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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (98514)2/3/2013 10:52:40 AM
From: dvdw©  Respond to of 217540
 
Bingo.....


To: dvdw© who wrote (927)
2/3/2013 10:14:46 AM
From: dvdw© of 928
In the previous post to which this is a reply are links about the Elk Point saga, read these profiles in news going back to 2006.

This issue, of or about Elk Point, needs elevation. Why?

The Variable Time sets about the Shape for Capital.

Incomplete awareness of variables makes for Mal investment across many alternatives.

Take Keystone, keystone the project which would bring Canadian oil to refiners in the ok,tx La, systems. This thread sees Keystone as currently constituted as a mal investment project for a wide range of reasons.

Elk Point would be a better alternative inclusive of Key Stone for a whole host of reasons.

At this moment; there is little bandwidth being applied to the probability wave that the best capital outcomes could arise from Elk Points full development.

We are putting this front and center.....because it deserves to be an integral part of the complex structures describing the Variables upon which Time will act.
Bingo.....



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (98514)2/3/2013 12:39:46 PM
From: arun gera1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217540
 
There were other successful internet projects before hypertext transport protocol (world wide web).

en.wikipedia.org

en.wikipedia.org

Enabling technology was TCP/IP
en.wikipedia.org

Also the Xanadu project struggled with making hypertext usable.

en.wikipedia.org

>Charles S. Smith, the founder of a company called Memex (named after a hypertext system proposed by Vannevar Bush [3]), hired many of the Xanadu programmers and licensed the Xanadu technology, though Memex soon faced financial difficulties, and the then-unpaid programmers left, taking the computers with them (the programmers were eventually paid). At around this time, Tim Berners-Lee was developing the World Wide Web. When the Web began to see large growth that Xanadu did not, Nelson's team grew defensive in the supposed rivalry that was emerging, but that they were losing. The 1995 Wired Magazine article "The Curse of Xanadu," provoked a harsh rebuttal from Nelson, but contention largely faded as the Web dominated Xanadu. [4]>