EconomistJapan.com: Celebrate Neumann's &Japan's gifts to humanity since 1945, all Asia Rising 1960+MacraeFriends and Family
Future HistoryEntrepreneurialRevolution.city July 2020..If you care about two out of 3 lives mattering who are Asian, nearly 60 years of miracles mapping around worldwide decision-makers considering Japan from 1962 are worth replaying -that's when my father Norman Macrae aged 39 was privileged to write his first signed survey in The Economist -the first 2 quarters of dad's 80+ years of life had been spent
**writing unsigned leaders in The Economist (eg as only journalist at Messina's birth of EU) after serving as teenager in world war 2 navigating air places uk bomber command region modern day bangladesh/myanmar -

Asia Rising Surveys

in 60 years


Journalism of 10**18 More Tech. Norman Macrae became Economist diarist of Neumann (Einstein Turing) in 1951. They all doied suddeenly (last notes Neumann - Computer & Brain , Bethesda 1956) but not before training economic jounalists to aim to map win-wins of their legacy of 10**18 more tech by 2025, JF Kennedy and Royal families of UK and Japan were first to debate what this might look like from 1962 - in 2025 the most exciting ai (learning) games millennails can play are rooted to this rough mapAI Game 1 douible lo[ps through 3ai wizards, 3 nations leaders, and 45 supercity mediatir wanting millennials inteligence to celebrate most win-wins ever traded in line with commonwelath reconciliation commitments og Japan UK and India since 1945
Jensen Huang
Demis Hassabis
Yann Lecun.
Bloomberg
45 Cities- Civil Eng Road of Things
SAIS 70 nations youth ambassadors of win-win science
Deep learning billion year leaps in Einstein 1905 maths e=mcsquared staring with biotech's 250 million proteins.
Emperor Naruhito
King Charles
Narendra Modi.

Monday, April 27, 2015

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Map Hiro2

Where would world be without tese links
Tokyo University
Global Social Value of Tokyo Medical Millennials

Indonesia end-poverty partnership with Toyota Development Networks and Dubai
Middle East end-poverty partnerships with Abdul Latif and MIT

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