Thursday, December 29, 2022

DIY semiotic analysis

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[skip]
http://visual-memory.co.uk/daniel//Documents/S4B/semold.html

D.I.Y. Semiotic Analysis: Advice to My Own Students
Semiotics can be applied to anything which can be seen as signifying something. Even within the context of the mass media you can apply semiotic analysis to any media texts, including television and radio programmes, films, cartoons, newspaper and magazine articles, posters and other ads. I strongly recommend detailed comparison and contrast of paired media texts dealing with a similar topic: this is a lot easier than trying to analyse a single text. It may also help to use a good example of semiotic analysis by an experienced practitioner as a model for your own analysis. John Fiske offers a valuable account of 'semiotic methods and applications' (Fiske 1982, 103-117).

 • Wherever possible, include a copy of the sign with your analysis of it, noting any significant shortcomings of the copy. Where including a copy is not practicable, offer a clear description of the sign which would allow someone to recognize it easily if they encountered it themselves. Briefly describe the genre to which it belongs and the context in which it was found.
 • What are the important signifiers and what do they signify?
    - What is the system within which these signs make sense?
 • Paradigmatic analysis
    - To which class of paradigms (medium; genre; theme) does the whole text belong?
    - How might a change of medium affect the meanings generated?
    - What might the text have been like if it had formed part of a different genre?
    - What paradigms are noticeably absent?
    - What paired opposites seem to be involved (e.g. nature/culture)?
    - Is there a central opposition in the text?
    - What connotative meanings do such paradigmatic structures suggest?
    - Apply the commutation test in order to identify distinctive paradigms and to define their significance. This involves an imagined substitution of one paradigm for another of your own, and assessing the effect.
 • What is the syntagmatic structure of the text?
    - How does one unit (e.g. a film shot) relate to the others used?
    - How does the sequential or spatial arrangement of the elements influence meaning?
    - Are there formulaic features that have shaped the text?
    - How far does identifying the paradigms and syntagms help you to understand the text?
 • Metaphors and metonyms
    - What metaphors and metonyms are involved?
    - How are they used to influence the preferred reading?
 • Intertextuality
    - Does it allude to other genres?
    - Does it allude to or compare with other texts within the genre?
    - How does it compare with treatments of similar themes within other genres?
    - Does one code within the text (such as a linguistic caption to an advertisement or news photograph) serve to 'anchor' another (such as an image)? If so, how?
 • What semiotic codes are used?
    - Do the codes have double, single or no articulation?
    - Are the codes broadcast or narrowcast?
    - Are they analogue or digital?
    - Which conventions of its genre are most obvious in the text?
    - Which codes are specific to the medium?
    - Which codes are shared with other media?
    - How do the codes involved relate to each other (e.g. words and images)?
    - What cultural assumptions are called upon?
    - What seems to be the preferred reading?
    - How far does this reflect or depart from dominant cultural values?
    - How 'open' to interpretation does the sign seem to be?
 • Social semiotics
    - What does a purely structural analysis of the text downplay or ignore?
    - Who created the sign?
    - For whom was it intended?
    - How do people differ in their interpretation of the sign?
    - On what do their interpretations seem to depend?
 • Benefits of semiotic analysis
    - What other contributions have semioticians made that can be applied productively to the text?
    - What insights has a semiotic analysis of this text offered?

http://visual-memory.co.uk/daniel//Documents/S4B/semold.html
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_T._Hall

The 'transference' of 'extension transference' is a term he coined to describe when people regard a symbol to actually be its referent [the thing that the word or phrase stands for]. The clearest example of this would be language; like when people do not realize that words are merely symbolic to their referents [the things that the word or phrase stands for]. For example, there is nothing inherently watery about the physical object water, at least in terms of the symbolic acoustic properties that are produced when someone utters water. Evidence for this would be the fact that across languages there are thousands of unique words that all refer to water. Culture, as an extension, is also a good example; extension transference of culture happens naturally when people are unaware of the extent to which culture shapes how they perceive time and space, or that culture shapes their perception of them at all. Time and space are the two prominent aspects that Hall in particular focuses on in many of his works.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_T._Hall
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extension_transference
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13:13
High Context Culture – Low Context Culture. How much information is enough?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4zbtYrWAeU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4zbtYrWAeU
CultureAcademy
  Nov 25, 2020  Understanding Culture
We look at the description, properties, and expressions of high- and low- Context cultures and contrast them with each other. It is important for our understanding of another culture to know about their inner systems or contexts of the society. Only if we know how the culture functions, can we understand it and communicate well.
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high context societies - low context societies
high context communication - low context communication
high context culture - low context culture 

high context - low context relative scale (anthropology)
high context - low context culture
high context - low context societies
high context - low context communication
               low context culture tends to be individualistic
high context tends to be collective
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33:17
The Culture Map - Erin Meyer - Italian Subs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRBpwjdk7dw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRBpwjdk7dw
Chantyba
  May 21, 2021
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what is in a message
 
http://visual-memory.co.uk/daniel/Documents/S4B/sem07.html

An ironic statement is not, of course, the same as a lie since it is not intended to be taken as 'true'. Irony has sometimes been referred to as 'double-coded'.

Modality          Postcard          Truth            Perceived
status            message           status           intent
---------------   ---------------   -----------      ------------
literal/factual   "the weather is   true             to inform
                   is wonderful"    (the weather
                                     is wonderful)

ironic            "the weather is   false            to amuse
                   is wonderful"    (the weather
                                     is dreadful)

lie               "the weather      false            to mislead
                   is wonderful"    (the weather
                                     is dreadful)

Irony thus poses particular difficulties for the literalist stance of structuralists and formalists that meaning is immanent - that it lies within a text.
http://visual-memory.co.uk/daniel/Documents/S4B/sem07.html
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4:37
Intro to Hermeneutics in under 5 minutes!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YiACCea0wY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YiACCea0wY
Ethan Renoe
  Feb 7, 2019
A very, VERY surface level introduction!
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Edward T. Hall
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_T._Hall
Known for Proxemics, High-context and low-context cultures, monochronic and polychronic time

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_context_culture

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low_context_culture

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proxemics

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronemics#Monochronic_time

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronemics#Polychronic_time

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-context_and_low-context_cultures

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proxemics

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beyond_Culture

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extension_transference


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinesics
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Birdwhistell

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paralanguage
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_L._Trager

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosody_(linguistics)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitch_(music)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudness

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intonation_(linguistics)
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Tuesday, December 27, 2022

on technology

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Reed E. Hundt, You say you want a revolution, 2000                          [ ]
p.131
  Ann Lewis
      “The Vice President has persuaded people to feel positively about technology,” she said. “This is a big change. Technology causes unpredictable change, and people don't like that. Change threatens jobs, produces anxiety. The elites believe in the benefits of innovation, but voters do not. Al has turned those attitudes around. He has increased America's confidence in the future.”

    (Hundt, Reed E., 1948─, You say you want a revolution : a story of information age politics / Reed E. Hundt, 1. united states. telecommunications act of 1996., 2. telecommunication policy──united states., 3. information superhighway──government policy──united states., 4. internet (computer network)──government policy──united states., HE7781.H88  2000, 384.3'3'0973──dc21, 2000,  )
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Kevin Kelly, What technology wants, 2010                                    [ ]

p.194
Often we will invent a machine for a particular and limited purpose, and then, in what Neil Postman calls the Frankenstein syndrome, the invention's own agenda blossoms.  "Once the machine is built," Postman writes, "we discover, always to our surprise——that it has ideas of its own; that it is quite capable not only of changing our habits but ... of changing our habits of mind."  In this way, humans have become an adjunct to or, in Karl Marx's phrase, appendages of the machine.


p.196
In 1997, I interviewed [George] Lucas ... .  ...  [...]  ...  I asked him, "Do you think technology is making the world better or worse"  Lucas's answer:

     If you watch the curve of science and everything we know, it
     shoots up like a rocket.  We're on this rocket and we're going
     perfectly vertical into the stars.  But the emotional intelligence
     of humankind is equally if not more important than
     our intellectual intelligence.  We're just as emotionally illiterate
     as we were 5,000 years ago; so emotionally our line is
     completely horizontal.  The problem is the horizontal and
     the vertical are getting farther and farther apart.  And as
     these things grow apart, there's going to be some kind of
     consequence of that.

I think we underestimate the strain of that gap.

    (Kelly, Kevin, 1952—, T14.5.K45 2010, 303.48'3—dc22, copyright © 2010)
(What technology wants / Kevin Kelly, 1. technology—social aspects., 2. technology and civilization., )
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Charles Perrow, Normal accidents : living with high-risk technologies, 1999 [ ]

Risks from risky technologies are not borne equally by the different social classes; risk assessments ignore the social class distribution of risk.

p.310
Baruch Fischhoff, in a thoughtful examination of cost-benefit analysis (the article has the engaging title, “Cost-Benefit Analysis and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance”), notes another consequence of the monetarization of social good by economists.14  Cost-benefit analysis is “mute with regard to distribution of wealth in society”, he notes. “Therefore, a project designed solely to redistribute a society's resources would, if analyzed, be found to be all costs (those involved in the transfer) and no benefits (since the total wealth remains unchanged).”  Risks from risky technologies are not borne equally by the different social classes; risk assessments ignore the social class distribution of risk.

