- Algorithms Engulf Wall Street by Michael Feldman, HPCwire January 2011
- Dire Consequences of Overconnectedness by William Davidow, Commonwealth Club January 2011
- Wired for War by P. W. Singer, Australian Broadcasting Corporation 2010
- An Economic View of Crowdsourcing and Online Labor Markets by John Horton, Harvard University for Computational Social Science and the Wisdom of Crowds, NIPS 2010 Workshop
- Modélisation de mouvements de foules by Bertrand Maury, Images des mathématiques January 2011
- How you and Google are losing the battle against spam in search results by Michael S. Rosenwald, The Washington Post January 2011
- La recherche médicale est-elle la priorité de ce siècle ?, Avec ou sans rendez-vous, France Culture February 2011
- Gravity takes advantage of the 'interest graph' by Amit Kapur, CNET News 2010
- Les états en guerre économique with Ali Laïdi, Canal Academie January 2011
- Les ETI. Champions cachés de notre économie with Yvon Gattaz, Canal Academie January 2011
- Words, Links, Likes and Shares: The Evolution of Relevance by Ryan McIntyre McInblog, February 2011
- Laissez-Faire, Picking Winners, and Other Myths of National Competitiveness by by Gary P. Pisano, Harvard Business Review January 2011
- Let’s End the Myth that Ideas are Worthless by Nathaniel Whittemore, Assetmap January 2011
- Personal information management in academia: a short bibliography by John M. Jackson, Ink and Vellum 2010
- Thought Tapestries, by Liane Gabora 2004
- Into Eternity, Magic Hour Films 2010
- with a problematic very similar to MemoryLoss to explain a set of concepts to an unknown future public with unknown cognitive abilities
- Why I Love Al Jazeera by Robert D. Kaplan, The Atlantic 2009
- Systemic risk in banking ecosystems by Andrew G. Haldane and Robert M. May, Nature January 2011
- Funding: Researching outside the box by Cristina Jimenez, Nature January 2011
- High-energy physics: Down the petabyte highway by Geoff Brumfiel, Nature January 2011
- From Simple To Complex by Jef Akst, The Scientist January 2011
- see TreeOfKnowledge
- "In general, things related to sex don’t follow the normal rules regarding evolution; innovation seems to be a really important part of sex." James Umen
- defining evolutionary transition in individuality (ETI)
- Collapse of Complex Societies by Joseph Tainter, International Conference on Sustainability 2010
- Martin Jacques: Understanding the rise of China, TED 2011
- CyberTower: The Substance of Civilization by Stephen Sass, Cornell University 2011
- The Substance of Civilization, Materials and Human History from the Stone Age to the Age of Silicon by Stephen Sass, Arcade Publishing 1999
- Creator of Instant Messaging Protocol to Launch App Platform for Your Life by Marshall Kirkpatrick, RWW February 2011
Skynet meets the Swarm: how the Berkeley Overmind won the 2010 StarCraft AI competition by Haomiao Huang, arstechnica January 2011
- Defining life: the development of an artificial cell By Diana Gitig, arstechnica February 2011
- Why Quora Is Not Wikipedia by Seb Paquet, The Quora Review February 2011
- It’s Not My Fault You Are New to Quora by Jamie Beckland, The Quora Review February 2011
- Don Tapscott - Macrowikinomics with Allan Gregg, TVOntario 2010
- Can’t Find a Technical Co-Founder? Do It Yourself by Vinicius Vacanti 2010
- S04E14: The Thespian Catalyst by David Saltzberg, The Big Blog Theory February 2011
- IdrA: "My mom has always been very supportive of me", FNATIC.com 2010
- Kiwikaki: The Green Bird by Glacials, ROOT Gaming 2010
- After Words with Michael Belfiore, C-SPAN BookTV 2010
- Les nouvelles technologies : révolution culturelle et cognitive by Michel Serres, INRIA 2007
- metaphore base sur le tableau de Bruna de Saint-Denis
- concluant ~min51 ""Les nouvelles technologies nous ont condamne a etre intelligent. Comme nous avons le savoir devant nous, comme nous avons l'imagination devant nous, mais oui nous sommes condamne a devenir intelligent, a devenir inventif. [...] Il ne nous reste exactement que l'inventivite. [...] Aujourd'hui le travail intellectuel est oblige d'etre un travail intelligent et non un travail repetitif comme il a ete jusqu'a maintenant."
