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         Inventing:     more books (100)
  1. Inventing Wyatt Earp: His Life and Many Legends by Allen Barra, 2009-01-28
  2. Inventing Accuracy: A Historical Sociology of Nuclear Missile Guidance (Inside Technology) by Donald MacKenzie, 1993-01-29
  3. Inventing Equal Opportunity by Frank Dobbin, 2009-05-26
  4. Hardcore Inventing: Invent, Protect, Promote, and Profit From Your Ideas by Ellie Crowe, Robert N. Yonover, 2009-07-27
  5. Inventing Flight: The Wright Brothers and Their Predecessors by John D. Anderson Jr., 2004-04-07
  6. Inventing the 20th Century: 100 Inventions That Shaped the World by Stephen Van Dulken, 2007
  7. Inventing our Selves: Psychology, Power, and Personhood (Cambridge Studies in the History of Psychology) by Rose Nikolas, 1998-12-28
  8. Re-Inventing Africa: Matriarchy, Religion and Culture by Ifi Amadiume, 1998-02-15
  9. Inventing Made Easy: The Entrepreneur's Indispensable Guide to Creating, Patenting and Profiting From Inventions by Tom Bellavance, Roger Bellavance, 2007-10-01
  10. The Harmony of Illusions: Inventing Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder by Allan Young, 1997-10-27
  11. Always Inventing: The Truestory Of Thomas Alva Edison (Hello Reader (Level 3)) by Frank Murphy, 1949-01-01
  12. Inventing Leonardo by Leonardo da Vinci, Richard A. Turner, 1994-10-06
  13. Inventing Paradise: The Greek Journey, 1937-47 by Edmund Keeley, 2002-03-20
  14. Inventing the Louvre: Art, Politics, and the Origins of the Modern Museum in Eighteenth-Century Paris by Andrew McClellan, 1999-10-26

61. IDEASWORK™
Committed to discovering, inventing, and promoting forms of governance that promote the wellbeing of poor people around the world. Resources, programs, news, and peace committees.
http://www.ideaswork.org/default2.htm

62. Inventing The Future: Booklet
inventing the Future. inventing the Future Communities in the InformationSociety was a short book produced by Partnerships for
http://www.partnerships.org.uk/itf/itfsum.html
Inventing the Future
Inventing the Future: Communities in the Information Society was a short book produced by Partnerships for Tomorrow for the annual conference of the National Association for Voluntary Organisations in February 1996, with support from BT Community Partnership. Partnerships for Tomorrow activities led to development of UK Communities Online and Partnerships Online Some of the issues raised in these articles are addressed in the Draft Prospectus for Online Communities . and in later articles in the publication How you can use IT in the community
Contents
An article by Dave Greenop mentioned here and published in the booklet by permission of the British Journal of Telecommunications Engineering, is not currently online.
Summary - Glimpses of the future
The articles in this book, contributed by authors from a range of backgrounds, provide some glimpses of the impact new technologies like the Internet may have on our society and local communities - for better or worse.

63. Moral Skepticism [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
The theory, supported by J.L. Mackie in Ethics inventing Right and Wrong, that belief in objective moral principles cannot be justified.
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/m/m-skepti.htm
Moral Skepticism
Moral skepticism is an epistemological position that we do not have knowledge or justification for believing in objective moral principles. Moral skepticism does not involve the rejection of moral values themselves, but simply the denial that we have knowledge of an objective realm of morals. Moral skeptics sometimes argue that moral values are similar to aesthetic judgments. Aesthetic judgments such as "This painting is beautiful" and "The food in this restaurant is pretty awful" are not objective in nature are based on human preferences. Analogously, moral skeptics argue that moral judgments like "premarital sex is wrong" or "abortion is wrong" are also not objective in nature. The most effective argument for moral skepticism is to question the existence of the realms in which objective moral principles are thought to reside. If the very notion of a spirit-like realm of abstract entities is called into question, then moral principles cannot be objective in that sense. MACKIE'S DEFENSE. In Ethics: Inventing Right and Wrong Mackie concludes that even if values are not objective, this does not mean that morality is useless. Instead, Mackie emphasizes the importance of creating moral guidelines which regulate the actions of ourselves and others.