   ( Normal accidents : living with high-risk technologies / Charles Perrow, 1. industrial accidents., 2. technology--risk assessment., 3. accident., HD7262  P55  1999, 363.1--dc21, 1999,  )
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Vaclav Smil, Transforming the 20th century, 2006                            [ ]   

p.293
These new risks included many forms of environmental pollution (ranging from exposures to gases and particulates released by combustion of fossil fuels to contaminated water and long-lasting pesticide residues), the already-described transportation accidents (motor vehicles, airplanes, crude oil tankers), and the chance of major malfunctions of complex technical systems (radioactivity from nuclear electricity-generating plants, failed high-voltage transmission networks instantly depriving tens of millions of people of electricity).
   At the same time, the overall level of everyday risks faced by an average citizen of an affluent country had substantially decreased.

   (Smil, Vaclav., Transforming the 20th century: technical innovation and their consequences / Vaclav Smil., 1. technological innovation ── history ── 20th century, 2006, )
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Reader's digest., Family guide to natural medicine : how to stay healthy the natural way, 1993

   Sometimes after 1960 the idea of a technological utopia faded, as people in developed countries began to see that science and technology created as many problems as they solved.  

pp.8─15
introduction

why a book on natural medicine?

Dr. Andrew Weil, chief consultant for Family Guide to Natural Medicine, explains why alternative therapies are attracting so much attention, and how they mesh with orthodox medicine.

Healing is a natural process, common to all life.  Wounds heal by themselves in people just as in animals and plants.  If we want to foster healing and promote health, we should pay attention to the ways of nature and learn to encourage the body's own, innate mechanisms of self-repair.  This is the basic principle of natural medicine.  Regrettably, orthodox medicine has moved away from nature.
p.8
   Sometimes after 1960 the idea of a technological utopia faded, as people in developed countries began to see that science and technology created as many problems as they solved.  We were also forced to confront the limitations of our power to change many human ills.  For example, as medicine succeeded in reducing the amount of sickness and premature death caused by infectious illness, it had to deal with more difficult kinds of illness prevalent in an aging population, such as chronic degenerative diseases and cancer.  Orthodox medicine has no magic bullets for these conditions.  Nor does it have effective treatments for viral infections, allergies and autoimmune diseases, mental illnesses, metabolic diseases, and functional and psychosomatic diseases.

   (Family guide to natural medicine : how to stay healthy the natural way / Reader's digest., 1. alternative medicine., includes bibliographical references and index., R733.F36  1993, 615.5─dc20, )
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"The shallows : what the Internet is doing to our brains" / Nicholas Carr.-1st ed.
[pp.210-211]
 ... "We shape our tools," observed the Jesuit priest and media scholar John Culkin in 1967, "and there after they shape us." 19
     19.  John M. Culkin, "A Schoolman's Guide to Marshall McLuhan," Saturday Review, March 18, 1967.

    (Carr, Nicholas G.; 'The shallows', © 2011, 2010, [612.80285-dc22], published by Norton, )
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Tim Wu, The Master Switch, 2010                                             [ ]

p.289
In Hindu mythology, deities and demons assume different incarnations to fight the same battles repeatedly.

p.289
It is the old conflict between the concepts of the open system and the closed, between the forces of centralized order and those of dispersed variety. The antagonists assume new forms, the general change, but essentially the same battles are fought over and over again.

pp.290-291
In 2006, Professor Jonathan Zittrain of Harvard made the startling prediction that over the next decade, the information industry would undertake a determined effort to replace the personal computer with a new generation of “information appliances.”18  He was, it turned out, exactly right.

18. These predictions form the thesis of Jonathan zittrain, The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2008).

p.293
Tom Conlon of Popular Science
The owner of an iPod or iPad is in a fundamentally different position: his machine may have far more computational power than a PC of a decade ago, but it is designed for consumption, not creation. Or, as Conlon declared vehemently, “Once we replace the personal computer with a closed-platform device such as the iPad, we replace freedom, choice and the free market with oppression, censorship and monopoly.”

   (Wu, Tim, The master switch : the rise and fall of information empires / Tim Wu., 1. telecommunication--history., 2. information technology--history., 2010 )
  (The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires, Tim Wu, 2010.)
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1:25:12
College Lecture Series - Neil Postman - "The Surrender of Culture to Technology"
https://youtu.be/hlrv7DIHllE?t=173
https://youtu.be/hlrv7DIHllE?t=173
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlrv7DIHllE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlrv7DIHllE
College of DuPage
Published on Jun 3, 2013
A lecture delivered by Neil Postman on Mar. 11, 1997 in the Arts Center. Based on the author's book of the same title. Neil Postman notes the dependence of Americans on technological advances for their own security. Americans have come to expect technological innovations to solve the larger problems of mankind. Technology itself has become a national "religion" which people take on faith as the solution to their problems.
 
7 questions
 1. what is the problem to which this technology is a solution?
 2. whose problem is it?
 3. suppose we solve this problem, and solve it decisively, what new problems might be created because we have solved the problem?
 4. which people and what institutions might be most seriously harmed by a technological solution
 5. what changes in language are being enforced by new technologies?
    what is being gained and what is being lost by such changes?
 6. what sort of people and institution acquire special economic and political power, because of technological change?
    this question needs to be asked, because the transformation of a technology into medium always results in a realignment of economic and political power.
 7. what alternative uses might be made of a technology the one proceeds here by assuming that any medium we have created is not necessarily the only one we might make of a particular technology

 https://youtu.be/hlrv7DIHllE?t=1035
 1. what is the problem to which this technology is a solution?
    now this question needs to be asked, because there are technologies that are not solution to any problem that a normal person would regard as significant

 https://youtu.be/hlrv7DIHllE?t=1440
 2. whose problem is it?
    but this question, whose problem is it, needs to be applied to any technologies. most technologies do solve some problem, but the problem may not be everybody's problem  or even most people's problem.  we need to be very careful in determining who will benefit from a technology, and who will pay for it.  they are not always the same people.  

 https://youtu.be/hlrv7DIHllE?t=1521
 3. suppose we solve this problem, and solve it decisively, what new problems might be created because we have solved the problem?
    the automobile solves some very important problems for most people

 https://youtu.be/hlrv7DIHllE?t=1740
 4. which people and what institutions might be most seriously harmed by a technological solution
 
 https://youtu.be/hlrv7DIHllE?t=2259
 5. what changes in language are being enforced by new technologies?
    what is being gained and what is being lost by such changes?

 https://youtu.be/hlrv7DIHllE?t=2746
 6. what sort of people and institution acquire special economic and political power, because of technological change?
    this question needs to be asked, because the transformation of a technology into medium always results in a realignment of economic and political power.
 
 https://youtu.be/hlrv7DIHllE?t=2925
 7. what alternative uses might be made of a technology the one proceeds here by assuming that any medium we have created is not necessarily the only one we might make of a particular technology

 https://youtu.be/hlrv7DIHllE?t=3037
 1. what is the problem to which a technology claims to be the solution
 2. whose problem is it
 3. what new problems will be created because of solving an old one
 4. which people in institutions will be most harmed
 5. what changes in language are being promoted
 6. what shifts in economic and political power are likely to result
 7. what alternative media might be made from a technology

automobile, television, computer
the same blindness, no one is asking anything worth asking
https://youtu.be/hlrv7DIHllE?t=3629
 60:29   Tocqueville says in democracy in America
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pp.78—79
Effective knowledge is professionalised knowledge, supported by a restricted acquaintance with useful subjects subservient to it.
    This situation has its dangers.  It produces minds in a groove.  Each profession makes progress, but it is progress in its own groove.  Now to be mentally in a groove is to live in contemplating a given set of abstractions.  The groove prevents straying across country, and the abstraction abstracts from something to which no further attention is paid.  But there is no groove of abstractions which is adequate for the comprehension of human life.  Thus in the modern world, the celibacy of the medieval learned class has been replaced by a celibacy of the intellect which is divorced from the concrete contemplation of the complete facts.
    ——Alfred North Whitehead
    (Quotations of wit and wisdom: know or listen to those who know / John W. Gardner & Francesca Gardner Reese, copyright © 1975, 808.882, ——, pp.78—79)
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Evelyn Fox Keller, A feeling for the organism : the life and work of Barbara McClintock, 1983

pp.205-206
In McClintock's view, too restricted a reliance on scientific methodology invariably leads us into difficulty.
“We've been spoiling the environment just dreadfully and thinking we were fine, because we were using techniques of science.  Then it turns into technology, and it's slapping us back because we did't think it through.  We were making assumptions we had no right to make.  From the point of view of how the whole thing actually worked, we knew how part of it worked .... We didn't even inquire, didn't even see how the rest was going on.  All these other things were happening and we didn't see it.”
  She cites the tragedy of Love Canal as one example, the acidification of the Adrirondacks Lakes as another.  “We didn't think [things] through .... If you take the train up to New Haven ... and the wind is from the southeast, you find all of the smog from New York is going right up to New Haven .... We're not thinking it through, just spewing it out .... Technology is fine, but the scientists and engineers only partially think through their problems.  They solve certain aspects, but not the total, and as a consequence it is slapping us back in the face very hard.”  

