June 12th, 2011 by zen
As noted previously, I was fortunate to attend...
Read morePosted in 19th century, 2011, 20th century, 21st century, 3 gen gangs, 4GW, academia, Afghanistan, Air Force, al qaida, America, army, barnett, Clausewitzian, cognition, COIN, counterinsurgency, Cyberwar, defense, DIME, diplomacy, diplomatic history, education, Epistemology, foreign policy, government, historians, history, ideas, insurgency, intellectuals, intelligence, leadership, metacognition, military, military contractor, military history, military intelligence, military reform, national security, Network-centric Warfare, organizations, security, social science, strategist, strategy, Strategy and War, Tactics, theory, war, warriors | 12 comments
May 4th, 2011 by Charles Cameron
Posted in al qaida, analytic, blogosphere, Charles Cameron, computers, connectivity, Cyberwar, google, horizontal thinking, innovation, national security, network theory, social networks, symmetry, tech, terrorism | 2 comments
December 12th, 2010 by Charles Cameron
I thought my response to a comment Lex posted at...
Read morePosted in Charles Cameron, chicago boyz, CIA, complexity, conspiracy, Cyberwar, foreign policy, games, radical transparency, Uncategorized | 11 comments
December 12th, 2010 by Charles Cameron
Posted in 21st century, Charles Cameron, complex systems, Cyberwar, disinformation, futurism, humor, insight, intelligence, map, media, networks, synthesis, terrorism | Comments Off on The power of network visualization
April 12th, 2010 by zen
Matt Armstrong has a must-read, incisive, take...
Read morePosted in 21st century, America, analytic, attention, bias, blogosphere, conspiracy, Cyberwar, disinformation, framing, globalization, ideas, innovation, insurgency, intellectuals, international law, IO, islam.insurgency, islamic world, islamist, military, mountainrunner, myth, non-state actors, open-source, Perception, politics, propaganda, psychology, public diplomacy, radical transparency, social networks, soft power, theory, war, web 2.0, youtube | 3 comments