Network Science Chooses the Most Creative Paintings in History | MIT Technology Review June 13, 2015 by timbatchelder, posted in Behavioral Science, Information Visualization, Sharing Economy, Social Business, Systems Science Machine Vision Algorithm Chooses the Most Creative Paintings in History | MIT Technology Review. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp
Who makes the most reliable hard drives? (updated) | ExtremeTech May 9, 2015 by timbatchelder, posted in Systems Science Who makes the most reliable hard drives? (updated) | ExtremeTech. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp
How sleeping 6 times a day helped the founder of WordPress build a billion-dollar company | VentureBeat | OffBeat | by Gregory Ferenstein February 16, 2015 by timbatchelder, posted in Health Informatics, Network Science, Sharing Economy, Systems Science How sleeping 6 times a day helped the founder of WordPress build a billion-dollar company | VentureBeat | OffBeat | by Gregory Ferenstein. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp
The first smart homes December 21, 2014 by timbatchelder, posted in Systems Science TreeHugger. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp
The correlation between biodiversity, ecological thinking and agreeableness December 20, 2014 by timbatchelder, posted in Digital Humanities, Sharing Economy, Systems Science Why countries with the nicest people are the greenest | MNN – Mother Nature Network. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp
Boston Tech Innovation: more solving tough social problems, less glamour December 20, 2014 by timbatchelder, posted in Network Science, Social Business, Systems Science Boston Is an Innovation Hotbed and Doesn’t Care Whether You Know It | Re/code. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp
Radical mycology: applying traditional wisdom to modern problems December 13, 2014 by timbatchelder, posted in Health Informatics, Metadata Masterdata, Network Science, Sustainable Design, Systems Science This guy thinks mushrooms can save the planet and he’s not even tripping | Grist. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp
Americas 10 Best Cities for Commuting on Public Transit | WIRED October 11, 2014 by timbatchelder, posted in Ethnographic Methods, Information Visualization, Systems Science Americas 10 Best Cities for Commuting on Public Transit | WIRED. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp
How The Clark Art Institute’s Renovation Saved a Whopping 1,000,000 Gallons of Water September 27, 2014 by timbatchelder, posted in Behavioral Science, Systems Science inhabitat. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp
Need a water filter? Peel a tree branch | MIT News Office September 24, 2014 by timbatchelder, posted in Behavioral Science, Health Informatics, Social Business, Systems Science Need a water filter? Peel a tree branch | MIT News Office. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp
This just in: Millennials love organic eggplant, hate Gucci | Grist September 13, 2014 by timbatchelder, posted in Health Informatics, Information Visualization, Social Business, Systems Science This just in: Millennials love organic eggplant, hate Gucci | Grist. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp
What is the blue light from our screens really doing to our eyes? — Tech News and Analysis September 12, 2014 by timbatchelder, posted in Behavioral Science, Health Informatics, Social Business, Systems Science What is the blue light from our screens really doing to our eyes? — Tech News and Analysis. Rate this:Share this:EmailTumblrFacebookRedditLinkedInPrintPocketPinterestTwitterWhatsApp