  (A feeling for the organism : the life and work of Barbara McClintock./ Evelyn Fox Keller., 1. McClintock, Barbara, 1902- ., 2. geneticists──united states──biography., QH439.2.M38K44 1983, 575.1'092'4, 10th anniversary edition, 1983, )
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"The shallows : what the Internet is doing to our brains" / Nicholas Carr.-1st ed.

[p.33]
 "We become, neurologically, what we think", echoing the first line in the work, "AS A MAN THINKETH" by James Allen, over one hundred years ago.  

THE aphorism, "As a man thinketh in his heart so is he," not only embraces the whole of a man's being, but is so comprehensive as to reach out to every condition and circumstance of his life. A man is literally what he thinks, his character being the complete sum of all his thoughts.

[pp.28-29]
 ...
 The New York University neuro-scientist Joseph LeDoux explains in his book 'Synaptic Self' that nature and nurture "actually speak the same langauge.  They both ultimately achieve their mental and behavior effects by shaping the synaptic organization of the brain." 21

[p.29]
 "Neurons seem to 'want' to receive input," explains Nancy Kanwisher of MIT's McGovern Institute for Brain Research: "When their usual input disappears, they start responding to the next best thing." 23

[pp.211-212]
 Even a tool as seemingly simple and benign as the map had a numbing effect.  Our ancestors' navigational skills were amplified enormously by the cartographer's art.  For the first time, people could confidently traverse lands and seas they'd never seen before--an advance that spurred a history-making expansion of exploration, trade, and warfare.  But their native ability to comprehend a landscape, to create a richly detailed mental map of their surroundings, weakened.  The map's abstract, two-dimensional representation of space interposed itself between the map reader and his perception of the actual land.  As we can infer from recent studies of the brain, the loss must have had a physical component.  When people came to rely on maps rather than their own bearings, they would have experienced a diminishment of the area of their hippocampus devoted to spatial representation.  The numbing would have occurred deep in their neurons.

[pp.210-211]
 ... "We shape our tools," observed the Jesuit priest and media scholar John Culkin in 1967, "and there after they shape us." 19
     19.  John M. Culkin, "A Schoolman's Guide to Marshall McLuhan," Saturday Review, March 18, 1967.

     Marshall McLuhan, who was Culkin's intellectual mentor, elucidated the ways our technologies at once strengthen and sap us.  In one of the most perceptive, if least remarked, passages in 'Understanding Media,' McLuhan wrote that our tools end up "numbing" whatever part of our they "amplify." 20
     20.  Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media: The Extension of Man, critical ed., W. Terrence Gordon (Corte Medera, CA: Gingko Press, 2003), 63-70.

     When we extend some part of ourselves artificially, we also distance ourselves from the amplified part and its natural functions.  When the power loom was invented, weavers could manufacture far more cloth during the course of a workday then they'd been able to make by hand, but they sacrificed some of their manual dexterity, not to mention some of their "feel" for fabric.  Their fingers, in McLuhan's terms, became numb.  Farmers, similarly, lost some of their feel for the soil when they began using mechanical harrows and plows.  Today's industrial farm workers, sitting in his air-conditioned cage atop a gargantuan tractor, rarely touches the soil at all--though in a single day he can till a field that his hoe-wielding forebare could not have turned in a month.  When we're behind the wheel of our car, we can go a far greater distance then we could cover on foot, but we lose the walker's intimate connection to the land.

    (Carr, Nicholas G.; 'The shallows', © 2011, 2010, [612.80285-dc22], published by Norton, )
("The shallows : what the Internet is doing to our brains", Nicholas Carr., 1. Neuropsychology, 2. Internet-Physiological effect., 3. Internet-Psychological aspects., © 2011, 2010, [612.80285-dc22],)
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Mind is the Master power that moulds and makes,
And Man is Mind, and evermore he takes
The tool of Thought, and, shaping what he wills,
Brings forth a thousand joys, a thousand ills:—
He thinks in secret, and it comes to pass:
Environment is but his looking-glass.

(The Project Gutenberg EBook of As a Man Thinketh, by James Allen)
(google or bing 'project gutenberg, as a man think' for online version of this TEXT)
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Noam Chomsky

We live in a highly indoctrinated society where elementary truths are easily buried.
  United States invaded South Vietnam
  The military system, to a substantially extend, not totally, is a mechanism by which the general population is compelled to provide a subsidy to high technology industry.   
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Tim Wu, The Master Switch, 2010                                             [ ]

pp.9-10
But this book will focus on chronicling the turning points of the 20th century''s information landscape: those particular, decisive moments when a medium opens or closes. The pattern is distinctive. Every few decades, a new communications technology appears, bright with promise and possibility. It inspires a generation to dream of a better society, new forms of expression, alternative types of journalism. Yet each new technology eventually reveals its flaws, kinks, and limitations. For consumers, the technical novelty can wear thin, giving way to various kinds of dissatisfaction with the quality of content (which may tend toward the chaotic and vulgar) and the reliability or security of service. From industry's perspective, the invention my inspire other dissatisfactions: a threat to the revenues of existing information channels that the new technology make less essential, if not obsolete; a difficulty commoditizing (i.e., making a salable product out of) the technology's potential; or too much variation in standards or protocols of use to allow one to market a high quality product that will answer the consumers'dissatisfactions.
  When these problems reach a critical mass, and a lost potential for substantial gain is evident, the market's invisible hand waves in some great mogul like Vail or band of them who promise a more orderly and efficient regime for the betterment of all users. Usually enlisting the federal government, this kind of mogul is special, for he defines a new type of industry, integrated and centralized. Delivering a better or more secure product, the mogul heralds a golden age in the life of the new technology. At its heart lies some perfected engine for providing a steady return on capital. In exchange for making the trains run on time (to hazard an extreme comparison), he gains a certain measure of control over the medium's potential for enabling individual expression and technical innovation--control such as the inventors never dreamed of, and necessary to perpetuate itself, as well as the attendant profits of centralization. This, too, is the Cycle.

   (Wu, Tim, The master switch : the rise and fall of information empires / Tim Wu., 1. telecommunication--history., 2. information technology--history., 2010 )
  (The Master Switch: The Rise and Fall of Information Empires, Tim Wu, 2010.)
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p.xxviii, p.217, p.218
  p.xxviii
    ...  When the performance of two or more competing products has improved beyond what the market demands, customers can no longer base their choice upon which is the higher performing product.  The basis of product choice often evolves from functionality to reliability, then to convenience, and, ultimately, to price.
    ...  [...]  ...
    In their efforts to stay ahead by developing competitively superior products, many companies don't realize the speed at which they are moving up-market, over-satisfying the needs of their original customers as they race the competition toward higher-performance, higher-margin markets.  In doing so, they create a vacuum at lower price points into which competitors employing disruptive technologies can enter.  Only those companies that carefully measure trends in how their mainstream customers USE their products can catch the points at which the basis of competition will change in the market they serve.

  p.217
    A product becomes a commodity within a specific market segment when the repeated changes in the basis of competition, as described above, complexly  play themselves out, that is, when market needs on each attribute or dimension of performance have been fully satisfied by more than one available product.  The performance oversupply framework may help consultants, managers, and researchers to understand the frustrated comments they regularly hear from salespeople beaten down in price negotiations with customers: "Those stupid guys are just treating our product like it was a commodity.  Can't they see how much better our product is than the competition's?"  It may, in fact, be the case that the product offerings of competitors in a market continue to be differentiated from each other.  But differentiation loses its meaning when the features and functionality have exceed what the market demands.

  p.218
    Consider, for example, the product evolution model, called the 'buying hierarchy' by its creators, Windermere Associates of San Francisco, California, which describes as typical the following four phases: functionality, reliability, convenience, and price.  Initially, when no available product satisfies the functionality requirements of the market, the basis of competition, or the criteria by which product choice is made, tends to be product 'functionality.'  (Sometimes, as in disk drives, a market may cycle through several different functionality dimensions.)  Once two or more products credibly satisfy the market's demand for functionality, however, customers can no longer base their choice of products on functionality, but tend to choose a product and vendor based on 'reliability.'  As long as market demand for reliability exceeds what vendors are able to provide, customers choose products on this basis — and the most reliable vendors of the most reliable products earn a premium for it.
    But when two or more vendors improve to the point that they more than satisfy the reliability demands by the market, the basis of competition shifts to 'convenience.'  Customers will prefer those products that are the most convenient to use and those vendors that are most convenient to deal with.  Again, as long as the market demand for convenience exceeds what vendors are able to provide, customers choose products on this basis and reward vendors with premium prices for the convenience they offer.  Finally, when multiple vendors offer a package of convenient products and services that fully satisfies market demand, the basis of competition shifts to 'price.'  The factor driving the transition from one phase of buying hierarchy to the next is performance oversupply.