64. Inventing Zero. Record Label.

http://www.inventingzero.net/

65. Abraham Gesner Saved The Whales
Who really saved the whales? Abraham Gesner did, by inventing kerosene. This single page is an exposition by James S. Robbins of changing technology and changing pressures on the ecology.
http://alts.net/ns1625/gesner.html
Abraham Gesner
Abraham Gesner ... saved more whales
than Green Peace ever will ...

In 1849, Gesner devised a method to distill kerosene from petroleum.
In 1846 there were 735 ships in the whaling fleet.
Thirty years later, in 1876, the fleet was down to 39 ships.
Kerosene had taken over the whale oil market.

The price of sperm oil reached its high of $1.77 per gallon in 1856;
by 1896 it sold for 40 cents. Yet it could not keep pace with the price
of refined petroleum, which dropped from 59 cents per gallon in 1865
to a fraction over seven cents in 1895.
How Capitalism Saved the Whales
by James S. Robbins
It is an article of faith among environmentalists that the ills of the world can be traced to economic and technological development, especially since the industrial revolution. The changes that took place in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, such as harnessing new sources of energy (moving from water to coal power, for example), the development of the factory system, and the human population explosion, they say, led directly to the current problems with waste disposal, air and water pollution, overcrowding, and misused resources, not to mention global warming, ozone depletion, acid rain, and other highly speculative developments.
Fixation on doomsaying can cause environmentalists to forget that the negative consequences of industrialization are minute compared to the positive developments of the industrial age. People are healthier, live longer, and are more productive than ever before in history. But defenders of industrialism can go even further to show that in many cases technological progress has benefited the environment. This is vividly demonstrated in the case of one of the most emotion-laden symbols of environmentalism, the whales.

66. No. 894: Inventing Printing
No. 894 inventing PRINTING by John H. Lienhard Click here for audio of Episode894. So How did we really figure out how to print words on paper?
http://www.uh.edu/engines/epi894.htm
No. 894
INVENTING PRINTING
by John H. Lienhard
Click here for audio of Episode 894. So: How did we really figure out how to print words on paper? The University of Houston's College of Engineering presents this series about the machines that make our civilization run, and the people whose ingenuity created them. T he oldest known piece of paper was made in Shangsi Province in China around 49 BC. That's about the same time sheepskin was replacing papyrus in the Roman world. So what is paper, really? You make paper by spreading out a slurry of organic fibers and draining off the water. Paper is a kind of felt made of overlapping fibers. At first the Chinese made paper from hemp. They used it for wrapping and decoration not for writing. They'd already been wrapping themselves in felt clothing. In AD 105, one Ts'ai Lun used paper to replace bamboo blocks as a writing surface. He made it from fibers of bark, bamboo, and hemp. By AD 500, the Chinese had experimented with rattan and mulberry and had finally settled on bamboo paper. And they not only wrote on their paper. They printed on it as well. Of course printing is, in the broadest sense, older than coal. Stamps, brands, royal seals even imprints of fossils on limestone are, after all, forms of block printing.

67. National Party (NP)
For many decades the party of apartheid. Now reinventing and re-naming itself as the New National Party.
http://www.natweb.co.za

68. Electric Harmonica, Harmonica, Harmonicas, Electric Harp, Electric Harmonicas
Harmonic Solutions is the company that is responsible for inventing and bringing the first production electric harmonica to market. Based in England, the company is also the UK distributor for HERING harmonicas.
http://www.electric-harmonica.com

69. Inventing Flight For Schools
inventing Flight for Schools is an activitydriven, multimedia science curriculumfor middle grade students to explore the Wright Brothers' discoveries.
http://inventingflightschools.org/
Welcome to Inventing Flight for Schools Learning about the science of how airplanes fly, learning about the history of flight, celebrating the invention of the airplane: This is what Inventing Flight for Schools is all about! This interactive website is a part of the Inventing Flight for Schools curriculum. In this hands-on curriculum, you will build kites, fly rubber-band-powered model planes, experiment with wing shapes, and do other fun and interesting activities both in class and online. What is Inventing Flight for Schools? At the center of the curriculum is a Curriculum Kit that contains:
Order your
Inventing Flight for Schools Curriculum Kit More information about the ... 2003 Inventing Flight Centennial Celebration Produced by Greater Dayton Public Television for

