Fripm October 12.
When worlds collide.
On Sep 24, 2012, at 9:39 PM, Douglas Roberts wrote:
Worksforme.
On Sep 24, 2012 9:34 PM, "Victoria Hughes"
wrote:
Perhaps one could rename or subset the meeting as FRIPM.
Meet at Sas' and finally combine the whiskey, the cast of
char
Perhaps one could rename or subset the meeting as FRIPM.
Meet at Sas' and finally combine the whiskey, the cast of characters,
and the table-pounding.
After October 10.
On Sep 24, 2012, at 9:28 PM, Douglas Roberts wrote:
Yikes. I might just have to break tradition and attend an actual
FRIA
LadleRatRottenHut! Be still my heart.
Brilliant in sooo many ways... Yonder nor sourghum stenches shut ladle
gulls torque wet strainers!
You know, HL Chace wrote/rewrote a number of those. All are beloved
and collected by word-y and book-y people. And of course locally our
own Robin Wil
Actually these elements that negotiate your behaviours are encoded
neuroelectrical and neurochemical subroutines, not with volitional
consciousness to decide or not decide- so 'belief' is perhaps not the
most accurate word for Ms Stem's motivation. If she had to think and
decide,she'd be
I remember. Hard to forget, and I can still see the illustrations. It
was already Not PC when I saw it. But I read it anyway, I believe in
the library in Manila at the American Church, which was really a
gigantic community center for expats. They also had all of the Wizard
of Oz books, orig
be different from mine. I'm just
saying that believing that the world will continue to conform to
your sense of what the everyday world is like is not faith; it's
simple belief.
Eric,
I would take "having faith in something" in the colloquial sense as
different from &q
Russ wrote, in part-
Faith, I would say (in fact I did earlier)
is believing something that one wouldn't otherwise believe without
faith.
Believing that the everyday world is the everyday world
doesn't seem to me to require faith.
Russ, with all due respect for the enjoyment I get f
Good points, Mike. I see aggressive authoritarianism as a
developmental stage. This behaviour did not start in the 20th century,
it starts as humans develop a sense of individual self.
Not just societies ( or "religions" ) but all human effort - from an
infant growing to adulthood to our sh
Absolutely to Steve, and whiskey and a talk about all this. I would
LOVE to.
Just tell me the time and place.
Tory
On Sep 14, 2012, at 12:33 PM, Douglas Roberts wrote:
Victoria,
I was speaking from the perspective of two religions with which I
have first-hand familiarity: Christianity
Exactly.
Thanks, Roger.
On Sep 14, 2012, at 10:47 AM, Roger Critchlow wrote:
The Fixation of Belief, Charles S. Peirce, Popular Science Monthly,
November 1877.
http://www.peirce.org/writings/p107.html
I was going to paraphrase another part of this, but looking at it
again I realize my fe
Religion is not inherently bad. It is the use of it for mundane power
that is the problem.
All religious traditions began with a prophet / visionary / mystic who
urged tolerance, peace and self-awareness. Muhammad, Jesus, Buddha...
In most cases, that person's initial followers began to lev
Re Doug's last comment:
It's about power and control. A justification for them. They are
using 'religion' as a potent, unquestionable label to justify their
behaviour. Much like fundamentalists from all 'religious traditions'
Technically, the word 'religion' derives from 're-linking', as in
You have such a way with words, Doug.On Aug 19, 2012, at 3:41 PM, Douglas Roberts wrote:Or, possibly it's due to the growing education of the masses, and the attendant dawning realization that Romney believes that god is a space alien who lives on the crystal planet Kolob. And that he baptizes dea
this mean the implants are next?ToryOn Aug 8, 2012, at 10:04 AM, Owen Densmore wrote:On Wed, Aug 8, 2012 at 9:56 AM, Victoria Hughes <victo...@toryhughes.com> wrote: I have one also, and love it. Artists were very early adapters to this technology, for obvious reasons. Many of us who are
Pamela- Congratulations! See you there, and looking forward to it-ToryOn Aug 1, 2012, at 2:29 PM, Pamela McCorduck wrote:Save the date:Pamela McCorduck will read from her new novel, Bounded Rationality, at Garcia Street Books, Saturday, August 25, at 2:00 p.m.Bounded Rationality is the second novel
Wow!
Great link, Owen. Startling and eery, but we'll get used to lusting
for it very quickly, like everything else.
Tory
On Jun 5, 2012, at 9:25 PM, Owen Densmore wrote:
Whoa! A deforming touch screen so that you can have real keyboards/
buttons!
http://www.iclarified.com/entry/inde
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-18302158
"At the tender age of 10, Swedish boy Linus Hovmoller Zou has had his
name put on a research paper published in The Philosophical
Transactions of the Royal Society.
