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         Inventing:     more books (100)
  1. Inventing the Indigenous: Local Knowledge and Natural History in Early Modern Europe by Alix Cooper, 2007-03-19
  2. Inventing for the Environment (Lemelson Center Studies in Invention and Innovation)
  3. Inventing the Future by Dennis Gabor, 1964
  4. Inventing Black Women: African American Women Poets and Self-Representation, 1877-2000 by Ajuan Maria Mance, 2007-07-30
  5. Sterling Point Books: Ben Franklin: Inventing America (Sterling Point Books) by Thomas Fleming, 2007-04-01
  6. Inventing New Orleans: Writings of Lafcadio Hearn by Lafcadio Hearn, S. Frederick Starr, 2001-07
  7. Inventing Memory by Anne Harris, 2005-04-01
  8. Edison: Inventing the Century by Neil Baldwin, 2001-04-28
  9. Inventing the Classics: Modernity, National Identity, and Japanese Literature
  10. Inventing Vietnam: The United States and State Building, 1954-1968 by James M. Carter, 2008-04-30
  11. Inventing Temperature: Measurement and Scientific Progress (Oxford Studies in the Philosophy of Science) by Hasok Chang, 2007-09-28
  12. Ethics : Inventing Right and Wrong by J. L. Mackie, 1991-05-17
  13. Inventing the Modern Artist: Art and Culture in Gilded Age America by Sarah Burns, 1999-03-11
  14. Inventing Late Night: Steve Allen And the Original Tonight Show by Ben Alba, 2005-10-03

121. RE-INVENTING N I G E R I A !!!
REinventing NIGERIA !!! A RADICAL CYBER REVOLUTION AIMED ARE RECONSTRUCTING ONEOF THE MOST TRAGIC NATIONS IN CONTEMPORARY WORLD HISTORY.
http://journals.aol.com/reliefmission/RE-INVENTINGNIGERIA
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RE-INVENTING N I G E R I A !!!
A RADICAL CYBER REVOLUTION AIMED ARE RECONSTRUCTING ONE OF THE MOST TRAGIC NATIONS IN CONTEMPORARY WORLD HISTORY. WE AIM FOR A NEGOTIATED CHANGE IN NIGERIA TO AVOID MAJOR COLLATERAL DAMAGE. WE ARE SPECIAL ADVISERS ON HOW TO RECONSTRUCT A FAILED "WOULD-HAVE BEEN GREAT COUNTRY." JOIN THE DREAM AND JOIN THE TEAM View Archives Alert Me as Entries are Posted
All About Me
As a former political prisoner of the Government of Nigeria, I believe more than most I have earned the right to speak about the destiny of that country literally with my blood from the torture of the military. As someone exiled to the US I believe that me and others like me should band together to reverse the our forced dislocation from Nigeria and work assidously owards reclaiming our homeland from the goons and ghouls who have raped and looted her serially in decades of misgovernment? We can not determine what happens o us but we can determine our response. If you are not working for your emancipation, you are working for your oppression. Are you an immigrant-slave in America or a budding freedom fighter with a country to return to?
Recent Entries
HOW TO SELL ICE TO ESKIM OES!

122. Inventing The Future - Next Frontiers - Inventions - MSNBC.com
Even the most important new ideas can seem silly at first, or irrelevant ordownright dangerous. (You mean that thing can fly?) How do you tell which ones
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6256766/site/newsweek/
Skip navigation Newsweek Subscribe Now Periscope ... Most Popular NBC NEWS MSNBC TV Today Show Nightly News Meet the Press ... Next Frontiers - Inventions
Inventing the Future
Even the most important new ideas can seem silly at first, or irrelevant or downright dangerous. (You mean that thing can fly?) How do you tell which ones are worthy? The best way is to just give them a try. Ten innovations that may change the way we live.
NEXT FRONTIERS
Go to Section Front Ten Inventions That Will Change Your World Sony Gets Personal Inventing the Future Polar Expedition The Creator: Now He's Playing Sony's Game ... Email this MORE FROM NEXT FRONTIERS: THE WIRELESS WORLD Next Frontiers: The Wireless World Next Frontiers: The Wireless World Your Next Computer The Wireless World Making the Ultimate Map ... Your Wireless Future
TOP STORIES Starr: Sox, Yankees and Forecasting Follies Gellman on the Legacy of Simon Wiesenthal Audio: A 'Ragged' Pre-Rita Evacuation in Texas Terror Watch: New Qaeda Claims on London ... Stricken JetBlue flight lands safely Most Popular Most Viewed Readers' Choice Another War on Poverty?

