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[seul-edu] Fwd: Re: Learnux - permission to use
Note: The Learnux Quick Start Guide to Linux is at
http://centre.linux.ca/
The U.S. Trademark Electronic Application System, to get the "R" in
the circle, is at
http://www.uspto.gov/teas/index.html Cost is $325.
"Common law" trademarks, use TM, do not have to be registered, but
have less protection.
--- George Free <gfree@linux.ca> wrote:
> Date: Sun, 02 Dec 2001 08:26:21 -0500
> From: George Free <gfree@linux.ca>
> To: Phil Collins <philosofr@yahoo.com>
> Subject: Re: Learnux
>
> Hi Phil,
>
> I wrote the Learnux Quick Start Guide. I had planned to develop it
> much > further, but that didn't happen. You are welcome to use it
in any way you see fit.
>
> cheers,
> George
>
> Phil Collins wrote:
> >
> > Dear George Free:
> >
> > You are listed as the contact person for The Learnux Quick Start
> > Guide to Linux, [This is a beta version of the User's Guide] in
> > December 1999.
> >
> > Is the "Learnux" name available? I have suggested it to seul.org
> > mail list as a name for a Linux collaborative effort.
> >
> > BTW. The Learnux Guide looks good as far as it goes. Could it be
> > mirrored elsewhere. Could others update and expand it?
> >
> > P.S. Notes on Mindsharing:
> >
> > Psychology 476* Brain, Cognition and Evolution (Fall 2001)
> > Instructor: Prof. Merlin Donald, Queens College, Canada
> >
> > Psy 476 Course Textbook: M. Donald, A Mind So Rare: the evolution
> of
> > human consciousness. New York: Norton, 2001.
> >
>
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:K7DSPBu-1z4:pavlov.psyc.queensu.ca/faculty/donald/476F01.html+mindsharing&hl=en
> > Mindsharing cultures
> > - A species with a mindsharing culture carries out a lot of
> cognitive
> > business collectively, and needs a different brain from one that
> does
> > its remembering and problem-solving entirely within the brain,
> alone,
> > that is, solipsistically.
> > - The central thesis summarized in a nutshell: humans evolved
> into
> > networking creatures with brains specifically designed for
> creating
> > and plugging into cultural networks. Humans are unique in that
> they
> > assimilate most of their advanced cognitive routines from the
> > surrounding culture. The brains of human infants are
> specifically
> > designed to exploit available cultural resources. This fact has a
> > huge impact on the ever-changing form of the adult mind, which is
> > tethered to a changing cultural scene.
> >
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