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         Inventing:     more books (100)
  1. Inventing America: Jefferson's Declaration of Independence by Garry Wills, 2002-11-14
  2. Inventing America, Second Edition (Single-Volume Edition) by Pauline Maier, Merritt Roe Smith, et all 2005-12-01
  3. Inventing Christmas: How Our Holiday Came to Be by Jock Elliott, 2002-10-01
  4. Inventing Eastern Europe: The Map of Civilization on the Mind of the Enlightenment by Larry Wolff, 1994-11-01
  5. Inventing Elliot by Graham Gardner, 2004-03-01
  6. Inventing the "Great Awakening" by Frank Lambert, 2001-01-03
  7. Inventing the French Revolution `: Essays on French Political Culture in the Eighteenth Century (Ideas in Context) by Keith Michael Baker, 1990-01-26
  8. Inventing Modern America: From the Microwave to the Mouse by David E. Brown, 2003-04-01
  9. Inventing Jewish Ritual by Vanessa L. Ochs, 2007-05-07
  10. Inventing the Axis of Evil: The Truth About North Korea, Iran, and Syria by Bruce Cumings, Ervand Abrahamian, et all 2006-01-08
  11. Inventing Public Diplomacy: The Story of the U.S. Information Agency by Wilson P Jr Dizard, 2004-06
  12. Inventing Global Ecology: Tracking Biodiversity Ideal In India 1947-1997 (Ecology & History) by Michael L. Lewis, 2004-06-16
  13. Inventing the Child: Culture, Ideology, and the Story of Childhood (Children's Literature and Culture) by J. Zornado, 2006-05-01
  14. Inventing on a Shoestring Budget by Barbara Russell Pitts, Mary Russell Sarao, 2006-06-02

41. INVENTION CONVENTION ® - Gateway To The World Of Inventing
Gateway to the World of inventing. Freefor-all resources at NCIO,America s Inventortm Online Magazine, Invention Connection
http://www.inventionconvention.com/
[Click Banner]
Interested In Inventions Available for Licensing, etc.? Click here!

Celebrating the Next Century's Pioneers
[Click Here to View Complete Product List With Descriptions]

IN THE MEDIA!
Friday, September 6, 2002
Los Angeles Daily News Article - Business Section
"He Built on Light-Bulb Moments" by Brent Hopkins

[To read the article, click link and a separate browser window will open.]
Site Directory
[Click on One of These Logos To Access The Site] This highly acclaimed, award-winning online magazine offers tools of the trade for the independent inventor, or as some call it, "inventors brainfood". National Congress of Inventor Organizations founded in 1977, debuted it free-for-all website in 1997, making information, education, and resources easily accessible to anyone.

42. Washingtonpost.com: Inventing Mark Twain
From the biography by Andrew Hoffman, courtesy of the Washington Post.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/books/chap1/inventingmarktwa
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Go to Chapter One Section Go to Book World's Review Inventing Mark Twain
The Lives of Samuel Langhorne Clemens

By Andrew Hoffman Chapter One: Inventing Sam Clemens Training is everything. The peach was once a bitter almond; cauliflower is nothing but cabbage with a college education. "Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calendar" (1894) Two months premature and weighing five pounds, the baby born to John Marshall and Jane Lampton Clemens on November 30, 1835, in the frontier hamlet of Florida, Missouri, had the worst possible prospects. "A lady came in one day," Jane Clemens wrote later, and "said you don't expect to raise that babe do you. I said I would try. But he was a poor looking object to raise." Writing as Mark Twain, Samuel Langhorne Clemens would claim that Florida, Missouri, "contained a hundred people and I increased the population by one per cent. It is more than the best man in history ever did for any other town." In 1835, the hamlet consisted of just two dusty roads and as many shacks as were needed to house a few hundred people a day's horse-ride away from the nearest Mississippi River community. Laid out in 1831, Florida sat on high, fertile ground where the north and south forks of Salt River joined thirty land miles from the Mississippi and seemed a likely spot to mill and ship the products of the outlying farms. By 1835, the first horse-powered mill gave way to a few water-powered ones; small, flat-bottomed boats carried produce the eighty river miles down to the town of Louisiana, Missouri, where Salt River joined the Big Muddy.

