Well, all information looks like noise until you break the code.
The more you know about your customers, the more you can provide to them information that is increasingly useful, relevant, and persuasive.
You can have data without information, but you cannot have information without data.
Wisdom is dead. Long live information.
A proven theorem of game theory states that every game with complete information possesses a saddle point and therefore a solution.
On first blush this looks to be about money, but it is about power. Is power going to go to the information monopolies, or will it go to developers and users?.
All "bad" presentations struggle to keep the audience interested. The audience squirms wishing they could escape. The audience has given the presenter an hour of their life, so they want that hour to be useful. It's disrespectful of a presenter to not show up rehearsed and prepared with information and insights that will improve the lives of the audience in some way. Presenting will do only one of two things for you: it will either diminish your credibility or yield results. Most bad presentations hurt the presenter's credibility.
One of the biggest challenges to medicine is the incorporation of information technology in our practices.
We are awash in the revealed world.
Marketing is all about providing information that will heighten someone's anticipated and real pleasure.
Some of those things come out and you don't know where they came from - somebody's leaking totally false information. They follow you for years and you have to be like, "I don't know anything about that. "
Everybody is looking at their base business and saying, "What else is it? Sure, we do this, but while we're doing that, what else do we know about our customer, and what does that enable us to do?" That comes from the access to information and the ability to analyze it with a speed they never had. I think everybody is thinking that way.
I tried to get the word out to people who are information hubs in their communities, because they could propagate the call quickly. One challenge is that breaking science fiction means, well, breaking science fiction. Many communities of colour have a different approach to narratives of science.
Because of Watergate in part, I am kind of a magnet for calls and information and suggestions.
I don't think there's any information to be gotten from television.
Don't let a single comic moment pass you by; then help the audience get the laughs. Give them permission to laugh by holding for laughter and by letting them know early on what they're in for. In the first few moments, the audience is gathering information, looking at the scenery and costumes. Create a comic moment as soon as you can.
But it is almost impossible to communicate with them [one's spies in the enemy camp] and receive the information they possess. . . Even when the general receives from his spies information of movements, he still knows nothing of those which may since have taken place, nor of what the enemy is going finally to attempt.
The artist's business requires an involvement in practically everything. . . The total scope of information he receives day after day is of concern.
Someone has to make the final decision, but the wise leader gathers information and seeks counsel - after deciding who among those surrounding him provides consistently wise advice - before making that final decision.
In the United States, it's the mandate of the FBI to gather information relating to terrorism, go out and collect it, to do the interviews, to do the investigative work.