123. CTIN499 - Inventing Extreme Dataspace
CTIN499 inventing Extreme Dataspace. March 22, 2005. Overview of remainingclasses. Remaining Classes March 23 - Science Fair Presentations,
http://interactive.usc.edu/classes/ctin499-dataspace/
CTIN499 - Inventing Extreme Dataspace
March 22, 2005
Overview of remaining classes
Remaining Classes
March 23 - Science Fair Presentations, Project Decisions, URN Agent
March 30 - Open Mic, Lecture, Project Work, URN
April 6 - Open Mic, Lecture, Project Work, URN
April 13 - Open Mic, Lecture, Project Work, URN
April 20 - Open Mic, Project Work, URN
April 27 - Final Presenations (Open to ICT and CNTV), URN conclusion Future Lectures will be approximately one hour long, and will be focused on the following topics: o Organizational Behavior
o Perception
o Storytelling
o Aha Moment
March 23rd Class - Details: Open Mic Session - 30 Minutes 1) Sketchbook / Blog now central to our work over the final weeks 2) Remind of book reports 3) Discussion of remaining classes and plan 4) Can you go to Aha moment lecture or do we plan in class (Templeton Lectures) Science Fair Project Presentations - 90 Minutes 1) 10 min Presentations 2) 5 min feedback Final Project Debrief Session - 60 Minutes 1) General Discussion 2) Priority Pick 3) Summer plans and project planning Special Project - 10 Minues 1) URN agent Posted by morie at 10:08 AM Comments (0) TrackBack (0)
February 27, 2005

124. Powell's Books - Modern Library Chronicles #11: Inventing Japan: 1853-1964 By Ia
Writing with a wit and authority made possible by a deep intimacy with his subjectand his own remarkable gifts, Buruma has produced a book that stands
http://www.powells.com/biblio?isbn=0679640851

125. Modern History Sourcebook: Thucydides: Inventing Speeches
Modern History Sourcebook Thucydides On inventing Speeches. Thucydides Historyof the Peloponnesian War was a major innovation in the recounting of the
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/thucydid.html
Back to Modern History Sourcebook
Modern History Sourcebook:
Thucydides:
On Inventing Speeches
Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian War was a major innovation in the recounting of the past. Rather than telling stories for entertainment or mythological reasons, Thucydides tried to analyse the past and form a coherent narrative. To do this required coming to grips with less than perfect source material. Thucydides discusses his solution.
This text is part of the Internet Modern History Sourcebook . The Sourcebook is a collection of public domain and copy-permitted texts for introductory level classes in modern European and World history. (c)Paul Halsall, April 1998
halsall@murray.fordham.edu

126. Inventing Arguments
inventing Arguments is organized according to argumentative situations vs. the The first fullcolor argument text, inventing Arguments engages students
http://www.newtexts.com/newtexts/book.cfm?book_id=2949

127. Inventing Gotham: New York City And The American Dream
Course Page for Fieldston s History of New York Course. Includes syllabi, timelines,multimedia resources such as slides, primary sources, and interactive
http://www.mapsites.net/gotham/

128. Inventing The Enterprise - CIO Magazine Dec. 15 1999/Jan. 1 2000
Without the contributions of these inventors, who knows what the CIO s worldwould look like today.
http://www.cio.com/archive/010100/inventing_content.html

Dec. 15, 1999/Jan. 1 2000
Issue of CIO Magazine
ENTERPRISE COMPUTING just didn't fall out of the sky. People have been laboring to invent what we now take for granted since the Nixon administration. Read this story for
Insights on 30 years of technological advancement
Perspective on today's technology wars
A sense of what sparks innovation
OPEN STANDARDS. PORTABILITY. SCALABILITY. Connectivity. The Internet. The spreadsheet's eternal A-B-C, 1-2-3. We consider these truths to be part of our fundamental technology rights, but somewhere, at some time, someone had to sit down and invent each one.
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To a man (and they are all men; for a look at two women's contributions, see " Missing in Action " and " Touched by Grace "), these developers acknowledge the crucial role that collaboration plays in technological innovation. James Gosling goes with Java, but behind him was Patrick Naughton and Wayne Rosing. Ray Ozzie wrote Notes, along with Len Kawell and Tim Halvorsen. Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson go hand-in-hand into the Unix hall of fame, but Bell Labs' stalwarts Steve Johnson and Brian Kernihan deserve a hand as well. If technology be the stuff of life, gentlemen, play on.