Using his Sudoku expertise, he helped his father Professor Sven
Hovmoller di
http://www.santafe.edu/news/item/lecture-most-human-human/Recommended. Santa Fe Institute tapes these community lectures, lucky for us. Usually engaging and thought-provoking. This one is also funny. For locals: they're held at James A Little Theater- sign up for SFI email list. Tory Hughesunusual
Ditto and right back atcha.
Incidentally, did anyone else on this list attend Rebecca Goldstein's
talk on Intuition the other day?
Victoria
On Apr 11, 2012, at 12:27 PM, Pamela McCorduck wrote:
Generally speaking, if a topic isn't interesting to me, I just pass
over it. I do
FYI.
Begin forwarded message:
From: Santa Fe Institute
Date: April 9, 2012 8:39:47 AM MDT
To: inho...@santafe.edu, activities-annou...@santafe.edu, lectu...@santafe.edu
Subject: [Lectures] SFI Community Lecture — Tonight, April 9, 2012 •
7:30 p.m. • James A. Little Theater
*** SFI Commun
Be interesting to hear why your ordination has meaning to you. That it
does is obvious, and your willingness to engage in FRIAM about it
implies there's an aspect of having it that you may not have
mentioned. Yes? No? Maybe?
Tory
On Mar 23, 2012, at 3:21 PM, Douglas Roberts wrote:
Inde
I used them last year in a show of my jewelry: each necklace had a descriptive tag with price, length, etc, and a QR code that took you to a page on my site where you could read the background story on the inspiration behind the piece, see photos of it worn, and purchase it through Paypal. Was a
re my last note-
> Financial success for me.
Success for my readers in whatever category they choose.
( For those of you who want to query my vague pronoun references...)
On Feb 15, 2012, at 1:04 PM, Victoria Hughes wrote:
Thanks all, this is quite helpful. I particularly like envisaging
Thanks all, this is quite helpful. I particularly like envisaging my
readers secretly copying my book so others can read it and ultimately
generate financial success à la Rowling. Nice visuals. I'll share,
when it happens.
Tory
On Feb 15, 2012, at 12:17 PM, James Steiner wrote:
On Wed, Fe
Any watermark or copy protection on this format?
Thanks,
Tory
On Feb 15, 2012, at 8:16 AM, Robert J. Cordingley wrote:
We've just finished a website to sell an eBook (Kindle or EPUB) for
an author in town, Josh Gonze, see the streetsofsantafe.com.
Visitors buy the ebook ($11.95) via PayPa
Easier to interpret the sabertooth in the underbrush, and procreate thereby.From a visual maker's perspective, the human compulsion for pattern recognition leads to much of the engagement of art, in all forms. Tory Tory Hughesunusual objects and unique adornments www.toryhughes.comwww.toryhughes-ga
Thanks, Owen. Good model.
Tory
On Feb 6, 2012, at 9:48 AM, Owen Densmore wrote:
Some more info:
http://www.thinkbelieveact.com/solveforx/
.. and here's the leaked image of 10 points used for speakers. Its
tiny but your browser can zoom in on it to the point that its quite
readable.
h
Cool. Must be the subliminal messages we send through the mesh networks.
On Jan 11, 2012, at 9:54 AM, Roger Critchlow wrote:
According to http://sopaopera.org/NM/ both our senators and our
congressman support SOPA and PIP.
-- rec --
On Wed, Jan 11, 2012 at 9:51 AM, Victoria Hughes > wr
Voting on SOPA is January 24th. Here's an accessible article The
Problem with SOPA (And How to Stop It) | Copyblogger to pass around to
those who don't quite get what is going on.
Easy online action: signing email letters.
Further action:Follow the links in the Copyblogger article to a
discu
What a great solution- the mesh network. Communal, reasonable, relying
on interpersonal responsibility. How feasible is this actually? This
model - what without knowing the jargon I'd call distributed or
partnership effort, each person doing a small part of the task, and
numbers making the
"Matt is right, in that scripting is the new literacy, and a growing
form of artistic expression. Tech-savvy artists are creating apps and
developing sites to put their art into the world. Whether its Matt
Inmann creating his work and coding his site at The Oatmeal or young
app developers l
St Johns is closed, to confirm.
On Dec 22, 2011, at 4:53 PM, Owen Densmore wrote:
If? Where?