43. Carnegie Foundation ELibrary - Inventing The Future
inventing the Future. It is a future worth inventing, and one that is powerfullyprefigured by the work presented in this volume. REFERENCES AND RESOURCES.
http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/elibrary/docs/inventing.htm
Home Publications eLibrary Publications home ... Annual Report
Inventing the Future
Conclusion to Opening Lines: Approaches to the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning By Lee S. Shulman From 1968 to 1975, I spent much of my time as a faculty member helping to create a new medical school at Michigan State University. I became particularly interested in the clinical work of faculty members in medicine. Many of my professorial colleagues were physicians who cared for patients while also doing research and teaching. They read the medical literature voraciously to ensure that the clinical care they provided patients (and modeled for students) was state-of-the-art. Many of them also conducted clinical research, both informally and formally. They carefully documented their diagnoses and treatment plans. They followed patients to track the course of treatments and responses. Periodically, they published sets of cases illustrating the efficacies of different interventions. At times, they moved from the systematic documentation of their clinical work to "clinical trials," more formal experimental studies in which experimental and control groups are compared over time. Thus, medical faculty not only engaged in scholarly healing; they contributed whenever possible, and in various ways, to a scholarship

44. Inventing The Abbotts (1997) - MovieWeb
inventing the Abbotts Starring Liv Tyler, Joaquin Phoenix, Jennifer Connelly,Joanna Going, Barbara Williams, Will Patton, Kathy Baker, Michael Sutton
http://movieweb.com/movie/inventing/
Ads_kid=0;Ads_bid=0;Ads_xl=0;Ads_yl=0;Ads_xp='';Ads_yp='';Ads_opt=0;Ads_wrd='[KeyWord]';Ads_prf='';Ads_par='';Ads_cnturl='';Ads_sec=0; Movies DVDs Film News DVD News Interviews Director Actor Film Reviews Trailers DVD Reviews DVD Eggs DVD Press Ads_kid=0;Ads_bid=0;Ads_xl=0;Ads_yl=0;Ads_xp='';Ads_yp='';Ads_opt=0;Ads_wrd='[KeyWord]';Ads_prf='';Ads_par='';Ads_cnturl='';Ads_sec=0;
INVENTING THE ABBOTTS (1997) When you want it all, but can't have it. There's only one way to handle life... Invent it. April 4th, 1997 Pat O'Connor Sue Miller, Ken Hixon Liv Tyler, Joaquin Phoenix, Jennifer Connelly, Joanna Going, Barbara Williams, Will Patton, Kathy Baker, Michael Sutton, Alessandro Nivola, Billy Crudup 20th Century Fox Drama Romance Not Available (for sexuality, language) Ads_kid=0;Ads_bid=0;Ads_xl=0;Ads_yl=0;Ads_xp='';Ads_yp='';Ads_opt=0;Ads_wrd='[KeyWord]';Ads_prf='';Ads_par='';Ads_cnturl='';Ads_sec=0;
The working class Holt brothers are smart, good-looking and as different from each other as their family is from the wealthy Abbotts. But the beautiful Abbott girls only appear to have it all. And as the Holts and Abbotts confront the timeless challenges of love, sex and identity, their struggle is complicated by a dark secret that haunts both families.

45. The GVU Center @ Georgia Tech
Georgia Institute of Technology, GVU, inventing and teaching
http://www.cc.gatech.edu/gvu
[August 26]
First Brown Bag of Fall '04 Semester GVU Convocation and Research Review Day was a success! Last modified on . Email: gvu-webmaster@cc.gatech.edu.

46. No. 894: Inventing Printing
No. 894 inventing PRINTING.
http://www.uh.edu/engines/epi894.htm
No. 894
INVENTING PRINTING
by John H. Lienhard
Click here for audio of Episode 894. So: How did we really figure out how to print words on paper? The University of Houston's College of Engineering presents this series about the machines that make our civilization run, and the people whose ingenuity created them. T he oldest known piece of paper was made in Shangsi Province in China around 49 BC. That's about the same time sheepskin was replacing papyrus in the Roman world. So what is paper, really? You make paper by spreading out a slurry of organic fibers and draining off the water. Paper is a kind of felt made of overlapping fibers. At first the Chinese made paper from hemp. They used it for wrapping and decoration not for writing. They'd already been wrapping themselves in felt clothing. In AD 105, one Ts'ai Lun used paper to replace bamboo blocks as a writing surface. He made it from fibers of bark, bamboo, and hemp. By AD 500, the Chinese had experimented with rattan and mulberry and had finally settled on bamboo paper. And they not only wrote on their paper. They printed on it as well. Of course printing is, in the broadest sense, older than coal. Stamps, brands, royal seals even imprints of fossils on limestone are, after all, forms of block printing.