70. Pro Home Systems Inc
Specializing in concepts and inventing innovative solutions. Offering stateof-the-art products, advice, and customer service will always be our primary commitment.
http://www.prohome-systems.com/
Specializing in unique audio/video and security systems,as well as sophisticated whole-house automation systems. Pro HomeSystems is the premier choice for all your home electronic needs.
Broadband Internet connection is reccomended for FLASH site.
(requires the Macromedia Flash plugin. This is a FAST and FREE download!) Click Here to enter the Pro Home Systems HTML site (for slower internet connections)

71. IT - Inventing Tomorrow
Fall 1999 Fall 1998. Summer 1998 Summer 1998. Home About News inventingTomorrow. © 2002 by the Regents of the University of Minnesota.
http://www.itdean.umn.edu/inventing/
Summer 2002
Winter 2002
Summer 2001
Spring 2001
Fall 2000
Spring 2000
Fall 1999
Spring 1999
Fall 1998
Summer 1998
Home About News
University of Minnesota
The U of M is an equal opportunity educator and employer. Last modified September 5, 2002

72. New York City Apartments - Citi Habitats, New York City's Premiere Real Estate B
Constantly reinventing and refining our business, helping find the right home in Manhattan.
http://www.citi-habitats.com/
SELECT
your price range All prices
in the last 1 day 2 days 5 days 7 days
and
for the HOTTEST RENTAL LISTINGS in the most updated Manhattan real estate database.
Studio

Chelsea
One Bedroom

Upper East Side
Two Bedroom

Upper West Side Gramercy 2 Bedrooms / 2 Baths John Maher Email For more details click here Quick Search Enter building's name, address or neighborhood: To advertise on the Citi Habitats website contact Gary Malin at 212-689-4900.

73. IT - Inventing Tomorrow - Summer 2001
Summer 2001. COVER STORY. Special report Preserving our planet A specialreport details the work of IT faculty who are creating new
http://www.itdean.umn.edu/inventing/01summer/
Summer 2001
COVER STORY
Special report: Preserving our planet
A special report details the work of IT faculty who are creating new technologies to improve and protect the environment, pursuing basic research on environmental issues, and promoting environmental literacy.
FEATURES
A mission aboard the vomit comet
EDUCATION:
A unique NASA program sends nin aerospace engirneering estudents on the ride of a lifetime. Fast forward
OUTREACH:
An entertaining and provacative program offers new insights into life-changing 20th-century inventions. Fueling the future
PROFILE:
Alumnus Lynn Orr pays tribute to the IT mentor and lifelong friend who shares his passion for learning and exceptional standards.
IN EVERY ISSUE
From the dean
Letters

Technofile

Research and discovery
...

University of Minnesota

The U of M is an equal opportunity educator and employer.
Last modified October 26, 2001

74. BossModels
World renowned for inventing the male supermodel.
http://www.bossmodels.com/

75. Inventing Threats
54, No. 2 inventing Threats By Carl Conetta Charles Knight. It was a remarkableadmission for a chairman of the Joint Chiefs I'm running out of demons.
http://www.bullatomsci.org/issues/1998/ma98/ma98conetta.html
March/April 1998
Vol. 54, No. 2 Inventing Threats
It was a remarkable admission for a chairman of the Joint Chiefs: "I'm running out of demons. I'm down to Kim Il Sung and Castro." The context for Gen. Colin Powell's 1991 remarks to Congress was the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact and America's recent victory in the Gulf War. When the Soviet Union collapsed soon after, an article in Aerospace Daily, a leading defense industry newsletter, recalled Powell's remarks and predicted: "Pentagon Budget Headed for $150 BillionHalf Current Level By 1996." But what a difference a few years can make. When he unveiled the "Quadrennial Defense Review" last May, Defense Secretary William Cohen warned that "new threats and dangers, harder to define and more difficult to track, have gathered on the horizon." Contrary to Aerospace Daily's forecast, Secretary Cohen sees keeping the Pentagon budget at $250 billion or slightly moreabout 77 percent of the 1991 level.
Breaking with reality
Beginning with efforts at the Rand Corporation during the late 1980s, the focus of defense planners has shifted from "the clear and present danger" of Soviet power to the intractable problem of "uncertainty." Along with this shift has come a new type of Pentagon partisan-the "uncertainty hawk."