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at htt
Hello all you friamistas -Come over for a visit next week, great field trip, refreshments et al.I have a nice studio at 1519 Upper Canyon,same studio compound as Orlando Leibovitz's. Quarter mile south of the hiking trails, the nature conservancy, etc.I'll be in my studio (directions below)next wee
ccess, even to an automated system. Thus the algorithm.Tory Tory Hughesunusual objects and unique adornments for women and menwww.toryhughes.com On Dec 22, 2011, at 9:25 AM, Parks, Raymond wrote: On Dec 21, 2011, at 11:06 PM, Victoria Hughes wrote: Well actually I was sorely tempted a
andard 3G (which of course Tmo does
NOT use) which is good enough if you get real 3G. If you really do
love watching videos on your phone, maybe you should consider the
trade-offs. BTW YouTube works fine w/ 3G.
I can go on forever, but better stop here,
-- Owen
On Wed, Dec 21, 2011
FYI re TMOBILE:
I have just had the latest in a round of totally unsuccessful
interactions with T-Mobile.
I have a Galaxy S2.
I have only had phone service with them for three months:
however I've had to deal with constant lousy coverage and unexplained
gaps in service,
I've replaced the or
Best statistics question ever
Posted: 28 Oct 2011 01:25 AM PDT
By way of Raymond Johnson, the best statistics multiple choice
question ever written on a chalkboard. Try not to think too hard.
[via]
You are subscribed to email updates from FlowingData
To stop receiving these emails, you ma
Ah Nick, you are a treasure. I have no info: very busy with a
professional watershed event and my place in it, so I watch and honk
as I drive by but choose not to participate. IF I had info, you would
definitely be getting it!
Tory
Tory Hughes
www.toryhughes.com
RAM- Terra Nova
Milagro H
Hello all-
In case this helps any related issues:
>> I posted re: my computer not holding my modem's password after I
uploaded the iTunes update, and having to manually go deep into system
preferences to add it in each time my laptop slept or shut down.
• The fix, given to me by my ISP:
1.
Would this also answer why since I upgraded iTunes last night, my
system network can no longer remember my password for signing on to my
own wireless - and can't hold the password when the computer goes to
sleep or shuts down? OS 10.5.9
So no emails, right, nor internet access despite a ni
LOL to THAT!
Tory Hughes
www.toryhughes.com
Milagro Hacienda creativity retreat
The Creative Development manual
On Oct 9, 2011, at 10:54 PM, Tom Johnson wrote:
"We don't allow faster-than-light neutrinos in here," says the
bartender. A neutrino walks into a bar.
-- tj
=
Oh joy.
On Oct 7, 2011, at 1:10 PM, Parks, Raymond wrote:
On Oct 7, 2011, at 12:50 PM, Victoria Hughes wrote:
I've just gotten T-Mobile and am having problems in many areas. I'd
love to know what you find out. If you have specific things I can
research, let me know. I know
I've just gotten T-Mobile and am having problems in many areas. I'd
love to know what you find out. If you have specific things I can
research, let me know. I know even less about what I don't know than
you do, so direction is useful.
Tory
On Oct 7, 2011, at 12:45 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
Great teaching style, use of simple accessible graphics, and what,
over 2400 topics about math, science, finances, and more. Video format.
http://www.khanacademy.org/
Tory Hughes
www.toryhughes.com
Milagro Hacienda creativity retreat
The Creative Development manual
=
Subject: Cannon Air Force Base low altitude training flights
On Sept. 14th Cannon Air Force Base released their Environmental
Assessment,
claiming their proposed low-altitude repetitive night flights
will have no impact on on the public or the environment
in northern New Mexico and southern Co
ey want to make of the mind that makes the mind-body problem
a problem?
Nick
From: friam-boun...@redfish.com [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com]
On Behalf Of Victoria Hughes
Sent: Saturday, September 17, 2011 1:09 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject:
Probiotics, reduced anxiety, and thoughts about the weird, wrong
perception that we exist separately from our bodies, somehow.
Date: September 17, 2011 12:18:17 PM MDT
Subject: The Psychology Of Yogurt
Source: Wired Science » Frontal Cortex
Author: Jonah Lehrer
My latest WSJ column uses a new
State University, Los Angeles
Google voice: 747-999-5105
blog: http://russabbott.blogspot.com/
vita: http://sites.google.com/site/russabbott/
_
On Sat, Sep 10, 2011 at 8:24 PM, Victoria Hughes > wrote:
Cool.
Tory Hughes
www.toryhughes.com
Cool.
Tory Hughes
www.toryhughes.com
The Creative Development manual
On Sep 10, 2011, at 8:51 PM, joseph spinden wrote:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424053111904900904576554063768827104.html?KEYWORDS=climate+jolis
--
"Sunlight is the best disinfectant."