- d'ou l'importance des valeurs fondatrices du support automatise de la creativite par Innovativ.it (nomme avant CoEvolution puis Seedea, des noms problablement plus representatif)
- Rémy Brague : La légitimité de l'humain, Canal Académie January 2011
- made me consider if human specie as a whole was not just a local optimum, overspecialized and thus if human thought was not also a local optimization of intelligence
- L’invention de la mécanographie by Denis Favre, Interstices January 2011
- Calculer différemment by Jean-Louis Giavitto, Interstices January 2011
- Facilitate Insight by Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation by Richard P. Chi, Allan W. Snyder, PLoS ONE February 2011
- is that equivalent to simulated annealing? moving out of a local optimum (here because of an hypothesis driven way of thinking)?
- note that it might not be that efficient when one does not know prior to the task when to shift and change from the classical ways to non traditional solutions
- especially not knowing the size of the solution space and what has been explored so far (a proper advancement metric)
- added to CognitiveEnvironments#tDCS
- is there a database of repeated research experiments?
- stipulating the result following an experimental protocol but also the name of the lab, the date when it was conducted, etc...
- notification means (e.g. RSS)
- another lab that has the materials and is studying that topic will probably be curious and check then publish if and only if it's wrong and it finds a better way or has sth to add
- for somebody that is not part of either lab just knowing that there is an independent lab reproducing the experiment is a good way of confirmation or infirmation
- you basically have to wait an undetermined time then check again if somebody published sth on that initial protocol thus extremely hard to track
- see DataDryad international repository of data underlying peer-reviewed articles in the basic and applied biosciences (~600 packages as of May 2011)
- Using genetic algorithms to find Starcraft 2 build orders by Louis Brandy, lbrandy.com Blog 2010
- An Evolutionary Approach to Financial History by Naill Ferguson, Gresham College 2009
- precision regarding of Lamarckian and asexual means
- Créer un cerveau artificiel est-il raisonnable ? with Avec Hervé Chneiweiss and Yves Fregnac, Science publique, France Culture February 2011
- mention of IHES researchers in mathematics involved
- defining imergence
- The BrainScaleS project, EU FET-Proactive FP7
- based on FACETS, resulted parrlt in Neural Ensemble programming the complexity telescope for brain-like computing
- including PyNN simulator-independent language for building neuronal network models.
- Where's the Real Bottleneck in Scientific Computing? by Greg Wilson, American Scientist 2006
- reconsidering ΦFP, especially regarding the importance of expressiveness
- Seven ways to think like the web by Jon Udell, January 2011
- How to Beat Procrastination by Luke Muehlhauser, Less Wrong February 2011
- Electric thinking cap? Flash of fresh insight by electrical brain stimulation, ScienceDaily February 2011
- Artificial Immune Systems by Dipankar Dasgupta, NIGEL 2006
- Zeitgeist: Moving Forward by Peter Joseph, January 2011
- It is the structure of social networks that shapes influence… and the structure is changing by Ross Dawson, My Venture Pad February 2011
- À propos de la recherche opérationnelle with Jean-Charles Billaut, Interstices 2010
- Les processeurs multicœurs aujourd’hui et demain with André Seznec, Interstices January 2011
- Imagery as a tool to improve idea development by Zafer Bilda and John S Gero
- User preferences for search engines by John Langford, Machine Learning (Theory) February 2011
- Aspects de l’œuvre de Fourier : les transformées, Continent sciences, France Culture February 2011
- Why Virtual Reality Is Probably Not Ever Actually Going To Happen by Leigh Alexander, Thought Catalog February 2011
- La Cour des comptes confirme les critiques du Sénat sur la gestion de la pandémie de grippe A(H1N1) by Charles Duchemin, February 2011
- Bees Solve Complex Problems Faster Than Supercomputers by Casey Kazan, DailyGalaxy 2010
- Quantitative Analysis of Culture Using Millions of Digitized Books Science 2010
- Dix pistes pour mieux former les ingénieurs by Isabelle Ficek, Les Echo February 2011
