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This page Stuff 'n Play is not intended to be well organized
http://www.ppmld.com Ralph White
http://www.catalystuk.com
http://www.teamcommunications.com John Faulkes
http://www.pliant.org/personal/Tom_Erickson/ Tom Erickson
http://www.kevents.intranets.com
http://www.mathcs.sjsu.edu/faculty/rucker/ Rudy Rucker
http://www.grenzenlose-unternehmung.de
http://www.control-center.de
http://www.freenetworks.org
http://www.red3d.com/cwr/boids Boids
http://www.research.ibm.com/knowsoc/storycoloredglasses/index.htm
http://www.research.ibm.com/SocialComputing/babble.htm
http://www.darwinawards.com/darwin/
http://www.ovaltine.org.uk/
http://dublincore.org
http://www.eknowledgecenter.com
http://www.laborjournal.de Hai Kai
http://www.gurteen.com
http://www.voght.com/cgi-bin/pywiki?KnowledgeSpace started by Denham Grey
http://www.sheldrake.org
http://www.phredsolutions.com
http://www.simplerwork.com Bill Jensen
http://www.simplerwork.com/workdiaries/invite.pdf Bill Jensen's workdiaries project
http://www.signofknowledge.com John Kellden
http://www.webassistant.com/site/John/index.html also John Kellden
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/ Principia Cybernetica Web (F. Heylighen, C. Joslyn, V. Turchin)
www.aliah-consulting.com Aliah Blackmore
www.gluetrain.com
www.wikipedia.com
www.co.uk.lspace.org/ lspace
http://www.syslab.ceu.hu/links/links.html Systems Laboratory Links to Stella and Other Modelling
http://www.vis-it.com hexagons
www.wbs.ac.uk/expertise/research_teaching/isru.cfm Yasmin Merali Warwick Info Systems Research
http://complex.csu.edu.au/complex Complexity On-line
http://web.cba.neu.edu/~mzack/ Michael Zack
http://www.corpwatch.org Corpwatch
http://www.weforum.org World Economic Forum
http://www.kurtz-fernhout.com
http://www.chaordic.org Chaordic Commons
http://www.konsequent-einfach.com
http://www.princeton.edu/~rjmorgan/working.htm
http://www.guerillakm.org
http://www.ceptualinstitute.com James N. Rose Integrity
http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~achim/ Achim Hoffmann
http://www.kmcluster.com John Malnoney
http://www.touchgraph.com Touchgraph
http://www.touchgraph.com/TGGoogleBrowser.html Touchgraph Google Browser
http://www.corante.com/many/ Corante Social Software Blog
http://www.ecademy.com Ecademy
http://allconsuming.net/ Book reading from Blogs, lists
http://www.ms.lt/ Minciu Sodas Andrius Kulikauskas thinking tools
http://www.sociate.com/ Jerry Michalski
http://www.ambientdevices.com/cat/index.html ambient devices
http://www.meetup.com meetup
http://www.foresight.org/ foresight instiute: nanotechnology
http://www.proseandpassion.com Michael Gross
http://www.alphaavenue.com Xerox Alpha
http://www.alphaworks.ibm.com IBM Alpha
http://www.bmplist.net bumplist
http://www.stevedennings.com Steve Dennings
http://www.illegal-art.org/
http://www.visualspatial.org/
http://www.kurzweilai.net/
http://www.geocities.com/john_f_ellis/bess.htm
http://www.edge.org/
http://smallworld.sociology.columbia.edu/index.htmlSmall World Project
http://www.ondemand-strategy.com on demand strategy
http://www.theknowledgelab.net
http://www.gutenberg.net
http://www.philipglass.com/glassengine/
http://www.deepquest.net/
http://www.urticator.net/ John McIntosh
http://ocw.mit.edu MIT open courseware
enticypress.com enticy press
http://stayfriends.spiegel.de Stayfriends
http://www.esato.com Esato mobile phones site
http://snookie.apostasy.org/~agrant/semiotics.html Computational Semiotics
http://brainwaves.thoughthorizon.com David C Buchan's Brainwaves : about Personal Brain
http://www.morphases.com/editor/ Morphases: generate and edit faces
http://www.surveymonkey.com Survey Monkey: create and do surveys
http://www.trojanmice.com/ Trojan Mice: consultancy and complexity
http://www.complexity-society.com/ Complexity Society

blog.zylstra.org http://groups.yahoo.com/group/personalbrain/ http://www.materialchange.com http://groups.yahoo.com/group/thinkingconcretely/ http://www.redvic.com http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ki-work/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/minciu_sodas_en/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Minciu_Sodas_DE/ http://www.tzw.biz/ http://www.ied.info http://www.inode.at/give/give/gv95/smythlec.htm www.natcap.org http://www.fischer-kompakt.de/komplexe-systeme
http://industriallogic.com/papers/khdraft.pdf
http://www.cs.unca.edu/~manns/holdit.doc
Pyramids: .....This evolved as a survival trait, in the same way as a human's hand-eye co-ordination, a chameleon's camouflage and a dolphin's renowned ability to save drowning swimmers if there's any chance that biting them in half might be observed and commented upon adversely by other humans

anti writing: Plato Phaidros king thamos god theuth men unlearn to remember and thus to think

From SCIENTIFIC COMPUTING NEWSLINE journal: Scientific Computing World.
http://www.scientific-computing.com
Issue 63, April 2003
Software uses pictures to represent information that people monitor
If your computer screen is covered with Web browser windows to let you monitor the news headlines, weather, traffic and stock markets while you work, you are probably suffering from information overload.
Computing researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology have now created a prototype software program to move such information from the centre of awareness to the periphery. Called InfoCanvas, the program creates an abstract pictorial representation of information that people want to monitor. The canvas is displayed on a separate monitor and looks much like a painting hung on a wall or a picture frame on a desk.
'We wanted people to be able to keep up with the stuff that's important to them, but not have it get in the way,' said John Stasko, an associate professor of computing at Georgia Tech. 'And the art angle is designed to enhance their environment or make it more aesthetically pleasing. This project gets at the idea that a picture is worth a thousand words.'
Ultimately, a proof-of-concept version of InfoCanvas - funded by a National Science Foundation grant - will allow users to design the entire scene from the background to every graphical image representing different data elements. At the moment, researchers manually code these elements into the software prototype after trial users select their graphics from paper cutouts.
The researchers have developed several InfoCanvas themes - a beach, desert, aquarium, office, a view out of a window, a medieval fantasy and a mountain campsite. Icons on the screen represent various types of information the user monitors. The icons gradually move - but not like animation - to indicate changes in information. Objects can appear or disappear, images change, and images can move along a path, scale up or down, rotate or populate an area like a field of flowers in response to data changes.
If a user is attracted by something on their InfoCanvas, they can run their mouse over that area to get more information in a pop-up box, or in the case of a stand-alone wall display, users touch the screen to get details. Recently actual links to the Web pages generating information in the InfoCanvas were added.
http://gtresearchnews.gatech.edu/newsrelease/infocanvas.htm
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