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New Architect March 2002 Peter Merholz |
Organized Chaos Steven Johnson's book Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software introduces readers to the subject of complex adaptive systems (such as ant colonies), and discusses how large-scale order emerges from a series of small-scale interactions... |
Fast Company September 2001 Polly LaBarre |
Organize Yourself. Or, What Business Can Learn From Ants For a book that begins with an account of the habits of slime mold, Steven Johnson's Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software isn't wanting for big ideas... |
Fast Company April 2002 Christine Canabou |
Books That Matter: Bo Peabody A book recommendation from Bo Peabody, Village Ventures Inc.... |
Salon.com June 9, 2001 Scott Rosenberg |
More lights go out on the Web The apparent demise of pioneering sites Feed and Suck leaves the online world an emptier, duller place... |
Wired September 2001 |
Street Cred Airplane Glue... VAIO Digital Studio PC PCV-RX490TV... Empire Earth... Emergence: The Secret Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software, by Steven Johnson... Wave/PC Interactive Audio System... When I Am King... SpringPort Wireless Ethernet Module... ReadMe... etc. |
BusinessWeek June 6, 2005 Spencer E. Ante |
Thriving On "Trash" Steven Johnson's new book, Everything Bad is Good for You, explains how today's popular culture is actually making us smarter. But it may overstate its case. |
Salon.com February 1, 2002 Jeff Stein |
Bin Laden's Olympic dreams Al-Qaida conducted "meticulous" surveillance of Salt Lake City, intelligence official says... |