968 research outputs found
The Cowl - v.82 - n.10 - Nov 16, 2017
The Cowl - student newspaper of Providence College. Volume 82, Number 10 - November 16, 2017. 24 pages
Gardening at Arm\u27s Length
Combined with a Master of Fine Art thesis exhibition, Gardening at Arm’s Length, this dossier provides supporting components: an extended artist’s statement, documentation of my artwork, an interview with artist Mary Mattingly and my Curriculum Vitae. Throughout the program, I have explored the nature/culture divide and concepts of agency shared by humans and non-humans alike. This work is informed by historical and contemporary artists who are discussed in my artist statement, as well as the theories of place-thought by Vanessa Watts, the dark ecology of Timothy Morton, and the vibrant matter of Jane Bennet. These research components help elaborate on the material investigations undertaken in the studio. My sculptures are based on developing hydroponic systems within assemblages of repurposed objects which support living plants. These sculptures help to highlight the agency of all participants within ecosystems and the acknowledgement of the blended reality of natureculture
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The Generative Internet
The generative capacity for unrelated and unaccredited audiences to build and distribute code and content through the Internet to its tens of millions of attached personal computers has ignited growth and innovation in information technology and has facilitated new creative endeavors. It has also given rise to regulatory and entrepreneurial backlashes. A further backlash among consumers is developing in response to security threats that exploit the openness of the Internet and of PCs to third-party contribution. A shift in consumer priorities from generativity to stability will compel undesirable responses from regulators and markets and, if unaddressed, could prove decisive in closing today's open computing environments. This Article explains why PC openness is as important as network openness, as well as why today's open network might give rise to unduly closed endpoints. It argues that the Internet is better conceptualized as a generative grid that includes both PCs and networks rather than as an open network indifferent to the configuration of its endpoints. Applying this framework, the Article explores ways--some of them bound to be unpopular among advocates of an open Internet represented by uncompromising end-to-end neutrality--in which the Internet can be made to satisfy genuine and pressing security concerns while retaining the most important generative aspects of today's networked technology
Future of the Internet--and how to stop it
vi, 342 p. : ill. ; 25 cmLibro ElectrónicoOn January 9, 2007, Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone to an eager audience
crammed into San Francisco’s Moscone Center.1 A beautiful
and brilliantly engineered device, the iPhone blended three products
into one: an iPod, with the highest-quality screen Apple had ever produced;
a phone, with cleverly integrated functionality, such as voicemail
that came wrapped as separately accessible messages; and a device
to access the Internet, with a smart and elegant browser, and with
built-in map, weather, stock, and e-mail capabilities. It was a technical
and design triumph for Jobs, bringing the company into a market
with an extraordinary potential for growth, and pushing the industry
to a new level of competition in ways to connect us to each other and
to the Web.Includes bibliographical references (p. 249-328) and index
Acceso restringido a miembros del Consorcio de Bibliotecas Universitarias de AndalucÃa
Electronic reproduction. Palo Alto, Calif. : ebrary, 2009
Modo de acceso : World Wide Webpt. 1. The rise and stall of the generative Net --
Battle of the boxes --
Battle of the networks --
Cybersecurity and the generative dilemma --
pt. 2. After the stall --
The generative pattern --
Tethered appliances, software as service, and perfect enforcement --
The lessons of Wikipedia --
pt. 3. Solutions --
Stopping the future of the Internet : stability on a generative Net --
Strategies for a generative future --
Meeting the risks of generativity : Privacy 2.0.
Index32
The BG News August 19, 2005
The BGSU campus student newspaper August 19, 2005. Volume 96 - Issue 1https://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/bg-news/8458/thumbnail.jp
Backwards is the way forward: feedback in the cortical hierarchy predicts the expected future
Clark offers a powerful description of the brain as a prediction machine, which offers progress on two distinct levels. First, on an abstract conceptual level, it provides a unifying framework for perception, action, and cognition (including subdivisions such as attention, expectation, and imagination). Second, hierarchical prediction offers progress on a concrete descriptive level for testing and constraining conceptual elements and mechanisms of predictive coding models (estimation of predictions, prediction errors, and internal models)
The Cowl - v.64 - n.16 - Feb 10, 2000
The Cowl - student newspaper of Providence College. Vol 64 - No. 16 - Feb 10, 2000. 40 pages
ME-EM 2011 Annual Report
Table of Contents ME-EM: 85 Years of Excellence Faculty & Staff Enrollment & Degrees Alumni Resources Graduateshttps://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/mechanical-annualreports/1007/thumbnail.jp
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