129. "Flights Of Inspiration" - First Flight
Now, he was ready to change the world. But how? Turn the page to see, as PartI inventing the Future continues -
http://sln.fi.edu/flights/first/before.html
Part I - Inventing the Future
Larger View of Orville Orville and Wilbur's father, Milton, was a minister in the Church of the United Brethren in Christ. As part of his work, he often traveled from place to place. When he returned home, he often brought gifts for his young children. Once, he presented a rubberband-powered flying toy to the boys. The toy fascinated them and sparked their lifelong interest in flight. Late in the autumn of 1878, our father came into the house one evening with some object partly concealed in his hands, and before we could see what it was, he tossed it into the air. Instead of falling to the floor, as we expected, it flew across the room till it struck the ceiling, where it fluttered awhile, and finally sank to the floor ... It was a light frame of cork and bamboo, covered with paper, which formed two screws, driven in opposite directions by rubber bands under torsion. A toy so delicate lasted only a short time in the hands of small boys, but its memory was abiding." Neither Wilbur nor Orville finished high school, although both liked to learn new things. By the time Wilbur was 22 years old, he and Orville (who was 18) opened their own printing office. They recycled broken parts and built the printing press they would use to start their business. A few years later, they became interested in bicycles and decided to switch businesses. In 1893, they opened the Wright Cycle Company, a bicycle sales and repair business in their hometown of Dayton, Ohio. By 1896, Wilbur had his mind set on a new idea: flying.

130. Young, A.: The Harmony Of Illusions: Inventing Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.
of the book The Harmony of Illusions inventing PostTraumatic StressDisorder by Young, A., published by Princeton University Press.......
http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/titles/5802.html
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NEW IN PRINT E-BOOKS ... HOME PAGE Winner of the 1998 Wellcome Medal for Anthropology as Applied to Medical Problems, presented by the Royal Anthropological Institute
The Harmony of Illusions:
Inventing Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Allan Young
Shopping Cart Reviews Table of Contents As far back as we know, there have been individuals incapacitated by memories that have filled them with sadness and remorse, fright and horror, or a sense of irreparable loss. Only recently, however, have people tormented with such recollections been diagnosed as suffering from "post-traumatic stress disorder." Here Allan Young traces this malady, particularly as it is suffered by Vietnam veterans, to its beginnings in the emergence of ideas about the unconscious mind and to earlier manifestations of traumatic memory like shell shock or traumatic hysteria. In Young's view, PTSD is not a timeless or universal phenomenon newly discovered. Rather, it is a "harmony of illusions," a cultural product gradually put together by the practices, technologies, and narratives with which it is diagnosed, studied, and treated and by the various interests, institutions, and moral arguments mobilizing these efforts. This book is part history and part ethnography, and it includes a detailed account of everyday life in the treatment of Vietnam veterans with PTSD. To illustrate his points, Young presents a number of fascinating transcripts of the group therapy and diagnostic sessions that he observed firsthand over a period of two years. Through his comments and the transcripts themselves, the reader becomes familiar with the individual hospital personnel and clients and their struggle to make sense of life after a tragic war. One observes that everyone on the unit is heavily invested in the PTSD diagnosis: boundaries between therapist and patient are as unclear as were the distinctions between victim and victimizer in the jungles of Southeast Asia.

131. Inventing Density
inventing Density. by Eleanor Duckworth Professor of Education, Harvard University.Published by North Dakota Study Group on Evaluation, Grand Forks, ND,
http://www.exploratorium.edu/IFI/resources/classroom/inventingdensity.html
Inventing Density
by Eleanor Duckworth
Professor of Education, Harvard University.
Published by North Dakota Study Group on Evaluation, Grand Forks, ND, 1986. This monograph is for Claire, Colette, Danielle, Evelyne, Henri, Ingrid, Jacques, Jeanne, Lise, and Pierre, and for the scores of other teachers who have put themselves on the line as learners in the search for greater understanding of learning and teaching. This is a story about the collective creation of knowledge: its multiple beginnings; its movement forwards, backwards, sidewards; its intertwining pathways. The setting is a course in the educational psychology of science teaching, at the University of Geneva. My approach to teaching this course is to engage the students in finding out something for themselves through their own investigations of everyday phenomena; and then to draw psychological and pedagogical themes from this joint engagement. What it is that becomes the major subject of study varies from group to group; we try two or three kinds of activities until something catches on. In this group, the first one happened to catch on: why some things float and not others. It caught on partly because of some tantalizing phenomena that occurred in the very first session, and partly because the members of the group (with one exception) were willing to acknowledge that they didn't know, or couldn't remember what they ever might have been taught about, what makes things float. It was their willingness to be perplexed, and to struggle publicly with their own perplexities, that created the story.