    (Innovator's dilemma, by Clayton M. Christensen, copyright © 1997, 2000, 658.4 Christen, p.xxviii, p.217, p.218)
   ____________________________________

Nathan Rosenberg, Inside the black box: technology and economics, 1982

pp.142-143
p.142
  This paper, then, is a kind of preliminary reconnaissance, the beginning of an attempt to develop a conceptual framework that will improve our understanding of the connections between science and economic performance.

p.142
In view of the obvious and compelling importance of this subject, I offer only a token apology for the fact that this paper is, at best, only the first small step on a long intellectual journey.  I will argue that technology influences scientific activity in numerous and pervasive ways.  I will attempt to identify some of the most important categories of influence and to sharpen our understanding of the causal mechanisms at work.

p.142
  Of course, the influence of certain technological concerns on the growth of scientific knowledge has long been recognized.  Torricelli's demonstration of the weight of air in the atmosphere, a scientific breakthrough of fundamental importance, was an outgrowth of this attempt to design an improved pump.2  Sadi Carnot's remarkable accomplishment in creating the science of thermodynamics was an outgrowth of the attempt, a half century or so after Watt's great innovation, to understand what determined the efficiency of steam engines.3  Joule's discovery of the law of the conservation of energy grew out of an interest in alternative sources of power generation at his father's brewery.4

pp.142-143
Pasteur's development of the science of bacteriology emerged from his attempt to deal with problems of fermentation and putrefaction in the French wine industry.  In all these cases, scientific knowledge of a wide generality grew out of a particular problem in a narrow context.

p.143
elemental point:  Technology is itself a body of knowledge about certain classes of events and activities.
It is a knowledge of techniques, methods, and designs that work, and that work in a certain ways and with certain consequences, even when one cannot explain exactly why.

p.143
gives only a very limited sense of the nature and extent of the interplay between science and technology.  Indeed, that sense is totally suppressed in the prevailing formulation of our time,

p.143
it is common to look at causality as running exclusively from science to technology, and in which it is common to think of technology as if it werereducible to the application of prior scientific knowledge.

p.143
Thus, it seems to be quite worthwhile to examine the science ─ technology interaction with greater care.

p.144
 As a result, technology has served as an enormous repository of empirical knowledge to be scrutinized and evaluated by the scientist.


p.236
  The point is that in certain areas, such as alternative energy or anti-pollution technologies, industry may simply lack sufficient R&D resources or the necessary market-generated incentives.  In many industries and areas of substantial social need, we simply do not have the basic knowledge of scientific and technical phenomena to proceed intelligently; our limited understanding of such complex ecosystems as San Francisco bay, for example, or of the effects upon human health of long-term exposure to certain industrial wastes, greatly hampers the development of optimal antipollutant technologies and regulations.  It is important to understand that the record of postwar American technical dynamism is a direct outgrowth of scientific and technical research in a very few areas (such as electronics), often funded and justified by defense requirements.  This knowledge is clearly transferable in certain cases ─ semiconductors are an obvious example ─ to the civilian sector, but it is limited in its range of applicability.  Integrated circuits will not immediately eradicate urban blight.  

  (Inside the black box./ Nathan Rosenberg, 1. technological innovations., 2. technology─social aspects., HC79.T4R673   1982, 338'.06, first published 1982, )
   ____________________________________
John Bartlett.──17th ed., Bartlett's familiar quotations, 2002

p.300:7
p.300
Giovanni Battista [Giambattista] Vico
1668─1744
7    The nature of things is nothing other than that they come into being at certain times and in certain ways.  Wherever the same circumstances are present, the same phenomena arise and no others.
          Scienza Nuova [1725]1
          1  translated by Jules Michelet.

p.366:1
p.366:2
p.366
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
1749─1832
1    Nothing is more damaging to a new truth than an old error.
         Proverbs in prose

2    Doubts grows with knowledge.
         Proverbs in prose

p.648
Émile Auguste Chartier [Alain]
1868─1951
3    Nothing is more dangerous than an idea, when it's the only one we have.
          Libres-propos

   ( Bartlett's familiar quotations : a collection of passages, phrases, and proverbs traced to their sources in ancient and modern literature / John Bartlett; edited by Justin Kaplan.──17th ed., rev. and enl., 1. quotation, English, PN6081.B27  1992, 808.88'2──dc20, 2002, )
   ____________________________________
   ____________________________________
May 14, 2012 Issue

When Giants Fail
What business has learned from Clayton Christensen.

By Larissa MacFarquhar

   ....   ...   ....

“In the steel industry, as in your industry, there are tiers in the market,” he said. “At the bottom of the market is concrete reinforcing bar”—rebar. “Anyone can make rebar, but steel used to make appliances and cars”—sheet steel, at the top of the market—“is really tough to make. In the beginning, the mini mills were making steel from scrap, so the quality was crummy. The only market that would buy what the mini mills made was the rebar market, because there are almost no specs for rebar, and once you’ve buried it in cement you can’t verify if it made them anyway, so it was just the perfect market for a crummy product.

“As the mini mills attacked the rebar market, the reaction from the integrated mills was, man, they were happy to get out of rebar, because it was truly a dog-eat-dog commodity, and why would they ever want to defend the least profitable part of their business when, if they focussed their assets on angle iron and thicker bar and rod, the margins”—twelve per cent—“were so much better? So, as the mini mills expanded their capacity to make rebar, the integrated mills shut those lines down, and, as they chopped off the lowest-margin part of the product lines, their gross-margin profitability improved.”

The integrated mills and the mini mills were happy with each other until 1979. “That was the year that the mini mills succeeded in driving the last of the integrated mills out of rebar,” Christensen said. “Bam!—the price of rebar collapsed by twenty per cent. It turned out that there was a subtle fact that nobody had thought about, and that is that a low-cost strategy only works when you have a high-cost competitor. As soon as the integrated mills fled upmarket, it was just low-cost mini mill fighting against low-cost mini mill. So what were these poor suckers going to do? One of them looked upmarket and said, ‘Holy cow, if we could make better steel, we could make money again!’ So they attacked the next tier of the market. And the integrated mills? Man, were they happy to wash their hands of that business. Because it was truly such a dog-eat-dog commodity business, and why would you ever defend a twelve-per-cent-margin business when you could focus your assets upmarket on structural steel, where the eighteen-per-cent margins were so much more attractive? And so the very same thing happened again. And as the integrated mills lopped off the lowest part of their product line their profitability improved.

   ....   ...   ....

Some people said that Christensen was a man with a hammer to whom everything looked like a nail. But he wasn’t the only one who saw nails everywhere. Not long after “The Innovator’s Dilemma” came out, Christensen got a call from William Cohen, at that time the Secretary of Defense under President Clinton, who asked him to talk to him and his staff about his research. Imagining a few second lieutenants and interns, Christensen was startled to see, upon entering Cohen’s office, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Secretaries of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force, and their Under-, Deputy, and Assistant Secretaries, all waiting to hear him. Bewildered, Christensen told his story about the integrated steel mills and the mini mills, until the chairman of the Joint Chiefs interrupted him and said, “You don’t have any idea why you’re here, do you?” Christensen admitted that he didn’t, and the chairman explained that, for him and his staff, the Soviets were sheet steel, terrorism was rebar, and they needed to figure out how to reconfigure their organization to capture the low end of the market. (Later, the government decided to set up an independent spinoff terrorism branch, in Norfolk, Virginia.)

   ....   ...   ....

source:
        https://www.textise.net/showText.aspx?strURL=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2012/05/14/when-giants-fail
   ____________________________________

Robert M. Gates., Duty: memoirs of a secretary at war, 2014

p.551
  The problem with the defense budget, as I saw it, is not its size but how it gets spent.  It's not that we have too many planes, warships, submarines, tanks, and troops; rather, we load up every possible piece of equipment with every possible technology, and then they are so expensive, we can buy only a small number.  Defense is not disciplined about eliminating programs that are in trouble, overdue, and over budget.  The Pentagon spends far too much money on goods and services that make only a tangential (if any) contribution to military capabilities ── overhead, or “tail”.

p.552
health care costs alone have risen in a decade from about $2 billion to nearly $60 billion.

  (Duty: memoirs of a secretary at war / by Robert M. Gates., 1. gates, robert michael, 1943─, 2. united states. department of defense──officials and employees──biography., 3. cabinet officers──united states──biography., 4. iraq war, 2003-2011──personal narratives.,  5. afghan war, 2001──personal narratives, American., 6. war on terrorism, 2001-2009──personal narratives, American.,  7. united states──military policy──decision making., 8. civil-military reations──united states──history──21 century., 9. united states──politics and government──2001-2009., 10. united states──politics and government──2009-, E897.4P48B76  2012, 355.6092──dc23, 2014, )
   ____________________________________
p.73
“diagnosis of problems and opportunities, rather than recommended actions”.
For Marshall, the focus on diagnosis rather than solutions was especially significant.149
basis for diagnosis.
  do we have problems?
  if so, how big is it?
  is it getting worse or better?
  what are the underlying causes?

p.83
Pedagogically, Marshall believes that allowing others to work out how to do a net assessment is preferrable to him trying to explain it to them.  
that of a shepherd guiding others' intellectual growth to help them arrive at their own conclusions through an intensive process.6
It must be learned experientially.

p.38
intellectual comfort zones rather than address harder questions.
pp.38-39
Observing this approach reinforced an enduring lesson for Marshall:  mediocre answers to good questions were more important and useful than splendid answers to poor questions.114

source:
        John Schutte, ‘Andrew W. Marshall and the Epistemic Community of the Cold War’, 2015, http://www.au.af.mil/au/aupress/digital/pdf/paper/dp_0016_schutte_casting_net_assessment.pdf

dp_0016_schutte_casting_net_assessment.pdf

Schutte, John M., 1976
  Casting net assessment : Andrew W. Marshall and the epistemic community of the cold war / John M. Schutte, Lieutenant Colonel, USAF.
1. Marshall, Andrew W., 1921─ 2. United States. department of defense. director of net assessment ── biography. 3. united states. department of defense ── officials and employees ── biography. 4. rand corporation ── biography. 5. united states ── forecasting. 6. military planning ── united states ── history ── 20th century. 7. military planning ── united states ── history ── 21st century. 8. united states ── military policy. 9. strategy. 10. cold war.
title: Andrew W. Marshall and the epistemic community of the cold war.

