Hi Marsha,

I wanted to let you know that I am reading this book on your
recommendation. I think there is a lot to unpack here with regard to
information theory in relation to the MOQ, but I don't feel at all
equal to the task. I hope someone smarter than I am will give it a go.
Do you have any thoughts to share about information and Quality?

Best,
Steve



On Fri, Sep 2, 2011 at 8:46 AM, MarshaV <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Here's an interesting radio interview with James Gleick concerning his new 
> book 'The Information'
>
>
> "We can see now that information is what our world runs on: the blood and the 
> fuel, the vital principle. It pervades the sciences from top to bottom, 
> transforming every branch of knowledge. Information theory began as a bridge 
> from mathematics to electrical engineering and from there to computing. What 
> English speakers call “computer science” Europeans have long since known as 
> informatique, informatica, and Informatik. Now even biology has become an 
> information science, a subject of messages, instructions, and code. Genes 
> encapsulate information and enable procedures for reading it in and writing 
> it out. Life spreads by networking. The body itself is an information 
> processor. Memory is stored not just in brains but in every cell. No wonder 
> genetics bloomed along with information theory. DNA is the quintessential 
> information molecule, the most advanced message processor at the cellular 
> level—an alphabet and a code, 6 billion bits to form a human being. “What 
> lies at the heart of every living thing is not a fire, not warm breath, not a 
> ‘spark of life,’” declares the evolutionary theorist Richard Dawkins. “It is 
> information, words, instructions. . . . If you want to understand life, don’t 
> think about vibrant, throbbing gels and oozes, think about information 
> technology.” The cells of an organism are nodes in a richly interwoven 
> communications network, transmitting and receiving, coding and decoding. 
> Evolution itself embodies an ongoing exchange of information between organism 
> and environment."
>
>
>
> http://onpoint.wbur.org/2011/03/18/james-gleick
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