@lindakinstler Thank you for your incredibly interesting article, Linda. Two science fiction stories are conflated in your telling. Your reference is to The Last Question a 1956 Isaac Asimov story. The incident you describe is from Frederic Brown's 1950 story Answer.
@kevin2kelly I did a physical and have CQ issues 2-43 (missing 1 and 27); WER issues 44 - 89; WE issues 90-110 (missing 95 and 98). So four issues missing in the run. I also have WE Software Review issues 1 and 2 and the Software Catalog. I will contribute shipping.
I just finished four hours with @DonnyWals workshop on CoreData/Combine/SwiftUI integration. It provided a step change in my intuitions about how these pieces interact. Thanks!
@FrankBruni How about gun management. That is the word we most commonly turn to when we need to describe something complex enough to require (individual or collective) human intervention.
@FramkBruni How about gun management. That is the work we most commonly turn to when we need to describe something complex enough to require (individual or collective) human intervention.
@FrankBruni How about gun management? That is the word we most frequently turn to when we need to address things complex enough to require (individual or collective) human intervention.
@matthewphillips What you describe in paragraph 10 of your NYT piece today is a positive feedback loop. Positive feedback (like a loudspeaker into microphone loop) amplifies what is happening, while negative feedback (like a thermostat to heater loop) regulates or controls it.
I just added an important idea from @PatMetheny to the discussion of melody on the https://t.co/nzqHxb0rYE site. His way of addressing the matter expands nicely on Gyorgy Kepes 1944 thinking about how melody plays in the plastic arts.