Posts Tagged ‘Big Data’
Posted by Mack W. Borgen February 27th, 2014
Utility and Limits of Facts – My Facts and Your Facts – Expenditures for Education Technology for and Internet Access of U.S. Students by Mack W. Borgen THE RELEVANCE OF REASON Two Companion Books Presenting The Hard Facts and Real Data About the State of Current America Book One – The Hard Facts and Real Data […]
Tags: Aristide, Big Data, Calvin Borel, computers per student, education technology, facts, Ida May Fuller, ideology, internet access for students, Kentucky Derby, Ludlow Vermont, Nate Silver, social security, Webley
Posted in Facts and Reasoning, Technology and Information •
Comments Off on The Utility of Facts and the Stubborn Elusiveness of Truth
Posted by Mack W. Borgen December 3rd, 2013
Like Hamsters In a Wheel – The Impact of Big Data Upon Our Capacities to Assimilate New Information; Number of Published Magazines in U.S. THE RELEVANCE OF REASON The Hard Facts and Real Data About the State of Current America by Mack W. Borgen “Stimulating, refreshing, and original…” Wayne S. Bell, Chief Counsel, CA Dep’t […]
Tags: alumni, association of magazine media, automotive, Big Data, Bill Gates, college, ethnic, fitness, health, magazines, medicine, new information, Precision, religion, speed, student press, theology, travel, zero-sum game
Posted in Big Data, Technology •
Comments Off on Like Hamsters In a Wheel
Posted by Mack W. Borgen September 1st, 2013
AVAILABILITY OF MACK W. BORGEN’S BOOK THE RELEVANCE OF REASON – The Hard Facts and Real Data About the State of Current America – Business and Politics – (Brody and Schmitt Publishers, an Imprint of Summerland Publishing)(2013) The Relevance of Reason – Business and Politics is the first book in Mack W. Borgen’s seven-book The Chance […]
Tags: Big Data, Canada, demagogues, Denmark, Finland, GDP, Israel, japan, R&D, research and development, Singapore, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan
Posted in GDP, Latest News, Research and Development •
Comments Off on The Unique Characteristics and Limitations of “Facts”