-- Supreme Court Justi
reas that
David brought up, about the development and nature of computational
models of brain activity.
Tory
On Sep 9, 2011, at 10:26 PM, Nicholas Thompson wrote:
In neither place does one get the stunning views of the Jemez and
the Sangre de Cristo’s we get at St. Johns.
How many people usually meet for Friam?
Tory Hughes
www.toryhughes.com
The Creative Development manual
On Sep 7, 2011, at 3:34 PM, Owen Densmore wrote:
We had wedtech today at Tesoro, as usual, and stopped into the Lucky
Bean coffee shop & cafe which has taken over the old Borders sit
Stephen's email re today's talk.
From: Stephen Guerin
Date: September 6, 2011 10:05:58 AM MDT
To: Owen Densmore , kordy Smythe >, Greg Sonnenfeld , Scott Wittenburg >, Peter Robert Guerzenich Small
Cc: disc...@sfcomplex.org, "Wedtech@Redfish. Com"
, Robert Geist
Subject: [sfx: Discuss]
I agree. The issue has been getting attention from various levels at
those levels.
Now our dilemma / opportunity is cultivating a willingness to see the
interconnections, from which humane lasting solutions can be drawn.
Thus my reference to the implications of Krakauer's last talk.
As I was
I'd couple this with the Ulam talks.
After further understanding the global cultural pressures we've taken
on when we plunged gleefully over the edge into the digital
revolution, we need to add that to the mix.
Cracking up, cracking open.
Our tools make our revolutions possible and increase
L
O
L
Tory Hughes
www.toryhughes.com
The Creative Development manual
On Aug 29, 2011, at 10:03 PM, Douglas Roberts wrote:
Thanks, Tory.
Emergent.
There, we're not off-topic any more...
-Doug
Sent from Android.
On Aug 29, 2011 9:57 PM, "Victoria Hughes"
wrote:
&g
Wow.
Fabulous trip. First time I've ever wanted a motorcycle. I enjoyed the
variety of scenery /geology you traveled across.
Thanks for sharing.
Tory
Tory Hughes
www.toryhughes.com
The Creative Development manual
On Aug 29, 2011, at 4:32 PM, Douglas Roberts wrote:
The finished trip bl
gs.
I just assumed I'd find or invent a way. That was his most valuable
legacy.
Steve, your narrative brought back lovely memories.
Thanks
Victoria
On Aug 21, 2011, at 10:11 AM, Nicholas Thompson wrote:
Steve,
It was not the icy hand of the parent I detected, but that
"God is a circle whose center is everywhere and whose circumference is
nowhere."
attributed to various philosophers, beginning with Empedocles
a non-dual rephrase> " ... whose center is everywhere and
circumference is now here".
or even "be the hologram you are, babe".
On Aug 19,
brief description and images of temporary patches: electronics that
measure, monitor and feed back info on activity in the heart, brain
and muscles
Electronic Temporary Tattoo Marks Breakthrough In Health Monitoring
@PSFK
Tory Hughes
victo...@toryhughes.com
=
BBC News - Animal's genetic code redesigned
The first few sentences-
Researchers say they have created the first ever animal with
artificial information in its genetic code.
The technique, they say, could give biologists "atom-by-atom control"
over the molecules in living organisms.
One
e can trust to care for the kiddies is a requirement
for many.
Victoria
On Aug 9, 2011, at 8:03 PM, ERIC P. CHARLES wrote:
Glen,
Excellent observation at the end. I don't know much about the human
data (is there an anthropologist in the house?), but for every non-
hum
at the Chico Hot Springs Hotel in Montana tonight, where
the wireless access is iffy, at best.
My take: we're fucked globally, for a while. Think the 2008
recession and I suspect we'll be in the ballpark.
On Mon, Aug 8, 2011 at 7:52 PM, Victoria Hughes > wrote:
Strong opinio
s before.
Stronger opinions re China and the US/West's addiction to their
cheaply made merchandise and to consumerism (especially after
Sarbajit's comments re cell phones), and the Tea Party will wait until
I see if anyone picks this thread up.
Yes,
ne,
other than changing your phone number.
That will not work for my business.
So is this really true?
There is no way to remove my phone number from a google voice mail
account once it's set up?
