... even with the aid of spreadsheets, databases, java and C.  Q?  Which had 
more effect on human affairs, the words of any one person, or the printing 
press that democratized access an publication?  The revolution at hand is as 
grand as the one that resulted in biology.

-----Original Message-----
From: Randall Lee Reetz <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, May 02, 2010 4:30 PM
To: How to use Revolution <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Apples actual response to the Flash issue

I doubt this.  I doubt that it will be an it so much as it will be the 
infrastructure through which the world will come alive reflecting the intention 
of the intermingled motivations and resources of the entities at play in the 
global info sphere.  What we can say for certain is that systems complexity has 
reached the limits of what is comfortable for human minds to manage manually 
even with the he

-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Kann <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, May 02, 2010 4:07 PM
To: How to use Revolution <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Apples actual response to the Flash issue

As I read what Randall proposes, you won't "sit down at a computer." The 
computer will have enough knowledge of the world to work full-time making the 
world a better place. Every so often it will sit down with a human to explain 
what it has discovered and what the human can do to help. 


--- On Sun, 5/2/10, Mark Swindell <[email protected]> wrote:

> From: Mark Swindell <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: Apples actual response to the Flash issue
> To: "How to use Revolution" <[email protected]>
> Date: Sunday, May 2, 2010, 5:58 PM
> Randall,



[The entire original message is not included]
_______________________________________________
use-revolution mailing list
[email protected]
Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription 
preferences:
http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution

Reply via email to