- Formations d’ingénieurs "à la française" : l’Institut Montaigne remet le modèle en cause, educpros.fr February 2011
- Les insurgés de la terre, Arte February 2011
- The Software of the Universe: An Introduction to the History and Philosophy of the Laws of Nature by Mauro Dorato, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 2010
- Digital Atlasing and Standardization in the Mouse Brain, PLoS Computational Biology February 2011
- basically providing a standard address space
- "standards will be developed and shared in a manner similar to that used by the World Wide Web Consortium"
- The Enhanced Indispensability Argument: Representational versus Explanatory Role of Mathematics in Science by Juha Saatsi, British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 2010
- Vicarious Systems Says Its Artificial Intelligence Is The Real Deal by Tomio Geron, Venture Capital Dispatch - WSJ February 2011
- Tibetan Philosophy,Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- note that conventional or nominal truth in The Doctrine of the Two Truths can be considered an abstraction, a useful way to focus on a specific level of the discourse while discarding other layers seemingly irrelevant to the point one wants to study
- Madhyamaka Buddhism, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- AI Techniques for Personalized Recommendation, AAAI 2004
- Wikipedia:Recommender system
- consider using recommendation engine for
- shared content (movies we like together) or
- select movies that both like, mix the 2 lists then remove each one does not like
- for presents (what did she liked recently)
- Créer sa boîte sans business plan : une nouvelle méthode débarque en France, Capital.fr February 2011
- Cyber Experts Have Proof That China Has Hijacked U.S.-Based Internet Traffic: UPDATED, by Stew Magnuson, nationaldefensemagazine.org Blog 2010
- La guerre de l'or noir, Arte.tv February 2011
- If You Love Nature, Move to the City by Edward Glaeser, Harvard Kennedy School February 2011
- The "internet kill switch" debate: Knocking over entire web systems, The Economist February 2011
- Fuyez... c'est trop dangereux ! by Pierre Gallais, Images des mathématiques February 2011
- Five Pervasive Myths About Older Software Developers by Dave, Lessons of Failure 2010
- The Future of Art an immediated autodocumentary, emergence 2010
- Sean Gourley on the mathematics of war, TED.com 2009
- Michael Pawlyn: Using nature's genius in architecture, TED.com 2010
- Blood in the mobile by Frank Poulsen, Arte.tv 2011
- Global Witness, natural resource-related conflict and corruption and associated environmental and human rights abuses.
- Le dessous des cartes on courants océaniques, déchets plastiques, Arte.tv February 2011
- Stonehenge ou les mystères révélés du néolithique, BBC/Arte.tv February 2011
- Building Watson: An Overview of the DeepQA Project, AI Magazine Fall 2010
- Pattern of Life: Where Would Hosni Mubarak Flee?, Recorded Future Blog January 2011
- Intelligence artificielle, futur du livre et de la bibliothèque? by Bruno Rives, Labo BnF January 2011
- How Many PlayStations Make A Watson? by Marcus L Endicott, January 2011
- Shifting innovation? by Jerome Cukier, OECD Factblog January 2011
- Bitcoin - a Step Toward Censorship-Resistant Digital Currency by Rainey Reitman, Electronic Frontier Foundation January 2011
- Open data: Empowering the empowered or effective data use for everyone? by Michael B. Gurstein, First Monday February 2011
- Minds For Sale by Jonathan Zittrain, Harvard Law School Alumni Reunion Luncheon 2010
- The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires, Columbia Law School Magazine 2010
- Tim Wu on the Master Switch at Berkman Center, January 2011
- "The Master Switch" by Tim Wu by Timothy B. Lee, Ars book review January 2011
- Why Techno-Utopians Should Beware by Evgeny Morozov, Zócalo Public Square 2010
- Jacob Weisberg & Tim Wu - The Master Switch, New America Foundation 2010
- Tim Wu: Information Empires in Agenda Steve Paikin, TV Ontario 2010
- Large-scale graph computing at Google by Grzegorz Czajkowski, Official Google Research Blog 2009
- Apache Mesos Spark a MapReduce-like cluster computing framework designed to support low-latency iterative jobs and interactive use from an interpreter written in Scala..
