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Brand names are imprinted on the brain: Study. A brand is not just a name. The brain reacts to brands by conjuring up a whole range of associations and ideas, which are primarily emotional, says a new study. The study conducted by reasearchers at the University of California, Los Angeles claimed that consumers reading a brand name do not treat it like any other word -- instead they activate parts of the brain normally used to process emotions... [xBlog: The visual thinking weblog | XPLANE] 11:03:14 PM |
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Wasn't my post originally: got it from Curiouser and Curiouser. And I believe there Tacit Knowledge Publishing was suggested in a later post. Ron Lusk: "I'm still working on the ??" Hey Ron, how 'bout Organizational Knowledge Publishing? [Steven's Weblog] Of course, OKP sounds like a positive report from your urologist, whereas TKP sounds less so (unless it is a diagnosis for Phenylketonuria). I'll leave it up to you. Once someone authoritative decides, I'll make a shortcut or two. |
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Steinberg asks a good question; I don't have a good answer, and I used to teach Java for Penn State. Hmmmm....... Rethinking the Java Curriculum: Goodbye, HelloWorld!. How do we train students in the ways of object-oriented programming? Teaching them C first and then porting to Java is obviously the wrong thing to do. And 3:00:48 PM |
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Enjoy...go play... e-Sphere. Hyperspace Star Polytope Slicer reminds me of those toys that expand and contract. Only, it's an electric version that you can control. [meryl's notes] 10:28:22 AM |
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Acronym tags added :
It's all in the title. 9:43:53 AM |
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