Hitting the Books: The Brooksian revolution that led to rational robots yahoo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from yahoo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
between the headwinds blasting in their faces and closed waters, closed trade. those that feel it s pushing at your back with open trade and opportunity. he hasn t delivered on that. he hasn t helped the people in the office. people basically believed in the reagan of 1984, cut tax rates, reduce government regulation and so i think he opened the door for a new kind of conservatism, but has not fulfilled it. that s for somebody in the future. so where do republicans go? when you look at republican congressm congressmen, politicians, have they looked at that campaign and said, we need to become more populous conservatives? is that where the party is heading? there was a book that was real useful to read. a short book called the structure of scientific revolutions by thomas kuhn. he said what happens in science?
you know, you rapidly run out of people you want to call, but it was the magic that two teenagers could build this box for $100 worth of parts and control hundreds of billions of dollars of infrastructure in the entire telephone network in the whole world. we could sort of influence the world. you know, control it in the case of blue boxes but something much more powerful than controlling, influencing in the case of apple. and they re very closely related. i really do to this day feel if we hadn t have had those blue box experiences, there never would have been an apple computer. i think jobs was always a storyteller. there was always this sense that he was constructing a persona. the first time i sat down with him to work on a story, he immediately asked me if i had read thomas kuhn s the structure of scientific revolutions. i think he was assimilating into