- Phoebus distributed framework for large scale graph processing written in Erlang by Arun Suresh
- see also Programming
- including a link to Gremlin, a graph traversal language
- Google Pregel Graph Processing by Ricky Ho, Pragmatic Programming Techniques 2010
- Why Starting Justin.tv Was A Really Bad Idea, But I’m Glad We Did It Anyway by Justin Kan, TechCrunch February 2011
- Neurobiologists Find that Weak Electrical Fields in the Brain Help Neurons Fire Together by Kathy Svitil, Caltech Media Relations February 2011
- Barbara van Schewick on Internet Architecture and Innovation, Berkman Center 2010
- How Watson “sees,” “hears,” and “speaks” to play Jeopardy! by David Gondek, IBM Research Blog January 2011
- Knowing what it knows: selected nuances of Watson's strategy by Jon Lenchner, IBM Research Blog February 2011
- Watson’s wagering strategies by Gerald Tesauro, IBM Research Blog February 2011
- 'Jeopardy!' Man vs. Machine: Who (or What) Should You Root For? by Cameron Martin, The Atlantic February 2011
- Ferrucci on Watson's Jeopardy performance: Day One by Stephen Baker, The Numerati February 2011
- The Misleading Metaphor of Decline by Joseph Nye, Harvard Kennedy School February 2011
- After ‘Jeopardy’ by Stephen Baker, The Boston Globe February 2011
- Formal Theory of Fun & Creativity by Jurgen Schmidhuber, European Conference on Machine Learning and Principles and Practice of Knowledge Discovery in Databases (ECML PKDD) September 2010
- XYDO Preparing Personalized News Hub With Quora Flavor by Louis Gray, February 2011
- Counting the Cost - Back to Dubai, AlJazeeraEnglish November 2010
- The Ethnoepistemology of Epistemologists in Ethnoepistemology, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Bioencryption by Bruce Schneier, Schneier on Security January 2011
- CUHK Bioencryption – Just storage, no encryption? by Kempton, ideas Revolutionary January 2011
- Project principle of team Hong Kong-CUHK, IGEM 2010
- De votre boulangerie à un système d’exploitation multiprocesseur by Brice Goglin, Interstices February 2011
- Santa's not so little helper: Today's the busiest online shopping day of the year. So are they ready at the biggest grotto this side of Lapland? by Robert Hardman, Daily Mail 2009
La place de l'Homme dans la biodiversité, Continent sciences, France Culture February 2011
- The Difficulty of Making New Discoveries by Jonah Lehrer, Wall Street Journal February 2011
- Nicholas Rescher by Michele Marsonet, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Internet : nouveaux champs de bataille 1/4 - Cyberguerre et guerres de l'information, Culturesmonde, France Culture February 2011
- Middle-earth according to Mordor by Laura Miller, Salon.com February 2011
- I.B.M.’s Watson - Computers Close In on the ‘Paris Hilton’ Problem by John Markoff, NYTimes.com February 2011
- Les enjeux de la grammatisation des relations by Christian Fauré, Hypomnemata : supports de mémoire February 2011
- La Taxe Google is back, this time to help French ISPs by Matthew Lasar, Arstechnica February 2011
- IBM’s Watson vs Humans, Noam Chomsky, Stephen Wolfram by Phillip Torrone, Make February 2011
- Kingpin by Kevin Poulsen by Bruce Sterling, Beyond The Beyond February 2011
- The Simple (And Perhaps Harsh) Reality Of Apple’s Ecosystem by MG Siegler, TechCrunch February 2011
- Why Are You People Defending Apple? by Jason Kincaid, TechCrunch February 2011
- Data Privacy - Susan Freiwald and Kevin Bankston, Stanford Center for Internet and Society January 2011
- Using Sociology(!) to Explain Unfollows on Twitter by Mor Naaman, The Ayman and Naaman Show January 2011
- Prêt à jeter, Arte 2010
- Dan Ariely, Authors@Google 2008
- Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely, Duke University 2008
- Biblionet - The Lights in the Tunnel by Jean-Paul Baquiast, Automates Intelligents February 2011
- The Lights in the Tunnel by Brad Feld, MIT Technology Review blog 2010
- La match Watson/jeopardy et la question de l'intelligence augmentée by Jean-Paul Baquiast, le blog philoscience February 2011
- What does Watson mean? by John Langford, Machine Learning (Theory) February 2011
- "human exceptionalists should understand what the really hard things for an AI to do are. It’s important to understand that there are various levels of I in AI. A few I think about are:
- Animal Intelligence. [...]