UA23.6.S43 2014
355.0092 -- dc23

local filename:  casting net assessment.txt
alternative short-cut:  Andrew W. Marshall and the epistemic community of the cold war (2)
   ____________________________________
   ____________________________________
Adam 1 and Adam 2, David Brooks
The lonely man of faith, 1965
Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik

 7:00
An Architecture of the Soul: Adam I and Adam II
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EKT9TApCYn0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EKT9TApCYn0
K12 Education Program
  May 6, 2015
“We live in a society that encourages us to think about how to have a great career but leaves many of us inarticulate about how to cultivate the inner life.”
David Brooks, “The Road to Character”

8:33
David Brooks - Adam 1 and Adam 2
https://youtu.be/PN8Yzxy11X0
https://youtu.be/PN8Yzxy11X0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PN8Yzxy11X0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PN8Yzxy11X0
My Water
  Nov 9, 2015
David Brooks (author, NY Times columnist, Professor at Yale) delivers a compelling blueprint for the gamut of moral genius, drawing lessons from: Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik, Nietzsche, George Catlett Marshall, Jr., David Foster Wallace and other greats.

It is worth noting that although David Brooks has given this speech a dozen times he chooses to read from a paper.
   ____________________________________

Monday, December 26, 2022

world as a total system (1985)

 Boulding, Kenneth Ewart, 1910-
The world as a total system.

“This volume is based on a series of lectures presented at the United Nation University, Tokyo, Japan, January/ February 1984.”
“September 1984”
1. civilization--addresses, essays, lectures
2. social system--addresses, essays, lectures
3. system theory--addresses, essays, lectures

1985

HM 201.B68 1985

Kenneth E. Boulding, The world as a total system, 1985                      [ ]

p.83
   The social system can be divided into three large, overlapping, and interpenetrating subsystems, which are distinguished by different modes of interaction of human beings, usually assisted by various artifacts, each of which has a certain rationale of its own that is also part of the human learning process. These three systems I have called the threat system, the exchange system, and the integrative system. All actual human institutions and relationships involve mixtures of all three in varying proportions.

p.83
A threat system originates when A says to B, “You do something I want or I will do something you don't want.” It could be stated in negative terms; “You refrain from doing something that I don't want and I will refrain from doing something that you don't want.” The law is often couched in these terms.

p.84
At least five broad classes of response can be distinguished.  The first is submission or acquiescence, ... .  Second comes defiance, ... has to decide whether to carry out the threat or not, or make new threats.  A third possibility is flight, ... .  This has been quite important historically and accounts for a lot of the spread of the human race over the globe.  A fourth possibility is counter-threat: ... .  This may lead to deterrence, in which neither threat is carried out, or it may lead into breakdown and the carrying out of the threats. It may also lead into a progressive increase in the threats, as in an arms race.  A fifth possibility is threat reduction, in which B makes himself or herself a suit of armor or hides in a castle or bunker and so diminishes A's ability to carry out the threat.

p.84
Threat systems, of course, are particularly important in political relationships, in the law and criminal justice, and in taxation. Most people pay their taxes because the state or political authority threatens them with various unpleasantness if they do not. And, of course, threat is overwhelmingly important in war.

p.84
Exchange is the main instrumentality of economic life, as we shall see. It is also present a good deal in political life, in legislative logrolling, in political bargains of all kinds. It is found also in the family and, indeed, in virtually all human relationships that involve some sense of reciprocity. In any relationship there is a sense of what is given up and what is received, and if these are not in some sense equivalent, there will be dissatisfaction with the relationship.

p.85
   The integrative system is a looser concept, harder to define, and may involve many different concepts. It involves such things as legitimacy, status, a sense of identity, morality, community, affection, and, at the other end of the scale, illegitimacy, enmity, community breakdown, and the like. Legitimacy is a particularly important concept here. I have argued that if we are trying to find any single dynamic system on which the rest of society hangs--and I am not at all sure that we should even try to find such, for society is so interrelated--legitimacy is a good candidate, simply because if any system, practice, person, or organization loses legitimacy, either in its own eyes or the eyes of others, it becomes virtually impossible to continue functioning.
   There are, of course, many forms and sources of legitimacy, and its dynamic processes are actually very puzzling. Just why some things lose legitimacy--which sometimes they do quite suddenly--as others gain it is a real puzzle, but it is an essential part of the social system. Without legitimacy--that is, widespread acceptance--governments cannot function.

p.85
Terrorists are soldiers without a government, for they are usually regarded as illegitimate by others, but they must regard themselves as legitimate or they could not continue to function. Exchange cannot function either without legitimacy.

p.85  legitimacy
Property, however, has a certain implicit threat behind it, and unless it is legitimated, exchange cannot take place. Thus slavery became illegitimate as human beings were no longer regarded as legitimate objects of property and exchange.

p.85
    We can roughly classify institutions and organisations in regard to the proportions of threat, exchange, and integrative elements they involve. The “social triangle” (Figure 4.1) illustrates these proportions. T shows 100 percent threat; I, 100 percent integrative structure; and E, 100 percent exchange. 

p.86
Figure 4.1  The social triangle

T (100% Threat)      : police, armed forces, bandit, taxes
I (100% Integration) : monastery, commune, church, family
E (100% Exchange)    : corporations, banks, stock markets, auctions

All actual human institutions and relationships involve mixtures of all three in varying proportions.

     (Boulding, Kenneth Ewart, 1910-, The world as a total system., “This volume is based on a series of lectures presented at the United Nation University, Tokyo, Japan, January/ February 1984.”, “September 1984”, 1. civilization--addresses, essays, lectures, 2. social system--addresses, essays, lectures, 3. system theory--addresses, essays, lectures, 1985, HM 201.B68 1985, pp.83-86)

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Redmi pad (December 2022)

 BLUF - Bottom Line Up Front:

if you are looking for mid-range budget ($250) Android tablet, consider getting the new REDMI Pad (from Xiaomi), "there's no real competition in its price bracket".

([ how far the technical development have come since the day of the Intel 4004 micro processor in 1971, also refer to as a general-purpose Central Processing Unit (CPU); in today classification, the 4000 series chips family would be considered a  microcontroller ])
   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_4004
([  the "4000 family".[23] The four chips were the following: the 4001, 256-byte 4-bit ROM; the 4002, DRAM with four 20-nibble registers; the 4003, I/O with a 10-bit static shift register with serial and parallel outputs; and the 4004 CPU. A fully expanded system could support 16 4001's for a total of 4 kB of ROM, 16 4002's for a total of 1,280 nibbles (640) bytes of RAM, and an unlimited number of 4003's. ])
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masatoshi_Shima
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcian_Hoff
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanley_Mazor
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federico_Faggin
([ in 50 years, [X] amount of investment and human power ])
([ can entertainment, gaming, arts, and film making drive the leading edge ])

source:
        13:24
        #redmi #tablet #android
        The New REDMI PAD Is The BEST Budget Android Tablet Right Now! Hands-On Review
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HLuaX4a6bKU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HLuaX4a6bKU
ETA PRIME
  Dec 18, 2022
The all-new Xiaomi REDMI Pad is the best budget android tablet right now for Emulation, Gaming, and Media Consumption. With a 10.6" 2k IPS display, 8000Mah Battery and Powered by the MediaTek G99 CPU this Android tablet has turned out to be one of the BEST budget tablets so far! In this video, we do an unboxing and test some video playback and native android games like Minecraft, Call Of Duty mobile, and Genshin Impact plus we had to see how the REDMI Pad handles emulation like N64, Dreamcast using redream, PSP with PPSSPP, Gamecube and Wii using the DOlphine emulator and even PS2 with AetherSX2!

release Oct 2022
$250
up to 400G SD card supported (reviewer tested)
(up to 1T SD card supported, according to the technical spec)

according to the youtube video, the spec is as followed:

Helio G99 "MT8781" MediaTek
          "MT6789"
2x A76 cores @ 2.2 ghz
6x A55 cores @ 2.0 ghz
  Mali-G57 mc2 graphic processor
    ram:  3gb - 4gb - 6gb
storage:  64gb - 128 gb
micro SD card support
90hz  10.61 IPS  @ 1200 x 2000
400nits, 5:3 ratio
quad speakers
8mp front and rear camera
5ghz ac wifi - bt 5.2 (bluetooth 5.2)
8000 mAh battery 18 watt fc (fast charging)
android 12 - MIUI 13

the actual product you get may not meet your expectation ...
subject to product availability, supply chain disruption, and ...