47. CNN.com - R.E.M. Star Denies Inventing Tale - March 21, 2002
CNN
http://cnn.com/2002/SHOWBIZ/Music/03/21/buck.defence/index.html
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EDITIONS CNN.com Asia CNN.com Europe CNNenEspanol.com CNNArabic.com ... set your edition Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Korean Arabic Japanese Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW InStyle Business 2.0
R.E.M. star denies inventing tale
Buck mistook waking in his prison cell for a "weird Disneyland hotel" LONDON, England Rock star Peter Buck denied inventing a tale about taking a sleeping pill to avoid accusations of drunkenness after an alleged rampage aboard a plane. The 45-year-old R.E.M. guitarist is said to have assaulted two British Airways cabin crew during a prolonged bout of "loutish behaviour" 35,000 feet above the Atlantic. He insisted during Thursday's hearing at west London's Isleworth Crown Court that his account of downing the tablet with a glass of wine at the start of the flight was true. During questioning by prosecution barrister David Bate QC, Buck denied making up the tablet story to cover his drunken behaviour on the 10-hour Seattle-to-London flight. Buck was arrested when the plane landed at Heathrow and he told the court that "it didn't really occur to me" to tell the police about the pill.

48. Inventing America Online Tutor

http://www.wwnorton.com/inventing/

49. CNN.com - Inventing Against The Odds - Feb. 10, 2003
CNN
http://cnn.com/2003/US/02/10/sprj.bhm.innovators/index.html
The Web CNN.com Home Page World U.S. Weather ... Special Reports SERVICES Video E-Mail Services CNNtoGO SEARCH Web CNN.com Overview Interactive Quiz
Inventing against the odds
Latest test: Spark young blacks' passion for science
By Greg Botelho
CNN New York Bureau
A painting of black scientist George Washington Carver, one of America's most prolific inventors. Story Tools (CNN) Take a bite out of your peanut butter sandwich, stop at the traffic signal, then turn left onto Pennsylvania Avenue as you explore Washington, D.C. And don't forget to thank the African-American inventors specifically George Washington Carver (who created dozens of peanut-related products), Garrett Morgan (the man behind the modern stop light) and Benjamin Banneker (mathematician, astronomer and key architect of the nation's capital) who made it possible. These men, and their innovations, aren't the only ones deserving of gratitude. From hands-on creations like pencil sharpeners and golf tees, to less tangible but no less important advancements such as refining sugar and storing blood, black inventors have profoundly impacted our day-to-day lives. That said, it has not been easy for black innovators. Slaves were considered property, not free people who could create and market inventions. Even given a post-Civil War boom of African Americans seeking patents, blacks have long struggled to get jobs, education and recognition.

50. Arkansas Woman Admits Inventing Dead Brother In September 11 Attacks
CNN
http://cnn.com/2003/US/South/04/04/attacks.fraud.ap/index.html

51. Interview: Inventing The Future: Spring Has Sprung For Actors Liv Tyler And Joaq
Liv Tyler and Joaquin Phoenix talk about their careers in film.
http://www.findarticles.com/cf_iview/m1285/n4_v27/19382615/p1/article.jhtml?term

52. BW Online | February 23, 2004 | Commentary: Inventing The "Clinton Recession"
NEWS ANALYSIS COMMENTARY/Commentary inventing The Clinton Recession The CEA is trying to alter the start date in a way that benefits Bush.
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_08/b3871044.htm
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International Editorials FEBRUARY 23, 2004 Editions: Edition Preference Printer-Friendly Version E-Mail This Story Graphic: When Did The Downturn Really Begin? ... A Bummer For The Hummer Find More Stories Like This Inventing The "Clinton Recession" The CEA is trying to alter the start date in a way that benefits Bush. `Tain't fair No one should be surprised when economic or budget forecasts coming out of Washington are influenced by politics, especially during an election year. But when economic history is rewritten with political consequences that's going too far. President George W. Bush's Council of Economic Advisers, chaired by Harvard economist N. Gregory Mankiw, is trying to get away with exactly such revisionist history. The CEA's Economic Report of the President, released Feb. 9, unilaterally changed the start date of the last recession to benefit Bush's reelection bid. Instead of using the accepted start date of March, 2001, the CEA announced that the recession really started in the fourth quarter of 2000 a shift that would make it much more credible for the Bush Administration to term it the "Clinton Recession." In a subsequent press conference, Mankiw said that the CEA had looked at the available data and "made the call."