- Turing Test Intelligence. [...]
- Pandora’s box Intelligence. [...]"
- Why "Me Too" Startups Are Not Always A Mistake by Dharmesh Shah, OnStartups.com 2007
- The World's Technological Capacity to Store, Communicate, and Compute Information by Martin Hilbert and Priscila López, Science February 2011
- "Normalization on compression rates is essential for comparing the informational performance" (p2)
- here based on the available best algorithm at each time, currently MPEG-4
- "it would theoretically be possible to normalize the resulting hardware capacity for algorithmic efficiency" (p4)
- http://martinhilbert.net/WorldInfoCapacity.html
- see also own related questions
- on a broader scale ProgrammingTheUniverse#Chapter7
- The Impact of Network Structure on Breaking Ties in Online Social Networks: Unfollowing on Twitter by Funda Kivran-Swaine, Priya Govindan and Mor Naamangi, CHI May 2011
- Google: Cloud Computing, Machine Learning–and Self-Destruction? by Martin Ford, econfuture 2010
- Robotic Nation by Marshall Brain, 2008
- added to TenDayMBA#EconomicsExercise
- Robots in 2015
- Robotic Freedom
- "This freedom would enable a period of creativity unlike anything that we have seen in the past. Is there a way to design the economy so that this level of creativity is possible?"
- "or the strongest possible economy, we need to create the largest possible pool of innovators"
- Will IBM's Watson put your job in jeopardy? by Martin Ford, Fortune Management February 2011
- "But don't assume that means artificial intelligence won't replace workers. Nearly all jobs in today's economy are specialized, and as applications like Watson become more versatile and affordable, they will be used in a variety of areas, especially in large organizations."
- Korean schools welcome more robot teachers by Tim Hornyak, CNET 2010
- Why 3 Startups Are Betting That You'll Want to Stream Your Browser History by Sarah Kessler, Mashable February 2011
- Look Out Quora, InboxQ Takes Q&A Off-Site And On To Twitter by Alexia Tsotsis, Techcrunch February 2011
- Data Processing at the LHC by Bob Jones, Google Tech Talk February 2011
- The Dark Side of Creativity: Original Thinkers Can Be More Dishonest by Francesca Gino and Dan Ariely, HBS Working Knowledge February 2011
- BitTorrent DNA Reduce content delivery bills
- Econometrics and Technological Unemployment — Some Questions by Martin Ford, econfuture 2010
- Structural Unemployment: The Economists Just Don’t Get It by Martin Ford, econfuture 2010
- impact of the difference of culture, e.g. Japan
- Robots, Dexterity and Visual Recognition by Martin Ford, econfuture, 2010
- Comparative Advantage v. Machines by Martin Ford, econfuture, 2009
- comparing biological beings to technology, e.g. oxen
- "Maybe there is an area where human workers will always have an absolute advantage: in jobs that require uniquely human qualities or creativity, artistic ability and so forth. A lot of the conventional wisdom seems to suggest that we simply need to retrain, re-educate and redeploy workers into these areas, and everything will be fine."
- The Jobs of the Future — or Not by Martin Ford, econfuture, 2009
- "Jobs that rely heavily on creativity, talent or unique personality traits (think authors, actors, musicians, commission sales people) very often have a power law income distribution."
- Martin Ford Asks: Will Automation Lead to Economic Collapse? by Aaron Saenz, Singularity Hub 2009
- "Ford argues that the Luddite Fallacy will only remain a fallacy so long as human capability exceeds technological capability. That is, as long as humans are able to improve faster (or as fast as) machines, humans cannot be fully replaced."
