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Strength
(mentions)
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person
Author (Unknown)
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Friend |
6
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person
Professional Geographers
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Professional academic challenge |
6
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person
Danny Hillis
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organization
The Professional Geographer
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Contributor |
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person
Danny Hillis
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Business associate |
5
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1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1965-01-01 | N/A | Janelle published his first paper on space-time compression. | The Professional Geographer... | View |
This document appears to be page 142 of a manuscript, book draft, or essay discussing the sociology and economics of speed, technology, and connectivity ('statefulness'). It references historical examples of transportation and computing growth to illustrate 'induced demand.' While stamped as House Oversight evidence, the text itself is philosophical in nature and quotes figures like Marx, Gordon Moore, and Marina Keegan.
This page appears to be an excerpt from a manuscript or book (possibly written by Epstein or a ghostwriter given the context of the file dump) discussing the sociology of technology, specifically 'MapReduce' and the concept of 'time compression' in modern economics. It draws parallels between historical liberty and future technological speed, arguing that entities capable of 'velocity' will dominate those that are slow. The document is marked with a House Oversight footer, indicating it is part of a congressional investigation evidence file.
This document is page 137 of a manuscript or book, likely 'The Seventh Sense' (based on the specific terminology used in the text). It discusses the difference between physical geography and network topology, referencing a 1965 paper by Janelle and using Napoleon as an analogy for understanding new strategic dimensions. The page bears the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_018369, indicating it was part of a document production for a House Oversight Committee investigation.
This November 9, 2012, page from The Virgin Islands Daily News reports on two main events. The lead story details a suspected arson that destroyed the St. Croix home of Assistant Attorney General Kip Roberson, with authorities noting evidence of tampering with surveillance cameras. The second major article covers the V.I. Boards of Elections violating local law by failing to count thousands of paper ballots from the recent general election in a timely manner. The document does not contain any mention of Jeffrey Epstein, though it details events in the U.S. Virgin Islands involving the legal and political systems.
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