132. The Hamster: Inventing New Terms
inventing New Terms. This one was just too funny to let go; O Reilly with presidentof the National Organization for Women, Kim Gandy
http://www.the-hamster.com/mtype/archives/2005/01/inventing_new_t.html
The Hamster
Main
January 30, 2005
Inventing New Terms
This one was just too funny to let go; O'Reilly with president of the National Organization for Women, Kim Gandy: O'REILLY: Let's get to your beefs with President Bush. Predictable. You want judges that would uphold Roe v. Wade. Obviously, you would want that. But this is interesting. You're pro-choice on abortion, but you're not pro-choice on Social Security. Isn't that interesting? Interesting indeeeeed! Posted by Eric at January 30, 2005 07:51 PM
Comments
So.... Does this mean O'Reilly's still a dick? Posted by: hylander at January 30, 2005 10:35 PM O'Reilly is pro-choice on Social Security but not pro-choice on drugs. Isn't that interesting? Posted by: falafel at January 30, 2005 11:45 PM Posted by: bankruptcy loan at March 16, 2005 03:51 AM Posted by: texas holdem tournament at March 20, 2005 01:37 AM If she garden pressure bonus free poker online spread progressive straight http://www.free-poker-on-line.us blind circle blackjack pasadena support casino nickel semi?For a start cheat free online poker fifth fishhooks hearts? Posted by: free online poker at March 25, 2005 09:52 AM

133. Peter H. Duesberg, 'Inventing The AIDS Virus' Regnery USA 1996, 720 Pages, ISBN
Peter H. Duesberg, inventing the AIDS Virus Regnery USA 1996, 720 pages, ISBN089526-470-6. HIV does not cause AIDS AIDS is not sexually transmitted.
http://www.virusmyth.net/aids/books/pdbinvent.htm
More information about controversial AIDS books.
VIRUSMYTH HOMEPAGE
BOOKSHELF
Peter H. Duesberg, 'Inventing the AIDS Virus' Regnery USA 1996, 720 pages, ISBN 0-89526-470-6.
  • HIV does not cause AIDS... AIDS is not sexually transmitted... AZT makes AIDS worse, not better...
  • So argues Dr. Peter Duesberg, one of the world's leading microbiologists, a pioneer in the discovery of the HIV family of viruses, and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Duesberg's evidence - revealed in top scientific journals but kept out of the mainstream press - raises questions the AIDS research establishment has so far declined to answer:
    • If HIV causes AIDS, why have thousands of AIDS victims never had HIV? Why have hundreds of thousands who have had HIV - for many years - remained perfectly healthy? Why does the discoverer of the HIV virus now claim it can not be the sole cause of AIDS? Why has more than ten years of AIDS research - costing tens of billions of dollars - failed to show how (or even if) HIV causes AIDS or attacks the immune system?
    With annual federal funding at more than $7 billion, AIDS research is better funded than any other disease - including cancer. Yet it has also produced the least results. Why? Duesberg explains how the lure of money and prestige, combined with powerful political pressures, have tempted otherwise responsible scientists to overlook - even suppress - major flaws in current AIDS theory.

    134. Inventing And Invoking Tradition In Holocaust Memorials
    inventing and Invoking Tradition in Holocaust Memorials.
    http://www.temple.edu/isllc/newfolk/memorials1.html
    New Directions in Folklore 4.2 October, 2000
    Newfolk
    NDiF Archive Issue 4.2 :: Page 1 :: Page 2
    Inventing and Invoking Tradition in Holocaust Memorials
    Simon J. Bronner
    Distinguished Professor of Folklore
    and American Studies
    Penn State Harrisburg
    This essay is an expanded revision of a presentation made at a symposium entitled "The Meaning of Things" held at the Cooper Hewitt, National Design Museum (Smithsonian Institution) in New York City, May 18, 1996. When ground was broken for the World War II Memorial on Veteran's Day of 2000 in Washington, D.C., a symbolic center for the nation, several speakers shared the hope that the structure about to be built would provide a sacred space that could become a backdrop for a ritual of remembrance. They hoped for the kind of ritual response that the Vietnam Memorial on the National Mall had inspired, and privately worried that the memorial would go the way of neglected sculpture for the Korean War (see Haas 1998). They hoped that the memory of a conflict in "good time" more than fifty years after the event, and thought of as "a good war," fought for a noble cause, would inspirit the memorial, indeed go beyond being symbolic to become "cultural." In ritually breaking ground, and expressing hopes and plans for memorials, especially for wars and tragedies, speakers confront a central problem of inventing and invoking tradition for public consumption. While private ceremonies for individual deaths have prescribed customs of grief, according to ethnic and regional traditions, the process of constructing memorials for the whole meant for public display, have less predictable responses. Since the purpose of public memorialization is more common on the landscape, memorial design, particularly for wars and tragedies that many citizens want to forget, struggles to create a location as well as an aesthetic for tradition.