go with the 4GB ram
          128GB storage  configuration

Helio G99 MediaTek with integrated Mali-G57 mc2 graphic processor
 integrated ARM Mali-G57 MP2 graphics solution of the MediaTek Helio G99

Helio G99 "MT8781" MediaTek
          "MT6789"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_MediaTek_systems_on_chips#Helio_G_Series_(2019%E2%80%93present)


references:
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Mediatek-Helio-G99-Processor-Benchmarks-and-Specs.669976.0.html

https://www.notebookcheck.net/Xiaomi-Redmi-Pad-review-Affordable-Android-tablet-with-90-Hz-and-4-speakers.673345.0.html

Mario Ray Mahardhika 8 days ago
Been owning this battery beast for about a week now. Very satisfied, there's no real competition in its price bracket. The 6/128 model here is only 224.25USD, way cheaper than 280USD in the US.
   ____________________________________
The following is a parallel story, one about technology (Xerox Altos), and another about two bloody wars (the Korean war, and, the Vietnam war);

March 1973
and by the time the Xerox Alto was introduced in March 1973, but never put into full production for general market availability ...

January 1973
in January 1973, Henry Kissinger and North Vietnamese representative Le Duc Tho meet in Paris to sign terms of “peace with honor”.

I thought the contrast and comparison prove interesting ...
because of my interest in the technology and warfare.
the history and biography of technology and
the history and biography of war.  
   ____________________________________
1973

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xerox_Alto

The Xerox Alto is a computer designed from its inception to support an operating system based on a graphical user interface (GUI), later using the desktop metaphor.[7][8] The first machines were introduced on 1 March 1973,[9] a decade before mass-market GUI machines became available.

The Alto is contained in a relatively small cabinet and uses a custom central processing unit (CPU) built from multiple SSI and MSI integrated circuits. Each machine cost tens of thousands of dollars despite its status as a personal computer. Only small numbers were built initially, but by the late 1970s, about 1,000 were in use at various Xerox laboratories, and about another 500 in several universities. Total production was about 2,000 systems.

The Alto became well known in Silicon Valley and its GUI was increasingly seen as the future of computing. In 1979, Steve Jobs arranged a visit to Xerox PARC, during which Apple Computer personnel would receive demonstrations of Xerox technology in exchange for Xerox being able to purchase stock options in Apple.[10] After two visits to see the Alto, Apple engineers used the concepts to introduce the Apple Lisa and Macintosh systems.

Xerox eventually commercialized a heavily modified version of the Alto concepts as the Xerox Star, first introduced in 1981. A complete office system including several workstations, storage and a laser printer cost as much as $100,000, and like the Alto, the Star had little direct impact on the market.

([ I read somewhere, and I can not cite the source, Intel 4004 was used as a microcontroller for the Xerox Altos keyboard ... ])
   ____________________________________

Hiltzik, Michael A.
Dealers of lighting : Xerox PARC and the dawn of the computer age / Michael Hiltzik. —— 1st ed.
1. computer science——research——california——palo alto——history
2. Xerox coproration. Palo Alto Research Center——history

pp.261—265
    "Computers architecture in those days was a major battleground for religious wars," he recalled, "and Xerox had them big-time."  His first assignment would have him interceding between two of its contending armies.
    The task was somehow to get the Alto manufacturing process jump started.  The machine had been designed and prototyped but as yet there were only five in existence.  The construction program, it seemed, had mysteriously stalled somewhere between Palo Alto and El Segundo.
    As it happened, Ellenby had distinguished himself as an industrial consultant in Great Britain by transforming dysfunctional programs into operational ones.  Turning his experienced eye to the Alto, he recognized instantly that the machines were indeed hostages of a religious war——this one between the Computer Science Lab, which designed them, and SDS, whose downtrodden factory staff was tasked with building them to PARC specifications in El Segundo, five hundred miles away.
    "El Segundo was a product organization with a lot of pride," Ellenby recalled, "It had a lot of good guys from the days when they had built a lot of quite impressive machines. And now they were getting fucked over by this copier company that knew now to put powdered coal onto drums that went whistling around and transferred it to paper but didn't know shit about electronics. So there was a religious problem right there. Then there was this funny group of weird Northern Californians they had to deal with while they were trying to solve their other problems. Meanwhile there was not a lot of respect to PARC for SDS. And nobody was really assigned at PARC to make it all happen. The Alto was kind of a baby looking for its mother."
    Ellenby stepped in to referee.  His first achievement was getting El Sengundo to complete 20 Altos stuck in the pipeline.  Then he took a radical step.  Organizing a small cadre of product engineers into an integrated engineering and manufacturing unit he called the Special Programs Group, he arranged for Chuck Thacker's time machine to be reengineered into an object that could be efficiently mass-produced.  The Special Programs Group replaced all the Thackeresque shortcuts, which looked like virtues when the goal was hastily to turn out a serviceable machine with spare parts, but were now merely the sources of annoying glitches.
    "No fault of Chuck's, but the machine was just flaky," Ellenby said.  "I had come from a pretty rigorous background because the machine for which I had been consulting designer at Ferranti, the Argus 700, was designed for very high-reliability process and communications control. I thought that somehow or other a machine that stops for no reason was not a good machine."
    Ellenby's group added a memory error-correction system similar to the one Thacker had designed for MAXC (but had left off the Alto).  This substantially cut the manufacturing cost of the machine by allowing the SPG to use more error-prone, but cheaper, memory chips without compromising the machine's reliability.  The original Alto was almost unmaintainable ("In order to get to something you had to take a lot of other stuff out," Ellenby recalled); he ordered the innards redesigned so every component would be easily accessible just by opening the cover, as in today's desktop PCs.  The so-called Alto II was both durable and easy to manufacture on a small production line.  "We just popped 'em out," Ellenby said proudly.  This was the machine that proliferated throughout PARC as a springboard for some of the most striking technological innovations the world has ever seen.
    Soon after the new machines started rolling off the fabrication line in early 1976, however, Ellenby came face-to-face with the realities of technology politics at Xerox.  Heady from the triumph of the Alto II, he forged ahead with a plan to design and manufacture an Alto III.  This would be the Holy Grail: a mass-marketable, programmable computer that would exploit the snowballing manifestation of Moore's Law (such as faster and cheaper memory chips) by offering user-friendly word processing, professional database programs, and more.  The goal was for the Special Programs Group to design the machine for manufacture by Xerox's Office Systems Division, a Dallas-based unit that turned out electric typewriters and other non-copier office machines under the leadership of a former Webster lab chief named Robert Potter.
    That July, Xerox's Display Word Processing Task Force endorsed the plan.  For a few short, glorious weeks, official Xerox policy was to service the growing market for electronic word processing with the Alto III, a programmable personal computer that would bear the same relationship to the competition's glorified typewriters as a Harley [Davidson motorcycle] does to a tricycle.  Ellenby's group was on target to engineer an inexpensive computer-cum-word processor and printing system for shipment to customers by mid-1978.  Had it done so, Xerox would have beaten the IBM PC to market by three years——with an infinitely more sophisticated machine.
     mid-1978.: Had it done so, Xerox would have beaten the IBM PC to market by three years——with an infinitely more sophisticated machine.
    [Computer Science Lab belonged to a larger organization, PARC (Palo Alto Research Center), which in turn beholden to a greater entity, Xerox.]
    But it was not to happen.  Bob Potter was not on board and never would be.  Potter had visited PARC in 1973, shortly after taking over the Dallas division.  But he and the CSL (computer science lab) engineers communicated like creatures of different species.  "I went out there and I sat in their bean bags, but I just couldn't get anything out of them," he groused later.  "They were only interested in their own thing. They thought they were four feet above everybody else."
    PARC's people returned the sentiment, dismissing Potter rudely as a hopeless technical illiterate whose exalted position owned less to managerial aptitude than to having the ear of Archie McCardell, Xerox's new president, a "bean-counter" with scarely any instinct for marketing.*
    * McCardell's intoxication with figures would weigh on the company until his departure in 1977. He was named chief executive of International Harvester, over whose drift into bankruptcy and near extinction he presided, joined by Potter.
    Potter's group had brought out a low-performance word processor in 1974 that failed in the marketplace.  But instead of accepting the office task force's recommendation that Xerox throw its weight behind the Alto III, he pushed his own new machine, another nonprogrammable word processor called the Xerox 850——essentially a typewriter with enough memory in it to hold a few pages of a business letter long enough to be proofread.
    For the rest of the summer Potter's and Ellenby's planners staged a battle of numbers, producing contradictory analyses of the Alto's manufacturing costs to bolster their arguments——Ellenby trying to prove that the Alto could be mass-produced for less than the 5000-dollar manufacturing cost of the 850, and Potter that it could never meet its claimed price target.
    Ellenby even enlisted the support of Xeror's most respected manufacturing engineers, experts from the product cost estimation division in Rochester.  "The dispute was over screws and things, all the minor stuff," he recalled.  "And they were the experts in that. They actually went through and asked me what would be the finish on the screws. Would I be using beryllium plate? Then they'd look it up and tell me how many cents that would cost. They did a very thorough job verifying that our costs were right . . . . And Dallas still didn't believe it."
    But as Ellenby gradually realized, the numbers were merely cannon fodder in a battle that was political to the core.  It was Xerox's organizational structure, not cost estimates or technological visions, that was driving the two sides apart.  The Dallas group knew that if they were forced to add an entirely new product to their customary line of office machines, any hope of meeting their near-term sales and financial quotas for the year would be demolished.
   "They had to sandbag the Alto III, because with it they wouldn't make their numbers and therefore wouldn't get their bonuses," Ellenby concluded.  "In fact, it would have been an absolutely impossible burden on them to be successful in making typewriters and also introduce the world's first personal computer. And they should never have been asked to do it that way. So it was shot down like most things that have to do with numbers, based on rumour and wrong data."
    With the power of tradition behind them, Potter and his political allies prevailed.  On August 18 the word processing task force, reversing itself under pressure from McCardell and others, declared the 850 the official Xerox word processor.  As a Xerox product, the Alto III was dead.

