Skip to content.
|
Skip to navigation
Site Map
Accessibility
Contact
Search Site
only in current section
Advanced Search…
Navigation
Home
Meritus
About
SEO Services
Hire
Bio
CV
Services
Capabilities
Cases
Testimonials
Clients
Partners
Blog
Gerris
Personal tools
Log in
You are here:
Home
Info
Search results
4
items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type
Select All/None
Page
Event
File
Folder
Link
News Item
New items since
Yesterday
Last week
Last month
Ever
Sort by
relevance
·
date (newest first)
·
alphabetically
Frank Burns Obituary & Service
Frank Lee Burns died Thursday, December 4, at Seton Health Center, surrounded by his loving family. Frank Burns was born in Colby, Kansas, on November 23, 1939, the son of Oran Burns and Marie Wilson Burns.
Located in
Blog
My friend and Mentor Frank Burns of The Meta Network (Metanet) and Metasystems Design Group (MDG)
As an Army officer, Burns served two tours in Vietnam (Silver Star, Bronze Star with 2 OLCs). He created the military recruitment slogan "Be All That You Can Be" in 1980 and was director of "Task Force Delta" (an ad hoc working group of 300 U.S. Army psychic adepts that met quarterly at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas) beginning in 1983. In the same year, Burns created the Meta Network (TMN), one of the first public online communities. TMN was one of the consortia of online communities and networks that banded together to form the Electronic Networking Association in 1985. It describes itself as being "dedicated to learning and creative freedom". Burns ultimately became president of Metasystems Design Group.
The Meta Network (TMN) Online Community
I spent my twenties as a denizen of the online community The Meta Network (TMN). The Meta Network (TMN) is an online community dedicated to learning and creative freedom. Founded in 1983, the goal was to make rich interaction possible beyond the limits of time and space. MetaNet continues to thrive as a haven of stimulating resources and conversation in an impersonal Internet.
Online Communities Are The Best Thing About The Internet
Recently, what I hear about online communities on the radio, the Internet, and TV is how they are either: 1) exclusive bubbles in which all the denizens are echo chamber zombies or 2) traps for naïfs and nerds who are one kind word away from being radicalized into violent extremism. But these exaggerations can’t be farther from the truth!
Located in
Blog
Powered by Plone & Python