In awe of megalopolies-
Victoria
On Aug 2, 2011, at 9:37 PM, Owen Densmore wrote:
Ouch
Speaking of which-
Begin forwarded message:
From: Tom Johnson
Date: August 2, 2011 9:43:39 PM MDT
To: disc...@sfcomplex.org
Subject: [sfx: Discuss] London’s bus network to benefit from Wi-Fi
and open data (Wired UK)
Reply-To: disc...@sfcomplex.org
Londoners will soon have access to Wi-Fi v
Gist of this is an interesting buried T-Mobile cell-phone service,
inexpensive and month-to-month. No contract, no penalties.
Link:
How to Save on Your Cell Phone Plan with Secret No-Contract Deals
Post:
This is a guest post from social-media maven Laura Roeder. Laura first
told me this story
Oh you all are going to have a field day with this one, I can see
already.
Howabout
how many Friamistas does it take to change a lightbulb?
The mind boggles.
Tory
On Jul 27, 2011, at 9:54 AM, Douglas Roberts wrote:
Another might be: "Why does water swirl the way it does going down
the dr
Looks like a heck of a lot of fun.
First ever electronics show-and-tell over google+ hangout was a
success! « adafruit industries blog
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lecture
Not all people or cultures would agree that fame and lack of privacy =
lack of safety.
On Jul 14, 2011, at 2:42 PM, Jochen Fromm wrote:
Privacy is a curious thing, especially
those who do not have it - the rich
and the famous - desire it.
Those who have it - the poor and the
nameless - do not
A great example of creative action; intentional and potent.
So those who sign up have self-selected to be in a group of folks
wanting specific things from their social networks, rather than those
wanting- or tolerating - the wider, scattershot approach of FB etc...
Our interests are much mo
I just signed up, am on the list: is there a quicker way to get an
account?
Went to Jochen's page, looks nice and clean. Of course pictures of the
Maldives beaches are helpful. Does a trip there come with the G+
account?...
Tory
On Jul 8, 2011, at 7:07 PM, James Steiner wrote:
I'm in it
You mean no one has posted this yet?
MENSA INVITATIONAL
The Washington Post's Mensa Invitational once again invited readers
to take any word from the dictionary, alter it by adding,
subtracting, or changing one letter, and supply a new definition.
Here are the winners:
1. Cashtration
http://www.xefer.com/2011/05/wikipedia
On Jul 7, 2011, at 8:03 PM, glen e. p. ropella wrote:
Owen Densmore wrote at 07/07/2011 06:39 PM:
Good lord, how? Is it as empirical? Does it create as provably
valid
models? Or is it simply as worthy an area of study as science?
Well, as I said, p
Pradeep, Steve-
Really enjoyed this information as well as the presentation style.
Thanks for the re-post of the link.
Having done some welding, I was particularly impressed by the video of
the cutting torch- it's an amazing sensation to watch that closely
without squinting behind the mask.
And a grand bottle it was, too. Now there's a tangent, a great bottle
of Bourbon.
Thanks, Sas, for the excellent summer get-together! Wonderful
conversations at our table about art, science, observation, cognitive
processing, perception, awareness, h, all the big ones.
Consciousness.
Ahem.
Thus working in a studio setting.
Don't think I am not observing the clamorous silence
in response to my post inviting you over to experiment with
what you think will happen,
what does happen, and
how you made it happen.
VEH
On Jul 4, 2011, at 9:30 AM, Nicholas Thompson wrote:
De
Be there within the hour. Want anything? TJ's is on the way.
Tory
On Jul 2, 2011, at 6:03 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
Nick, Peter -
It is good to see the curmudgeons with their curmudgeons out. Maybe
we can get Doug to flail (swirl?) his too! and I think we
have a few others here as well...
many of you don't even live here.
But those of you who are local and want to pursue how gendanken
experiments work, and have moved to the part of the process where you
test things in the real world, let's see what happens.
Victoria (if you're coming to my stu
http://www.inciweb.org/incident/article/2385/12142/
Laboratory-Developed Military Technology Put to Use
Incident: Las Conchas Wildfire
Released: 40 min. ago
News Release Noon
News Media Information: 505-820-1226
NR#28
Laboratory-Developed Military Technology Put to Use for Las Conchas
Fire E
Speaking of which:
A pie chart of what happens on line in 60 seconds:
60 Seconds - Things That Happen On Internet Every Sixty Seconds
[Infographic]
Search engine Google serves more that 694,445 queries
6,600+ pictures are uploaded on Flickr
600 videos are uploaded on YouTube videos, amounting
d was effective enough to remain an accessible didactic
example long after your admittedly frustrating few minutes were over.
Always wanted to hear you speak and show - Teach - on the topic again.
Perhaps time for a presentation? I'd be there, and bring people.
Victoria
On Jun 28, 2011,
1 - 100 of 267 matches
Mail list logo