- Economic Growth Given Machine Intelligence by Robin Hanson, 1998
- asks the direct question of the cost of intelligence
- see also previous work on the cost of information
- Economics of Science Fiction at George Mason University
- The Economic Implications of Intelligent Machines by Martin Ford, econfuture 2009
- Take Both Econ, Techies Seriously by Robin Hanson, Overcoming Bias 2009
- Response to Robin Hanson: Why he’s wrong about “Economic Growth Given Machine Intelligence” by Martin Ford, econfuture 2009
- Economics Of The Singularity by Robin Hanson, IEEE Spectrum 2008
- "Though it might cost many billions of dollars to build one such machine, the first copy might cost only millions and the millionth copy perhaps thousands or less. Mass production could then supply what has so far been the one factor of production that has remained critically scarce throughout human history: intelligent, highly trained labor."
- "So far, machines have displaced relatively few human workers, and when they have done so, they have in most cases greatly raised the incomes of other workers. That is, the complementary effect has outweighed the substitution effect--but this trend need not continue."
- As Economic Disparity Grows, Higher Taxes May Be Only Solution by Gregory Clark, The Washington Post 2009
- Autopsie du bug, Place de la toile, France Culture February 2011
- World's total CPU power: one human brain by John Timmer, arstechnica February 2011
- Google Gets Involved in BitTorrent Search Engine Lawsuit by Ernesto, TorrentFreak February 2011
- How to build your own Watson Jeopardy! supermachine by Timothy Prickett Morgan, The Register February 2011
- A tale of two qubits: how quantum computers work by Joseph B. Altepeter, arstechnica 2010
- Goodbye academia, I get a life. by Massimo, blog.devicerandom February 2011
- Why I'm leaving Harvard by Matt Welsh, Volatile and Decentralized 2010
- "The question for me is simply which side of the innovation pipeline I want to work on. Academics have a lot of freedom, but this comes at the cost of high overhead and a longer path from idea to application."
- DeSTIN vision development by Joel Pitt, OpenCog Brainwave February 2011
- “If this is so good, why don’t you trade with it yourself?”, Recorded Future Blog February 2011
- Watson making Information Management (even more) cool by Bernie Spang, IBM Research blog February 2011
- Revealed: Air Force ordered software to manage army of fake virtual people by Stephen C. Webster, The Raw Story February 2011
- Flash crash panel calls for market overhaul by Roberta Rampton and Jonathan Spicer, Reuters February 2011
- Short Sharp Science: Do casual words betray warlike intent? by Peter Aldhous, NewScientist February 2011
- How to crash the Internet by Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols, ZDNet February 2011
- La vie artificielle, Continent sciences, France Culture February 2011
- Top 10 Botnet Threat Report, Damballa 2010
- HTM: New Algorithms and a New Way of Programming by Tom Murphy, New Tech Post 2010
- Neurons Behaving Like Social Networks by Tom Murphy, New Tech Post January 2011
- Complexity Cases in Wolfram Alpha by Michael Sollami, Wolfram|Alpha Blog February 2011
- How a Remote Town in Romania Has Become Cybercrime Central by Yudhijit Bhattacharjee, Wired January 2011
- Computing Machinery and Intelligence, by Alan Turing, Mind 1950
- The Turing Test, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Wikipedia:Turing test
- http://www.aaai.org/aitopics/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/AITopics/TuringTest
- Scholarpedia:Turing test
- make X/Y be interrogated by another entity also of X/Y to the point where it itself correctly suggest without being asked first that X/Y is of type X or Y
- linking consciousness and creativity
- one can wonder if, because of automation for example (cf economy articles read earlier this month), creativity becomes increasingly important and thus a favored skills implying a specific state of mind, the ability to properly manage consciousness (and maybe attention) would become gradually critical too