    (Hiltzik, Michael A., copyright © 1999, QA76.27.H55 1999, 004'.0720794'73——dc21)
(Dealers of lighting : Xerox PARC and the dawn of the computer age / Michael Hiltzik. —— 1st ed., 1. computer science——research——california——palo alto——history, 2. Xerox coproration. Palo Alto Research Center——history, pp.261—265)


pp.272—273
    Xerox's top executives were for the most part salesmen of copy machines.  From these leased behemoths the revenues stream was as tangible as the "click" of the meters counting off copies, for which the customer paid Xerox so many cents per page (and from whih Xerox paid its salesperson their commissions).  Noticing their eyes narrow, Ellenby could almost hear them thinking: "If these is not paper to be copied, where's the 'click'?"  In other words: "How will I get paid?"
    For Geschke, the most discomfiting revelation was the contrast between the executives' reactions and those of their wives.  "The typical posture and demeanor of the Xerox executives, and all of them were men, was this"——arms folded sternly across the chest.  "But their wives would immediately walk up to the machines and say, 'Could I try that mouse thing?' That's because many of them had been secretaries——users of the equipment. These guys, maybe they punched a button on a copier one time in their lives, but they had someone else do their typing and their filing. So we were trying to sell to people who really had no concept of the work this equipment was actually accomplishing.
    "It didn't register in my mind at that event, but that was the loudest and clearest signal we ever got of how much of a problem we were going to have getting Xerox to understand what we had."
    (Hiltzik, Michael A., copyright © 1999, QA76.27.H55 1999, 004'.0720794'73——dc21)
(Dealers of lighting : Xerox PARC and the dawn of the computer age / Michael Hiltzik. —— 1st ed., 1. computer science——research——california——palo alto——history, 2. Xerox coproration. Palo Alto Research Center——history, )
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Vietnam War
-----------
began November 1, 1955
ended April 30, 1975
Result: North Vietnamese victory

source:
       https://www.bing.com/search?q=vietnam+war
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1950
March 10, 1950
President Truman officially recognizes France's colonization of Southeast Asia, including Vietnam.


Soon thereafter, the U.S. sends military aid and a Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) to Saigon.  This group was to assist French in their fight against the communists.

Over the next four years, the U.S. sends more than $4 billion in aid for France's war on Vietnam.
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[ June 25, 1950:  North Korea invades South Korea (the forgotton war) ]

1954
March 1954
The Vietminh surround and lay siege to the remote French garrison of [[Dien Bien Phu]].
[put wikipedia entry here; from a military perspective, this is one of the significance battle ]

12,000 French soldiers remain trapped inside.

April 7, 1954
In a historic press conference, President Truman makes the case for containing communism in Indochina.  The “Domino Theory” stated that if Vietnam were to become communist, then the rest of Asia would follow, ending with Japan becoming a communist country.

Despite criticism, the “Domino Theory” would guide the U.S. in its crusade against communism in Vietnam, and throughout the world.

May 7, 1954
After months of holding out, France finally surrenders Dien Bien Phu.  It marks the pivotal end of war for France.  A cease-fire is called, followed by France's eventual withdrawal from Vietnam.  

June 1954
France and Vietnam agree to terms of peace under the Geneva Accords.  The 17th parallel temporarily separates the country into two:  to the NOrth the communist Vietnamese government of Ho Chi Minh, to the South the American installed government of Ngo Dinh Diem.  Elections are to be held in two years to unite the country.

Installed by the U.S., Diem ruled over South Vietnam as an authoritarian power.

Already fragmented with rivalries and factions, South Vietnam suffered under massive corruption, religious oppression and poor leadership.

In Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh faced his own problems.  Dissidents were executed, and the military was used to put down uprising in North Vietnam.
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1956
Fearing a communist win, South Vietnamese Premier Diem and the U.S. block elections scheduled to reunite Vietnam.  American military advisors are stepped up in South Vietnam.

American pours money into South Vietnam to prop up its economy.  Premier Diem institutes oppressive measures to root out communists in the South and continue his rule.
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1959
January 1959
North Vietnam officially sanctions force in its struggle to unite the country.  Military attacks and assassinations are stepped up against the South.

The Ho Chi Minh trail is established as a military route to South Vietnam.
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1961
December 1961-1962

President Kennedy authorizes a drastic increase in the number of military advisors sent to Vietnam.

Within a year, 9,000 advisors are directly assisting South Vietnam in fighting against Communists.

Agent Orange is used to defoliate the countryside.
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1963
Buddhists protest religious presecution in South Vietnam, garnering worldwide attention when monks self-immolate themselves on the streets of Saigons.

With American approval, the South Vietnamese military stages a coup, murdering Diem and his brother.

Three weeks after Diem's murder, President Kennedy is assassinated.  Vice President Johnson assumes the reins of power.

The following year, another coup rocks South Vietnam.

In the years following, SOuth Vietnam undergoes more the five coups and changes of leadership.
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1964
August 2, 1964
North Vietnam attacks a U.S. warship in the Gulf of Tonkin.  A second attack, conceived by the U.S., though not actually occurring, provides the impetus for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution.

Congress overwhelmingly passes the resolution, giving the President broad powers to wage war.
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1965
January 1965
Attacks against the South Vietnamese and their American advisors intensify, Americans die in battle and sabotage.

Consequently, President Johnson initiates Operation Rolling Thunder, a series of sustained bombing attacks against the North which would last 3 years and kill over 180,000 civilians.

March 1965
Johnson deploys the first American combat troops to Vietnam.

By the end of the year, their numbers would grow to 160,000

The first “teach-ins” are held at American universities to protest the war.  A growing anti-war movement includes veterans, politicians and foreign leaders.

1965-1967
American troop strength builds as the war insensifies.  By the end of 1967, American troop strength is at more than half a million with expenditures of over $2 billion a month.

The U.S. drops more tonnage of bombs than it had in all the World War II.

Resistance to the war increases, with a march on Washington number 100,000 strong.

White House staff members resign, draftees dodge the war and public opinion in favor of the President drops.
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1968
January 1968
Taking advantage of the lunar New Year of Tet, the Communists launch a massive assault on South Vietnam.

The North suffers huge losses as a result, with approximately 30,000 killed, but the United States is stunned by the effort.

Two months later, Lyndon Johnson announced on television that he will make efforts at peace with Vietnam, and more shockingly, will not seek re-election.

In the village of My Lai, American troops massacre approximately 200 civilians.
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1969
President Nixon begins secret bombing raids into neighboring Cambodia, a neutral country used by North Vietnam to infiltrate south.  The resulting destabilization of the country eventually would lead to a genocidal Cambodian dictatorship which murdered millions of its own people.

A policy of “Vietnamization” is announced, in which the South Vietnamese would be expected to take up more of the fighting while the U.S. de-escalated its ground war.

At the same time, Nixon steps up the bombing, averaging one ton of bombs dropped every minute.

On September 4th, Ho Chi Minh dies of a heart attack in Hanoi.
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1970
Americans protest Nixon's invasion of Cambodia.  Massive protests are held throughout the country.  At Kent State University and Jackson State University, protests are shot and killed by the National Guard.

U.S. troop size in Vietnam falls to 280,000.  Approximately 65,000 servicemen are using easily available drugs.  Nixon announces the draft will end in 1973.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambodian_campaign

The Cambodian campaign (also known as the Cambodian incursion and the Cambodian invasion) was a brief series of military operations conducted in eastern Cambodia in 1970 by South Vietnam and the United States as an extension of the Vietnam War and the Cambodian Civil War. Thirteen major operations were conducted by the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) between 29 April and 22 July and by U.S. forces between 1 May and 30 June 1970.

The objective of the campaign was the defeat of the approximately 40,000 troops of the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) and the Viet Cong (VC) in the eastern border regions of Cambodia. Cambodian neutrality and military weakness made its territory a safe zone where PAVN/VC forces could establish bases for operations over the border. With the US shifting toward a policy of Vietnamization and withdrawal, it sought to shore up the South Vietnamese government by eliminating the cross-border threat.