    135. TIMEasia.com | TIME 100: Daisuke Inoue | 8/23/99-8/30/99
    With his now ubiquitous karaoke machine, this laidback Japanese inventor providedthe soundtrack for millions of wannabe Sinatras and Madonnas.
    http://www.time.com/time/asia/asia/magazine/1999/990823/inoue1.html
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    TIME 100: AUGUST 23-30, 1999 VOL. 154 NO. 7/8

    Daisuke Inoue
    Born May 10, 1940 in Osaka
    Forms musical band with six colleagues and begins playing at bars in Kobe
    Leases the first set of karaoke machines to nightspots in Kobe. Despite invention's popularity, makes little profit since he fails to patent the machine
    Karaoke now a $10 billion-a-year business
    To celebrate his 59th birthday, uses his invention for the first time Inoue in his Kobe bar band days. Courtesy of Daisuke Inoue With his now ubiquitous karaoke machine, this laid-back Japanese inventor provided the soundtrack for millions of wannabe Sinatras and Madonnas By PICO IYER The terms of the deal are almost complete, and the negotiating teams decide to go out on the town to continue their discussion in more relaxed surroundings. A few drinks later, the lights go low and somebody flicks a button. Suddenly, images of a dreamlike California are drifting across a screen, a low-key musical accompaniment is floating through the room and the company chairman, heaving with emotion, is crooning into a microphone: "You ain't nothin' but a hound dog..." It's time to praise (and occasionally curse) the muse of a million cocktail lounges, the genius who gave voice to the common man in the 20th century, Daisuke Inoue. Daisuke who? The laid-back sometime drummer who currently operates out of a second-floor walk-up in the suburbs of Osaka hardly seems to belong in the company of those Asians who turned whole continents on their heads with their ideas and visions and resolve. Yet this Eastern Walter Mitty has, in his unobtrusive way, helped to liberate legions of the once unvoiced: as much as Mao Zedong or Mohandas Gandhi changed Asian days, Inoue transformed its nights. He helped invent karaoke, creating a tradition that, in 30 years, has become as universally known as pizza or disco.

    136. Jack Kilby, American Hero - Ayn Rand Admirers At The Atlasphere
    Ayn Rand dating service and networking directory, for admirers of Ayn Rand snovels the Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged.
    http://www.theatlasphere.com/columns/050725-perren-jackkilby.php
    Ayn Rand Dating
    Atlas Shrugged Ayn Rand, Fountainhead Ayn Rand, Anthem Ayn Rand
    Search directory By Name By Interest By Education By Occupation By Location By Narrative All Fields for Home Directory Dating Columns ... Invite Friends Feature Column
    Jack Kilby, American Hero
    Column by Jeffrey Perren - Jul 25, 2005 In the summer of 1958, Jack Kilby had no vacation. The thirty-five year old engineer had only recently been hired by Texas Instruments, a small semiconductor company in Dallas that no one outside the industry had even heard of.
    It was July, and as many manufacturers do at some point in the year, TI shut down for two weeks. Jack, new to the job with no accumulated vacation time, looked around for something to work on that would impress his new boss, as well as help him avoid having to work on the dreary project he anticipated. A few weeks later, he invented something he called an Integrated Circuit.
    By 1958, the imaginations of electrical engineers had outrun their ability to realize their visions due to a phenomenon called 'the tyranny of large numbers.' With vacuum tubes giving way to the recently invented solid-state transistor (in 1947, commercially available in 1952), many were trying to discover ways to shrink components and place them into a tightly contained package.
    In order to create a complex electrical circuit, a number of individual components — resistors, capacitors, transistors — needed to be joined together, usually with wires and soldering iron. The size and heat-generating properties of these relatively bulky components limited how many could be put into a space of a given volume. To add to the difficulty, to realize the applications they had in mind would require connecting thousands of such components by hand.

    137. COMMENTS
    Invention, continued. From yesterday So maybe here s my point blogging is notdemocratic only because it gives each person a place to publish it is
    http://www.mchron.net/site/edublog_comments.php?id=2959_0_13_0_C

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