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" ... For many years, axioms like these have inhibited creative initiatives that could push broadcast TV towards greatness again. ... "
" ... In the demarcation of certain important techno-cultural moments, I believe that early 2021 will be noted as the time in which one of my axioms from a prior moment of demarcation — “We will know blockchain-based music startups have arrived when people stop saying the word Blockchain” — may have come to fruition. ... "
" ... Many of Taylor's principles live on today, often within modern improvement methodologies such as Lean and Six Sigma. Others, such as fairly sharing productivity gains with workers, seem decreasingly valued in the corporatist-Wall-Street axis of ruthless cost cutting. Perhaps it's time to return to one of Taylor's simplest, yet most profound axioms: "The principal object of management should be to secure the maximum prosperity for the employer, coupled with the maximum prosperity for each employee." ... "
" ... Moreover policy derives from political axioms. Irrespective of an administration's policy rigor, or lack thereof, if Bell’s Populist Postulate – that people are more competent to manage their own affairs – is true then federal policies under whoever holds this truth to be self-evident tend to produce political outcomes more beneficial than the elitist alternatives. ... "
" ... Of the many axioms about Twitter, the one I like best is "Facebook makes you hate people you know; Twitter makes you love people you've never met." Twitter on the night of a large-scale national event -- debates, the State Of The Union, election night -- is the Cheers bar most of us don't actually get to have in real life. It's a place (or, more accurately, a "place") where you can gather with like-minded strangers, sit back and kibitz. If the need to get in quick and keep it short leads to more snark and less value, well, that'd be true down at the pub too. Not that there isn't a quantity of useful, meaty commentary in those 140-character bursts; it all depends on who you follow. But if you buy the Cheers metaphor, there's something -- well, cheering about the fact that the tweets flew hardest and fastest around the moment of Obama's little joke. It didn't exactly kill in the House chamber, and Obama is no Carson when it comes to salvaging the moment and turning it to his advantage. But in the electronic corner bar, those tweets flying thick and fast were the equivalent of a crowd of strangers issuing a collective good-natured groan, and being bonded just a little bit more tightly in the moments after. ... "