james-albus.org
James S. Albus, PHD - Area of Interest
http://www.james-albus.org/area.html
A Computational Theory of Mind. There are three great questions in science:. What is matter and energy? In my web site www.peoplescapitalism.org. I confront the political and economic issues. In this section, I address the enabling science intelligent systems. A Model of the Cerebellum. Another important insight suggested by CMAC was that if some of its outputs are looped back to its input, a CMAC can act as a finite state automata. This means that neural nets can generate strings of actions such as ...
james-albus.org
James S. Albus, PHD - Books
http://www.james-albus.org/books.html
Is a plan to create a new social order in which material prosperity and personal financial security would be commonplace. Peoples' Capitalism would generate the savings and loans necessary to finance massive new investments in modern technology and generate rapid productivity growth. And it would distribute the benefits of rapid economic growth to all. Everyone would become a capitalist. To find out more visit http:/ peoplescapitalism.org. Engineering of the Mind:. The authors' reference model architectu...
vectorguerillas.blogspot.com
vector guerrillas
http://vectorguerillas.blogspot.com/2008/01/these-are-revolutionary-times.html
Friday, January 11, 2008. Http:/ www.peoplescapitalism.org/. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). More Saffo science to technology. You gotta feel the terror. From the Saffo Journal. How the west became a workers paradise. The feeds extended representation a rant. Walker Art center new Exhibition on Suburbia. The next magazine. ideas for representation #1. Energy Towers at the Beach and the Burbs. Planning and bold visions are back again. Some blogs that look better than ours oh and they.
james-albus.org
James S. Albus, PHD - Vision
http://www.james-albus.org/vision.html
A world without poverty. A world of prosperity. Imagine a world where economic wealth is efficiently created and equitably distributed. Imagine a world where jobs are plentiful, unemployment is low, and workers are well paid. Imagine a world where every adult receives an income from dividends on capital assets that is large enough to support a decent standard of living. Imagine a world where average income consistently increases more than 5% per year. A world of opportunity. A world without pollution.
en.wikipedia.org
Paul Romer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Romer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. November 7, 1955 (age 60). Robert Lucas, Jr. James S. Albus. Born November 7, 1955) is an American economist. He is currently professor of economics at the Stern School of Business. At New York University. Prior to that, Romer was a professor of economics at Stanford University's. Graduate School of Business. And a senior fellow at Stanford's Center for International Development, the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. And the Hoover Institution. Romer'...
n8o.r30.net
start · Promoting the Progress
http://n8o.r30.net/doku.php
This is the personal wiki of Nato Welch. It's built on dokuwiki. At one time, this wiki also served as my blog, but Drupal. Now serves my latest updates. Feel free to register. And contribute, or syndicate the xml feeds. To keep up to date on changes as things develop. Entries. Syndication feeds are available in RSS. More channels are at Feeds. A Life Without Progress. Essentially, it shows how the post-WW2 social contract that linked productivity improvements to median income gains was shattered in 1974.
vectorguerillas.blogspot.com
vector guerrillas: January 2008
http://vectorguerillas.blogspot.com/2008_01_01_archive.html
Wednesday, January 30, 2008. More Saffo science to technology. Saffo charts the transcending of sciences into technolgies in an interesting if not very simplified diagram. Links these changes to a 30 year cycle. We have just entered by this estimate the bio age, who would disagree, yet we in architecture at least remain fairly fixated on the machinic. I'm thinking there is an argument to be made here about a "disciplinary lag" that puts architecture's innate conservatism at a 30 yr handicap. In short, ch...