53. Safety Pin
Walter Hunt is credited with inventing this, at least in modern times.
http://www.sjmv.org/Campus/Class/scinventors/safetypin/SafetyPin.html
The Magnificent Safety Pin The safety pin was invention and an improvement of a pin. Both improved and invented by a man named walter Hunt in New York the year eighteen forty nine. The safety pin is made out of a small piece of metal. This metal in which the safety pin was made was a combination of copper, iron, aluminum, gold, silver, and platinum. These metal were heated and formed into a small piece of combined metals. It all started one afternoon.. Walter Hunt had to think of a way on how to pay back a fifteen dollar debt. He was sitting at his desk just twisting a piece of wire while trying to think of how to pay back his debt. He sat twisting wire for three full hours and realized what he had created. He called it the safety pin. He although did not invent the safety pin he just improved it. The man whom Hunt had borrowed the money from was the one who gave him the piece of wire and told him he would pay him four hundred dollars for all the rights to whatever Walter Hunt created. In exchange Walter Hunt sold him the safety pin and all the rights to the device.
for four hundred dollars. The reason this man wanted Walter Hunt to create something was because Walter Hunt was a inventor.

54. Peter H. Duesberg, 'Inventing The AIDS Virus' Regnery USA 1996, 720 Pages, ISBN
VIRUSMYTH HOMEPAGE. BOOKSHELF. Peter H. Duesberg, inventing the AIDS Virus Regnery USA 1996, 720 pages, ISBN 089526-470-6. HIV does not cause AIDS
http://www.virusmyth.net/aids/books/pdbinvent.htm
More information about controversial AIDS books.
VIRUSMYTH HOMEPAGE
BOOKSHELF
Peter H. Duesberg, 'Inventing the AIDS Virus' Regnery USA 1996, 720 pages, ISBN 0-89526-470-6.
  • HIV does not cause AIDS... AIDS is not sexually transmitted... AZT makes AIDS worse, not better...
  • So argues Dr. Peter Duesberg, one of the world's leading microbiologists, a pioneer in the discovery of the HIV family of viruses, and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Duesberg's evidence - revealed in top scientific journals but kept out of the mainstream press - raises questions the AIDS research establishment has so far declined to answer:
    • If HIV causes AIDS, why have thousands of AIDS victims never had HIV? Why have hundreds of thousands who have had HIV - for many years - remained perfectly healthy? Why does the discoverer of the HIV virus now claim it can not be the sole cause of AIDS? Why has more than ten years of AIDS research - costing tens of billions of dollars - failed to show how (or even if) HIV causes AIDS or attacks the immune system?
    With annual federal funding at more than $7 billion, AIDS research is better funded than any other disease - including cancer. Yet it has also produced the least results. Why? Duesberg explains how the lure of money and prestige, combined with powerful political pressures, have tempted otherwise responsible scientists to overlook - even suppress - major flaws in current AIDS theory.

    55. ExpersOnª Innovation For Entrepreneurs, Business Plans, New Product Development
    Innovation tools, publications, techniques, and creativity enhancing resources for inventing .
    http://www.expertson.com/Innovation/innovation.html
    Branding and Symbolism
    Business Plan Research

    Electronic Commerce

    Innovation
    ...
    Web Site Optimization
    Innovation
    I nnovation tools, innovation publications, innovation techniques, and creativity enhancing resources.
    Innovation Resources
    Invention Dimension MIT's exceptionally rich collection of invention links and resources. Must see! Kid's invention links, too. Arthur D. Little Enterprises Invention Management Program commercializes innovations by turning early stage ideas into successfully licensed technologies. Great resources. CERF Innovation Centers - Examples of the process of studying an innovative idea in engineering. Investing in Innovation Project on Technology Policy Assessment, Harvard, long article on issues surrounding government policy. murli's creativity page An exciting, stimulating site dedicated to creativity tools. Links to A Short Course on Creativity, books, organizations, technologies, discussion groups. Excellent. Innovation Web Pages Mint Research Center. Links to innovation sites worldwide. Canadian.

    56. Inventing Agriculture
    POSTED 22 NOV 2000. inventing AGRICULTURE. SEEDS OF DOMESTICATION.GENETIC CHANGES. THANK THE FARMER. SCANDINAVIAN SCENE. GONE FISHING.
    http://whyfiles.org/122ancient_ag/
    POSTED 22 NOV 2000 INVENTING AGRICULTURE SEEDS OF DOMESTICATION GENETIC CHANGES THANK THE FARMER SCANDINAVIAN SCENE ... GONE FISHING Rice is one of the largest crops in the world. It can be grown in dry fields, or flooded fields like the paddies shown here.
    Courtesy International Rice Research Institute A blacksmith in Senegal demonstrates one of the many crafts that flourished after the dawn of agriculture.
    Domestication dominates!
    Thinking about food? Everybody else is: Mad cow disease is causing a mini-panic in France. Europeans are stewing about the discovery of genetically modified corn in their food despite assurances that "Frankenfood" would not reach food stores. Consumers aren't swallowing red delicious apples the rot-proof fruit that, after years of intensive crop breeding, tastes better'n, well, cardboard. With the market gone bust, some farmers in Washington State, United States, are burning their orchards. Thanksgiving has arrived in the United States, and the gobbling of turkey is heard across the land.