A change in the Cambodian government allowed an opportunity to destroy the bases in 1970, when Prince Norodom Sihanouk was deposed and replaced by pro–U.S. General Lon Nol. A series of South Vietnamese–Khmer Republic operations captured several towns, but the PAVN/VC military and political leadership narrowly escaped the cordon. The operation was partly a response to a PAVN offensive on 29 March against the Cambodian Army that captured large parts of eastern Cambodia in the wake of these operations. Allied military operations failed to eliminate many PAVN/VC troops or to capture their elusive headquarters, known as the Central Office for South Vietnam (COSVN) as they had left a month prior, but the haul of captured material in Cambodia prompted claims of success.
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1971
June 1971
Congress repeals the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, restricting the President's war-making powers.  It also restricts further attacks into Cambodia.  Instead, Nixon steps up invasions into neighboring Laos.

Nixon announces the withdrawal of 100,000 troops from Vietnam by the end of the year.  Public opinion against the war reaches an all-time high, with 71 percent of the public believing it was a misake.
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1972
May 1972
While American ground troops decrease, Nixon initiates Operation Linebacker, a massive bombing campaign against North Vietnam.

New “smart” bombs are also used:  computer-controlled bombs mounted with television cameras for precise targeting.  Massive casualties ensure.

October 1972
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger signs terms for a cease-fire with North Vietnamese representatives.

Kissinger's announcement that “peace is at hand” is undercut by South Vietnam's opposition to the agreement.

December 1972
Nixon initiates what would become known as the “Christmas Bombings”, dropping more tonnage of bombs in 12 days than in the entire period from 1969 to 1971.

The attacks draw worldwide condemnation.  Nixon's popular approval rating sink.  Congress calls for an end to the war.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Barrel_Roll

Operation Barrel Roll was a covert U.S. Air Force 2nd Air Division and U.S. Navy Task Force 77, interdiction and close air support campaign conducted in the Kingdom of Laos between 14 December 1964 and 29 March 1973 concurrent with the Vietnam War. The operation resulted in 260 million bombs being dropped on Laos, making Laos "the most heavily bombed nation in history".[1]

The original purpose of the operation was to serve as a signal to the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam) to cease its support for the insurgency then taking place in the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam). This action was taken within Laos due to the location of North Vietnam's expanding logistical corridor known as the Ho Chi Minh Trail (the Truong Son Road to the North Vietnamese), which ran from southwestern North Vietnam, through southeastern Laos, and into South Vietnam. The campaign then centered on the interdiction of that logistical system. Beginning during the same time frame (and expanding throughout the conflict) the operation became increasingly involved in providing close air support missions for Royal Lao Armed Forces, CIA-backed tribal mercenaries, and Thai Volunteer Defense Corps in a covert ground war in northern and northeastern Laos. Barrel Roll and the "Secret Army" attempted to stem an increasing tide of People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) and Pathet Lao offensives.

Barrel Roll was one of the most closely held secrets and one of the most unknown components of the American military commitment in Southeast Asia. Due to the ostensible neutrality of Laos, guaranteed by the Geneva Conference of 1954 and 1962, both the U.S. and North Vietnam strove to maintain the secrecy of their operations and only slowly escalated military actions there. As much as both parties would have liked to have publicized their enemy's own alleged violation of the accords, both had more to gain by keeping their own roles quiet.[2] Regardless, by the end of the conflict in 1975, Laos emerged from nine years of war just as devastated as any of the other Asian participants in the Vietnam War.

https://www.thecollector.com/war-in-laos-most-heavily-bombed-country-in-history/
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5:14
Air⭐️Conflicts: Vietnam [Operation Barrel Roll] Happy 75th Anniversary Air Force!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IjZ_pFsWYAg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IjZ_pFsWYAg
SPOTTED
  Sep 25, 2022
Operation Barrel Roll "Advisor Era"
December 14, 1964

Despite Laos' declared neutrality there are around 6000 Viet Cong troops positioned in Eastern Laos.  The United States is covertly supporting the western part of the country in their fight against communism, but with North Vietnam expanding their logistic corridor, the Ho Chi Minh Trail, we are left with few options.  We must intervene before the Viet Cong's control of the area becomes too dominant.  However, given Laos' neutrality, this operation is in direct violation of the Geneva Convention - therefore it is classified and top secret!  Revealing this operation would do major damage to the international reputation of the U.S.  Thanks to your previous performance and reports from senior officers, you have been selected to be part of Operation Barrel Roll.  Your primary goal is to eliminate ground targeted in the area and disrupt enemy supply routes.

Happy 75th Anniversary Air Force!
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1973
January 1973
Henry Kissinger and North Vietnamese representative Le Duc Tho meet in Paris to sign terms of “peace with honor”.

The war continues without direct U.S. military involvement.
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Vietnam War
-----------
began November 1, 1955
ended April 30, 1975
Result: North Vietnamese victory

source:
       https://www.bing.com/search?q=vietnam+war
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https://www.amazon.com/Achilles-Vietnam-Combat-Undoing-Character/dp/0684813211

https://www.amazon.com/gp/customer-reviews/RC2Y3ZM74RAAS/ref=cm_cr_dp_d_rvw_ttl?ie=UTF8&ASIN=0684813211
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"Is a warrior ever justified in challenging his commander?  Must he sacrifice his life for someone else's cause?  How is a catastrophic war ever allowed to start ─ and why, if all parties wish it over, can it not be ended?  Giving his life for his country does a man betray is family?  Do the gods counternance war's slaughter?  Is a warrior's death compensated by his glory?

These are the questions that pervade the Iliad.  These are also the questions that pervade actual war."

              ──Caroline Alaexander, The war that killed Achilles, 14─15
source:
       https://onedrive.live.com/view.aspx?resid=BCF8F54CAB28EA82!63247&ithint=file%2cpptx&authkey=!AGNzXW452zrIfPQ
       slide 28 of 28
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Hans Rosling, Factfulness, 2018                                             [ ]

pp.131-132
The Vietnam war as the Syrian war of my generation.
   Two days before Christmas in 1972, seven bombs killed 27 patients and members of staff at the Bach Mai hospital in Hanoi in Vietnam.  I was studying medicine in Uppsala in Sweden.  We had plenty of medical equipment and yellow blankets. Agneta and I coordinated a collection, which we packed in boxes and sent to Bach Mai.
   Fifteen years later, I was in Vietnam to evaluate a Swedish aid project.  One lunchtime, I was eating my rice next to one of my local colleagues, a doctor named Niem, and I asked him about his background.  He told me he had been inside the Bach Mai hospital when the bombs fell.  Afterward, he had coordinated unpacking of boxes of supplies that had arrived from all over the world.  I asked him if he remembered some yellow blankets and I got goose bumps as he described the fabric's pattern to me.  It felt like we had been friends forever.

p.132
Above the treetops I could see a large pagoda, covered in gold. It seemed about 300 feet high.  He said, “Here is where we commemorate our war heroes. Isn't it beautiful?”  This was the monument to Vietnam's war in China.
   The wars with China had lasted, on and off, for 2,000 years.  The French occupation had lasted 200 years.  The “Resistance war against America” took only 20 years.  

   (Hans Rosling with Ola Rosling and Anna Rosling Rönnlund, Factfulness : ten reasons we're wrong about the world ── and why things are better than you think, 155.9042  Rosling, 2018, )

world health chart
www.gapminder.org/whc
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https://www.amazon.com/mafiti-Writing-Scribbling-Drawing-eWriter/dp/B07VM4CYXQ/

Mafiti LCD Writing Tablet 8.5 Inch Electronic Writing Drawing Pads Portable Doodle Board Gifts for Kids Office Memo Home Whiteboard Blue
Deal
-48% $5.73 (2022-12-22)

([ at $6.00 USD, you should get three, like electronic paper ])
(] my informal consumerist intelligence tells me you can pick up these kind of LCD writing tablet in Japanese dollar store in Japan (Nihon) for a song [)

LCD writing tablet 8.5 inch

Brand    Mafiti
Color    Blue 8.5inch
Item Weight    0.24 Pounds
Display resolution    1024 x 600
Item Dimensions LxWxH    9.06 x 5.91 inches

About this item
【Update Version Easy and thicker writing and one key to clear】Writing or drawing with the included plastic stylus, compare with previous version, update version are with thicker writing, more easy to view, easy to write.Erase your writing content quickly with simply one press of erase button.
【 Replaceable coin-cell battery】Writing and erasing more than 100,000 times, battery can be replaced with new ones easily when remove button without function, battery type: CR2016 3.0V.
【Kick-stand function】Stylus can be used as a kick-stand to display your written messages to family, friends and co-workers. Built-in stylus dock provides convenient storage for stylus when not in use.
【Ultra light-weight, portable】It is 1/8 inch thin and is easy to take with you anywhere you go.
【 Environmental-Friendly and Multi-Purposes】No paper or chalk needed, not only suitable for kid’s Graffiti, Arithmetic, Drawing and Pictures, also suitable for Shopping lists, To-do, Recipe, even office Memos.
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