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Thus, it was not until Tuesday night that a member of HCS, Lee D. Feigenbaum '01, attempted to fix the program...

Author: By Elizabeth N. Dewar, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Computer Glitches Delay U.C. Election | 10/1/1998 | See Source »

...Feigenbaum solved the computer's redistricting problem, but further complications cropped up just as he was leaving to attend Yom Kippur services. He left the Council members with directions onhow to fix the new problems, but they were unableto fix them early enough for the elections tobegin on time...

Author: By Elizabeth N. Dewar, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Computer Glitches Delay U.C. Election | 10/1/1998 | See Source »

...safety and oversight. We have pledged to go beyond the requirements of regulatory compliance to earn back the public trust and demonstrate our passion for safety. In the end, our business objectives can be met only after we first satisfy our safety goals and our employees' concerns. TED C. FEIGENBAUM, Executive Vice President and Chief Nuclear Officer Northeast Utilities Service Co. Hartford, Connecticut...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Mar. 25, 1996 | 3/25/1996 | See Source »

...visitor Daniel Stein in the December issue of Physics Today, can rightly ask, "Why is it necessary to force ((these phenomena)) under a single umbrella?" Yet there can be no doubt that investigations of complexity and chaos have at least made things more interesting. Comments Rockefeller University physicist Mitchell Feigenbaum: "Now we see things we didn't notice before, and we ask questions we didn't know how to ask. And whenever we can think of new questions, we can do good science...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Field of Complexity | 2/22/1993 | See Source »

...resisted automation. No one, however, was going to build expert systems if they took several years to construct. Solution: create a Mycin without medical knowledge -- in effect, construct an empty shell into which programmers could pour all kinds of different expertise. In 1977 a team of Stanford researchers under Feigenbaum dubbed the new shell Emycin (for Empty Mycin) and used it to build several more expert systems. Emycin spurred a number of start-up companies, led by AI entrepreneurs like Feigenbaum, to build knowledge shells for the commercial market...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Technology: Putting Knowledge to Work | 3/28/1988 | See Source »

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