- "Our problem then is to find out how to programme these machines to play the game. At my present rate of working I produce about a thousand digits of programme a day, so that about sixty workers, working steadily through the fifty years might accomplish the job, if nothing went into the waste-paper basket. Some more expeditious method seems desirable." (p455)
- "It should be noticed that it is used in the analogous process of evolution. But there the systematic method is not possible. How could one keep track of the different genetical combinations that had been tried, as to avoid trying them again ?" (p459-460)
- Economics of AI by Robin Hanson, The Second Conference on Artificial General Intelligence, AGI Conference 2009
- Dave Slate on Winning the R Challenge by Dave Slate, Kaggle blog - No Free Hunch February 2011
- How we did it: the winners of the IJCNN Social Network Challenge by Arvind Narayanan, Kaggle blog - No Free Hunch January 2011
- A symbolic analysis of relay and switching circuits by Claude Shannon, MIT 1936
- RSA Conference: Researchers Go Inside the Botnet Threat by Brian Prince, eWeek.com February 2011
- How to Execute Great Ideas by Marla Tabaka, Inc.com February 2011
- How social media amplifies competitive advantage by Mark Schaefer, Grow blog February 2011
- Quora vs. StackExchange: Why, Joel, Why? by Jon Evans, TechCrunch February 2011
- PeopleRank: Quora Is Developing An Algorithm To Determine And Rank User Quality by Leena Rao, TechCrunch January 2011
- Wittgenstein for programmers (part 1), HXA7241 February 2011
- Stanford Expert Considers Robots and the Law by Ryan Calo, Center for Internet and Society January 2011
- Climate change challenge, The Ideas Economy, The Economist February 2011
- If You Don't Want To Influence Others, You Can't Lead by Linda Hill & Kent Lineback, Harvard Business Review February 2011
- French search company lobs new antitrust complaint at Google by Jacqui Cheng, arstechnica February 2011
- Empty suit: the chaotic way Anonymous makes decisions by Nate Anderson, arstechnica February 2011
- Genèse d’un algorithme by François Rechenmann and Marie-Christine Rousset, Interstices February 2011
- Can Montreal Become an Open Source Startup Hub? by Evan Prodromou, NextMontreal February 2011
- Exaptive Innovation and creative epistemology by Jean-Baptiste Labrune, MIT Media Lab 2010
- Dream Machines, Technological Imaginary and Visual Representation by Jean-Baptiste Labrune, MIT Media Lab Conference 2009
- Researcher Identifies New Fast-Flux Botnet by Lucian Constantin, Softpedia February 2011
- Jean-Baptiste Labrune: Exploring Creativity with a Reflexive Lens, MIT Media Lab 2008
- What I Wish Someone Had Told Me 4 Years Ago by Amir Khella, February 2011
- Do helmets make sports more violent?, Decision Science News February 2011
- What’s a Distributed Social Network? comic
- The freedom to be who you want to be… by Alma Whitten, Google Public Policy Blog February 2011
- Google’s Wizard Of Oz Search Algorithm And The Threat Of Facebook Search by Michael Arrington, TechCrunch February 2011
- Tableau Public's New Data Policy by Robert Kosara, eagereyes February 2011
- Why Apple Should Pay $100 Billion To Buy Facebook by Eric Jackson, BusinessInsider.com February 2011
- Metaphors We Think With: The Role of Metaphor in Reasoning by Paul Thibodeau and Lera Boroditsky, PLoS ONE February 2011
- Shrinking cities : l'Europe des villes en décroissance, Planète terre, France Culture February 2011
- How to use cognitive surplus to create civic value by Clay Shirky, Rencontres RSLN #3 January 2011
- Midday nap markedly boosts the brain's learning capacity ScienceDaily February 2010
- La sérendipité : Quel rôle joue le hasard dans la science ?, Science publique, France Culture February 2011
- Ben Fullerton at Wisdom 2.0 Conference, Living with awareness, wisdom, and compassion, February 2011
- Language as a Window into Human Nature by Steven Pinker, The RSA London February 2011
- see Nature/Science article read before (by Harvard PED)
- Tony Judt: What is Living and What is Dead in Social Democracy, 2009 Remarque Lecture at NYU
- The Google Paradox by Marc-Alexandre Gagnon, February 2011
- How Demand Media Used PR Spin to Have Google Kill Their Competitors by Aaron Wall, Aaron Wall's blog SEObook.com February 2011
- Turn Off The Light by Sam McDougle, The Beautiful Brain February 2011
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