    57. Executive Coach, Steve Mitten CPCC, MCC
    Helping highly successful mid and latecareer executives with the 3 R's renewing, re-focusing and re-inventing themselves to make a great transition into successful entrepreneurship.
    http://www.principalevolutions.com
    EXECUTIVE COACH "Nothing happens without personal transformation" - W. E. Deming

    Executive Coaching
    Executive coaching provides focused, confidential and experienced support to successful executives committed to the highest levels of competence, accomplishment and success. These executives know the value of investing in the very best support and are looking for convenient, confidential, experienced assistance to;
    • work on specific challenges or goals. step back from the day-to-day battles and look at the big picture of their careers and lives. make significant advances in their leadership and communication skills. challenge their assumptions as to what is possible. renew themselves and access more of their creative and productive energies. create a compelling future vision for themselves and their organizations.

    58. Inventing Threats
    54, No. 2. inventing Threats By Carl Conetta Charles Knight. It was a remarkableadmission for a chairman of the Joint Chiefs I m running out of demons.
    http://www.thebulletin.org/issues/1998/ma98/ma98conetta.html
    March/April 1998
    Vol. 54, No. 2 Inventing Threats
    It was a remarkable admission for a chairman of the Joint Chiefs: "I'm running out of demons. I'm down to Kim Il Sung and Castro." The context for Gen. Colin Powell's 1991 remarks to Congress was the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact and America's recent victory in the Gulf War. When the Soviet Union collapsed soon after, an article in Aerospace Daily, a leading defense industry newsletter, recalled Powell's remarks and predicted: "Pentagon Budget Headed for $150 BillionHalf Current Level By 1996." But what a difference a few years can make. When he unveiled the "Quadrennial Defense Review" last May, Defense Secretary William Cohen warned that "new threats and dangers, harder to define and more difficult to track, have gathered on the horizon." Contrary to Aerospace Daily's forecast, Secretary Cohen sees keeping the Pentagon budget at $250 billion or slightly moreabout 77 percent of the 1991 level.
    Breaking with reality
    Beginning with efforts at the Rand Corporation during the late 1980s, the focus of defense planners has shifted from "the clear and present danger" of Soviet power to the intractable problem of "uncertainty." Along with this shift has come a new type of Pentagon partisan-the "uncertainty hawk."

    59. Inventing The Tablet PC
    inventing the Tablet PC by Suzanne Ross. For over twenty years scientistshave been dreaming about creating a real PADD, the slate
    http://research.microsoft.com/features/tablet.asp
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    Inventing the Tablet PC
    by Suzanne Ross
    For over twenty years scientists have been dreaming about creating a real P.A.D.D., the slate device that the inhabitants of Star Trek used to record and access data as they moved around the starship Enterprise. There have been attempts to duplicate it over the years, but the Tablet PC may be the first successful incarnation. Some of this is timing - consumers are demanding more from their computers, and they want what the Tablet offers. The other reason is research - years of hard work and data gathering have made the Tablet PC possible. Tablet PC is an evolution of the portable PC. It takes the best from a standard laptop and adds features that make retiring your laptop one of the smartest ideas you've ever had. To start with, it uses multi-modal input - you can input with keyboard, pen, or voice. While you may be committing a social faux pas by burying your head behind a computer screen as you click on a keyboard during a meeting, you will feel perfectly comfortable taking notes in your own handwriting on the Tablet PC. Even better, the handwriting recognition in Tablet PC can take your handwriting (as long as your writing doesn't resemble chicken scratches) and transform it into digital text. You can then search your handwritten notes.

    60. T3X -- A Minimum Procedural Language
    Minimum procedural language. Goal aid productivity in exploring/inventing algorithms. Small, portable, procedural, blockstructured, recursive, almost typeless, partly OO. Information, compilers, how-to, download latest compiler, some tools. Open Source, BSD
    http://t3x.dyndns.org/T3X/
    T3X.ORG Dirs: Documents
    Files: index compilers examples license ... TIDE This is the official home page of the T3X Project , a non-profit project committed to the development of the minimum procedural language T3X . It is maintained by the inventor of the language. On this page, you can The T3X compilers are distributed under an unrestrictive, BSD-style open source license . They are free for both private and commercial use. Updated: Nils M Holm nmh@t3x.org

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