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Modern science, the Internet, big data, and AI are each saying the same thing to us: the world is--and always has been--far more complex and unpredictable than we've allowed ourselves to see. As a result we're undergoing a sea change in our understanding of how things happen, and in our deepest strategies for predicting, preparing for, and managing our lives and our businesses.
For example, machine learning allows us to make better predictions (think the weather, stock performance, online clicks) but we know less about why those predictions are right--and we need to get used to that. And in fact, over the past twenty years we've been unintentionally developing strategies that avoid anticipating what will happen so we don't have to depend on unreliable revenue forecasts, assumptions about customer needs, and hypotheses about how a product will be used. By embracing these strategies, we're flourishing by creating yet more possibilities and yet more unpredictability.
In wide-ranging stories and characteristically all-encompassing syntheses, technology researcher, internet expert, and philosopher David Weinberger reveals the trends that hide in so many aspects of our lives--and shows us how they matter.
Charles Marowitz was the first American to direct at the Royal
Shakespeare Company and the first American to direct at the Czech
National Theatre (while collaborating with Vaclav Havel). Known as
a maverick playwright, director, and critic, he nurtured numerous
figures who have come to shape contemporary theatre and larger
society. Without Marowitz the theories and ideas of Antonin Artaud
would remain obscure. The entire trajectory and ecology of theatre
and performance since the 1960s have been considerably influenced
by this alone. The present-day popularity of immersive theatre was
a mode of performance introduced to the British theatre by Charles
Marowitz and Allan Kaprow in the famous Happening at the 1963
Edinburgh Drama Conference. In 1968 Marowitz started the Open Space
Theatre on Tottenham Court Road in collaboration with Thelma Holt.
There is a gap in our collective understanding of this important
figure and a gap in currently available literature about him. The
Marowitz Compendium seeks to spark a revaluation. The audience for
this book includes students, postgraduates, specialists and general
readers interested in drama and the history of contemporary
theatre.
Ten years after "Cluetrain's" original publication, too many
companies still ignore the idea that markets are really made up of
people. In our rapidly changing world, this book's message is more
vital than ever. Companies may be wired for business, but they
still struggle with how to talk to their customers like human
beings.
The 10th Anniversary Edition features extensive new commentaries
by industry leaders, but the core message of this modern business
classic remains intact.
Business visionary and bestselling author David Weinberger charts
how as business, politics, science, and media move online, the
rules of the physical world - in which everything has a place - are
upended. In the digital world, everything has its places, with
transformative effects: Information is now a social asset and
should be made public, for anyone to link, organize, and make more
valuable; There's no such thing as "too much" information. More
information gives people the hooks to find what they need;
Messiness is a digital virtue, leading to new ideas, efficiency,
and social knowledge; Authorities are less important than buddies.
Rather than relying on businesses or reviews for product
information, customers trust people like themselves.With the shift
to digital music standing as the model for the future in virtually
every industry, "Everything Is Miscellaneous" shows how anyone can
reap rewards from the rise of digital knowledge.
A boy can get awfully confused when he wins $100,000,000 in a state
lottery...and can't tell anyone about it.
In this insightful social commentary, David Weinberger goes beyond
misdirected hype to reveal what is truly revolutionary about the
Web. Just as Marshall McLuhan forever altered our view of broadcast
media, Weinberger shows that the Web is transforming not only
social institutions but also bedrock concepts of our world such as
space, time, self, knowledge-even reality itself. Through stories
of life on the Web, a unique take on Web sites, and a pervasive
sense of humour, Weinberger is the first to put the Web into the
social and intellectual context we need to begin assessing its true
impact on our lives. The irony, according to Weinberger, is that
this seemingly weird new technology is more in tune with our
authentic selves than is the modern world. Funny, provocative, and
ultimately hopeful, Small Pieces Loosely Joined makes us look at
the Web as never before.
David Weinberg argues that American experimental theatre practice
was one key factor in the development of an important phase in the
history of the alternative theatre movement in Britain during the
period 19561980. His analysis draws on key concepts and theories in
the work of Elizabeth Burns (1972) and Baz Kershaw (1992, 1999).
The main historical developments he covers are the activities of
the experimental theatre groups associated with Jim Haynes, Charles
Marowitz, Nancy Meckler, and Ed Berman, four expatriate American
theatre practitioners living in Britain during the time period
19561980. In addition, he also examines important American-based
groups -- Living Theatre (1947), Open Theatre (1964), La MaMa
(1960), and Bread and Puppet (1965) which performed in Britain and
which made an impact during the same period, as well as a wide
range of indigenous British groups -- Pip Simmons (1968), Foco Novo
(19721989), Joint Stock (19741989), institutions -- RSC (1961),
Royal Court (1956) and individuals such as Max Stafford-Clark,
Thelma Holt, John Arden, Ann Jellicoe, and the Portable playwrights
(19681972) which in one way or another were influenced by American
exemplars. Weinbergs study is essential reading for everyone
seeking a more comprehensive and dynamic understanding of the
forces which shaped the alternative theatre movement in Britain.
With the advent of the Internet and the limitless information it
contains, we're less sure about what we know, who knows what, or
even what it means to know at all. And yet, human knowledge has
recently grown in previously unimaginable ways and in inconceivable
directions. In Too Big to Know , David Weinberger explains that,
rather than a systemic collapse, the Internet era represents a
fundamental change in the methods we have for understanding the
world around us. With examples from history, politics, business,
philosophy, and science, Too Big to Know describes how the very
foundations of knowledge have been overturned, and what this
revolution means for our future.
Bachelorarbeit aus dem Jahr 2011 im Fachbereich Elektrotechnik,
Note: 1, Hochschule Mittweida (FH) (Elektro- und
Informationstechnik), Sprache: Deutsch, Abstract: Diese
Bachelorarbeit soll die Grundlage fur hochbeschleunigte
Zuverlassigkeitstests auf Waferebene unter Verwendung von
In-Situ-Heizelementen aus polykristallinem Silizium bilden. Nach
einer Einfuhrung in die Zuverlassigkeitstheorie wird eine Auswahl
an Zuverlassigkeitstest vorgestellt. Diese sind momentan, durch den
Einsatz von Hot-Chuck's, noch recht zeitaufwandig und verlangen
daher nach einer alternativen Warmequelle. Der in dieser Arbeit
vorgestellte Ausweg beschreibt einen Polysilizium-Widerstand direkt
in der zu beheizenden Struktur. Weiterhin wird die Warmeausbreitung
durch thermische Simulationen dargestellt. Am Ende dieser Arbeit
wird noch die mogliche Temperaturmessung an solchen Teststrukturen
vorgestellt.
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