A quote attributed to Albert Einstein argues that ‘insanity means doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results’. Scriptwriter Bruce Feirstein, who wrote some of the James Bond movie scripts, asserted further that the distance between insanity and genius is measured only by success. Armed with such heavyweights-uttered quotes, we can [...]
Posts Tagged ‘The Guardian’
The Insane and the Genius
Posted: by Rudy Nadler-Nir in Anthrodigital, Archetypes, Narratives, TheoriesTags: Albert Einstein, archived content, Bruce Feirstein, Chris Anderson, Content seekers, Dow Jones, Feinstien’s maxim, Fortune Magazine, Fox Business Network, freeconomics, information web, Insanity, insanity vs. genius, James Bond, News Corp., Rupert Murdoch, searchable content, the 25 most powerful people in business, the free Web, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, Wired magazine, WSJ content
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Webs, clouds and tags of meaning
Posted: by Rudy Nadler-Nir in NarrativesTags: bots, Charlie Brooker, cloud of meaning, Content Managemant Systems, Grokker, information enablers, information repositories, Kartoo, Pixsy, Private Eye online, Quintura, Search Engine Optimisation, search engine robots, semantic cloud, Semantic Web, semantics, SEO, SEO visibility, The Guardian, Tim Berners-Lee, visual search engines
Some time ago, The Guardian‘s Charlie Brooker wrote an article knocking the idea that 9/11 was some sort of demonic conspiracy by sinister industrial-military stakeholders in the US government. No ways, argued Charlie, for conspirators to bypass the gigantic pile of bureaucratic dust that is likely to be required in order to commission a governmental [...]