76. Oreilly.com -- Online Catalog: Writing GNU Emacs Extensions
This book introduces Emacs Lisp and tells you how to make the editor do whatever you want, whether it's altering the way text scrolls or inventing a whole new major mode.
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/gnuext/
Books Articles Conferences
O'Reilly Home
Press Room Jobs Resource Centers Perl Java Python C/C++ ... Bioinformatics Book Series Hacks Cookbooks In a Nutshell CD Bookshelves ... The Missing Manuals Online Publications MacDevCenter.com ONDotnet.com ONJava.com ONLamp.com ... XML.com Special Interest Events Meerkat News Ask Tim tim.oreilly.com ... Learning Lab Inside O'Reilly About O'Reilly International Media Kit Contact Us ...
Register your book
to get email notification of new editions, special offers, and more.
Writing GNU Emacs Extensions
Editor Customizations and Creations with Lisp
By Bob Glickstein
1st Edition April 1997
1-56592-261-1, Order Number: 2611
Buy from O'Reilly: Buy Online at: select a store O'Reilly Amazon.com Amazon.co.uk Amazon.ca Bookpool Borders Chapters.indigo.ca Digital Guru Foyles PC Bookshop (UK) Powell's Quantum Readme.doc Reiter's San Diego Technical Books Softpro Stacey's This book introduces Emacs Lisp and tells you how to make the editor do whatever you want, whether it's altering the way text scrolls or inventing a whole new "major mode." Topics progress from simple to complex, from lists, symbols, and keyboard commands to syntax tables, macro templates, and error recovery. [ Full Description
Code Examples
Download the code examples from this book. The complete set of examples is available at:

77. INVENTING
Welcome to inventing Inventors Awareness Group, Creating Possibilities.Inventure Place, Inventors Hall of Fame. GUESTBOOK FEEDBACK
http://www.arctic.net/~inventor/in06000.htm
Welcome to Inventing Inventors Awareness Group Creating Possibilities Inventure Place Inventors Hall of Fame ... NEW BUSINESS SITES Return to InventorNet Send E-Mail
Last Update: 08/27/96
Web Author: Pamela Middaugh

78. Inventing The Clickless Ad
1999 Archive 2000 Archive 2001 Archive 2002 Index inventing the Clickless Ad. byZachary Rodgers Associate Editor of ChannelSeven.com and TurboAds.com 1/9/02.
http://www.turboads.com/case_studies/2002features/c20020109.shtml
SEARCH ChannelSeven.com TurboAds.com WirelessAdWatch internet.com The Ultimate Resource for Rich Media Advertising
TurboAds Home

Rich Media News

Case Studies

Contact Us
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NarrowCast delivers news, research, and commentary.
HTML TEXT TurboAds delivers broadband and rich media updates.
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More resources from internet.com: Ad Resource ChannelSeven ClickZ CyberAtlas ... WirelessAdWatch internet.com internet.com Internet News Internet Investing Internet Technology ... Corporate Info internet.commerce Be a Commerce Partner Windows Web Hosting Find a Web Host MLM Training Register for AIIM Tech Magazines - FREE Website Monitoring ... 2002 Index Inventing the Clickless Ad by Zachary Rodgers Associate Editor of ChannelSeven.com and TurboAds.com Since the dawn of the browser, clicks have ruled. It's an implicit fact of the Web, usually too obvious to bother mentioning: The fabric of online experience is woven with clicks, double clicks, and the occasional drag-down menu. And this trait has long been the value proposition of choice for Web publishers seeking to advance their ad revenue streams. Site publishers and the representation firms that sold their inventory could promise (for the first time in ad history) to measure effectiveness and deliver sales. By now it's clear that this wasn't necessarily a good idea, and it looks like 2001 will go down as the year the primacy of the mouse button faded.

79. Modern History Sourcebook: Thucydides: Inventing Speeches
Back to Modern History Sourcebook. Modern History Sourcebook ThucydidesOn inventing Speeches. Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/thucydid.html
Back to Modern History Sourcebook
Modern History Sourcebook:
Thucydides:
On Inventing Speeches
Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian War was a major innovation in the recounting of the past. Rather than telling stories for entertainment or mythological reasons, Thucydides tried to analyse the past and form a coherent narrative. To do this required coming to grips with less than perfect source material. Thucydides discusses his solution.
This text is part of the Internet Modern History Sourcebook . The Sourcebook is a collection of public domain and copy-permitted texts for introductory level classes in modern European and World history. (c)Paul Halsall, April 1998
halsall@murray.fordham.edu

80. INVENTING EDWARD / WE'VE MET AN IMPASSE (BY MIDNIGHT WE'LL BE NAKED)

http://www.inventingedward.com/

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