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Warning: This page has been depreciated and replaced with the Links Section. I had cached versions of most of these articles, but I've removed them.

Many of my interests pertain to technology and the manners that it affects society. Specifically some of the things I'm most interested in include hackers & hacking (the true meaning of hackers - the media often labels "crackers" as hackers), cryptography, privacy (both online and off), cloning & genetic engineering, electronic paper/ink, copyright/trademark/patent issues(again, both online and off) and most especially nanotechnology (machines so small they're invisible to the naked eye - I love nanotech).

Here then, are some of the articles I've found on the web that I've thought are interesting enough to keep. If you know of an article that you think I might enjoy, please send me a link!

Hunting the Wild Hacker [hacking culture]
Work should be play, says a new book that sets forth the emerging ethical code of free-software programmers. Added: 2001.02.15

Electronic Paper Turns the Page [e-paper/e-ink]
Guttenberg's printing press needed paper to make a revolution. The clunky e-book needs e-paper. And it's on the way. Added: 2001.02.15

Charlotte's Goat [cloning/genetic engineering]
In a concrete bunker on a mothballed Air Force base in Plattsburgh, New York, two Nigerian dwarf goats named Mille and Muscade joyfully munch grass and slurp water. Oddly, they are protected from intruders by security guards and razor wire. Added: 2001.02.15

Burn Your Cubicle - Virtual Teams Are the Future of Work [telecommuting]
Woody Allen once observed that 80 percent of success is just showing up. He must not have had the future American workplace in mind. These days, letting knowledge workers not show up is fast becoming a key ingredient to competitive success in the global economy. Added: 2000.11.21

More More More - Nanotechnology and the Law of Accelerating Returns [nanotechnology]
"We're accelerating the rate of progress. In fact, we're doubling the rate of progress every decade," declared Raymond Kurzweil in his keynote speech at the Foresight Institute's 8th Molecular Nanotechnology Conference. "We are now entering the knee of the exponential growth curve of progress." Added: 2000.11.18

 

 

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