We're moving beyond an information economy. The efficiencies and optimizations that come from constant and iterative feedback will soon become the norm for businesses and governments.
What do ant colonies have in common with the internet? Steven Johnson, author of Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software, explains the concept of 'bottom-up' intelligence
Medieval source-based textual scholarship is arguably blessed
by the internet. Scholars can exchange paleographic, codicological and
other philological information on listservs like MEDTEXTL. They can work in
teams, examining text and digitized color photographs shared as e-mail
attachments, or as file transfers, in JPEG, GIF and other image formats
on web pages, debating the significance of a serrif, a minim, or
evidence of a trimmed manuscript page. They can exchange MIDI, MP3 and
other audio files for editions interpreting manuscripts of musical
scores. The distance separating team members is little relevant and
they are as mobile as their digital communication devices.
In addition, textual scholars can produce critical editions on the web
which would not be given due consideration by traditional paper
publishers, not because of quality or of methodological soundness, but
simply because of the money involved in producing critical editions
that are fully appropriate for a variety of readers, and which take
advantage of the enormous amount of relevant information available in
our time. These editions will certainly enhance the reader's ability to
judge the validity of an editor's choice of manuscripts or readings.
(prikaz) ��ma: Bernardinus Gallelus de Jadra, vicarius et officialis generalis Cracoviensis 1509-1517., ČKD, 1935/4, str. 413-414, cit dle: http://depositum.cz/knihovny/ckd/strom.clanek.php?clanek=24165 (2012)
Čakavska rič. Polugodišnjak za proučavanje čakavske riči, Vol.XXXVIII No.1-2 Studeni 2010. DVA SVEŠČIĆA STIHOVA IZ XVI. STOLJEĆA, NAVODNO MIHOVILA VRANČIĆA ŠIBENČANINA Amir Kapetanović; Institut za hrvatski jezik i jezikoslovlje, Zagreb, Hrvatska. Str. 183 - 207
Sažetak: U radu se opisuju dva sveščića pjesama koja je F. Fancev 1925. godine povezao s jednim uglednim članom glasovite šibenske obitelji, Mihovilom Vrančićem, i gradom Šibenikom. Izbor nekih pjesama ipak upućuje na to da je opsežniji sveščić imao vezu sa splitskim krajem. U žarištu je rada popis i opis sastavnica dvaju spomenutih sveščića, te slovopisne, jezične i versifikacijske značajke. Posebno je zanimljiva provedena štokavizacija/čakavizacija izabranih pjesama u dvama sveščićima.
According to a note partially scraped off on f. 260v the manuscript was bought by a priest in Ragusa (Dubrovnik) in 1455 Iste liber Servii est conventus Ragusini emptus ducatis ... a presbiteri Simeo filio Andre de Tr ... de Ragusio 1455 die 15 Iulii
A. (formerly Rodrigo Borgia), and A. Fabregues. Johann Winterburg, Vienna, (1493)after 2 Oct. 1493. The brief, addressed to Maximilian I, concerns the struggle against the Turks. The letters of Fabregues concern the Turkish invasion of Croatia. Locations: France: Paris BN -- Germany: Hannover KestnerM -- Austria: Wien, ÖNB (Ink 1.G.97: fragment). Reproductions: Microfiche: Primary Source Microfilm (an imprint of Cengage Learning), 2002. Incunabula: the Printing Revolution in Europe 1455-1500. Unit 53 - Current Affairs Part II, CA 233.
?. Cambridge companions to literature Cambridge University Press,, Cambridge :, (2005.)Electronic reproduction. Cambridge, UK : Cambridge University Press, 2006..