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" ... Compare the experience of a mediaeval peasant, cowering and hungry in her freezing hovel, beseeching her god to cease his furious vengeance on her village, with today’s knowledge worker, anxious about new virus strains, frustrated by her restricted movements, and worried about Zoom burnout. The gulf between these two people’s life experience is vast, and the main force which has opened it up is technology. ... "
" ... JJ Kett: VoiceSage is a modern enterprise-to-customer communications company. We develop the software that enables brands to communicate proactively out to their customer base via an interactive platform with a suite of products on it that enables companies to deliver great customer experience, and therefore get their customers to do more business with them and ideally, get them to stay with them forever. We help to enable the business to dramatically cut their costs by comparison with their older, less effective and inefficient call centre type operation. I sometimes use the analogy of the great mediaeval castle: the bigger the lord, the bigger the castle, and the bigger the castle, the bigger the moat. ... "
" ... Microsoft has issued a fix for a major vulnerability in remote desktop services. Luxembourg: A... [+] reflection of mediaeval castle in windows of Microsoft's office ... "
" ... Pettegree: In mediaeval Europe news was expensive: difficult to obtain and even more difficult to corroborate. So access was largely confined to those in the circles of power: the church, trans-continental European merchants and Europe’s rulers. From the sixteenth century print allowed far more of Europe’s citizens to take an informed interest in what was going on. Why they wanted to do so – spending hard-earned cash on news – is quite complicated. These were turbulent times, with the Reformation splitting the church and endemic warfare between Europe’s nation states. Anxiety prompted an urgent desire to be informed and reassured. Governments wanted to explain policy and celebrate victories. But following the news also came increasingly to be a mark of social status: to subscribe to a weekly newspaper was to be admitted to a previously closed world. This was a lifeline for the first newspapers which were in truth not very interesting: a turgid litany of battles and diplomatic comings and goings that would have been hard going to the uninitiated. Newspapers offered little commentary or explanation, and domestic news was largely avoided. Commentary came from the news pamphlets – an opportunity to reflect on concluded events and process what had occurred in an increasing complex and crowded world. Those who truly needed to be informed bought both. ... "
" ... The mathematical sciences were neglected almost to the point of extinction within the mediaeval educational system, the schools teaching almost no mathematics and the universities only paying lip service to a narrow curriculum of mathematical topics at the very lowest level. In order for the mathematisation of nature, that many historians regard as the core of the scientific revolution, to be consummated it became necessary in the 16th and 17th centuries to reform the prevailing education system and introduce a thorough grounding in the mathematical sciences in order to produce the mathematicians, astronomers and physicists capable of carrying out the task. The man who undertook this reform for the Catholic education system in Europe was Clavius. ... "