“The most important human resource, the only true natural resource, is the human mind.” — John Allison (now Cato Institute president), quoted in Knowledge and Power, by George Gilder George Gilder, ...
Human beings tend to get hung up on looks. Whether it's cars, buildings or other people, homo sapiens have a habit of associating form with function. But every now and then, through evolutionary and ...
In his new book Knowledge and Power, futurist George Gilder challenges existing economic theories of both Keynesians and libertarians by placing creativity, innovation and entrepreneurship at the ...
IRVING, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Salem Media Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: SALM), announced today that it has acquired George Gilder’s investment newsletters Gilder’s Technology Report, Gilder’s Technology ...
George Gilder made a name for himself with his instant classic Wealth and Poverty. Published in 1981, it appeared at precisely the right moment, explaining the principles of supply side economics, ...
George Gilder, the technofuturevangelist who earned investors' ire with bad investment advice, has seen the future, and the future is the internet. Swanson and Gilder think internet traffic will be ...
A few years ago, film and television producer extraordinaire Brian Grazer published A Curious Mind. The book described Grazer’s meetings with rather interesting and accomplished people from all walks ...
George Gilder listened to the technology, and became guru of the telecosm. The markets listened to his newsletter, and followed him into the Global Crossing abyss. yet he's never stopped believing.
I WAS AT THE WATERGATE THE OTHER EVENING for a book party, held in the apartment of John Wohlstetter. He has a grand piano, a beautiful view over the Potomac River, and a book to sell. Actually there ...
In this installment of Eagle Reels, host Dalton Delan welcomes two provocative voices to unpack the chaotic landscape of modern American economics and politics. George Gilder, a pioneering supply-side ...
George Gilder--who wrote a book "Life After Television"--was long ago predicting the death of television and Hollywood as we know it. Speaking at the AO2005 Summit about the long tail ("Customers ...
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