Hyperlink Quotes

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Literature is the original Internet – every footnote, every citation, every allusion is essentially a hyperlink to another text, to another mind.
Maria Popova
In today’s hyperlinked world, solving problems anywhere, solves problems everywhere.
Peter H. Diamandis (Abundance: The Future is Better Than You Think)
The kind of intelligent book club discussion as now happens on the book sharing site Goodreads might follow the book itself and become more deeply embedded into the book via hyperlinks. So when a person cites a particular passage, a two-way link connects the comment to the passage and the passage to the comment. Even a minor good work could accumulate a wiki-like set of critical comments tightly bound to the actual text.
Kevin Kelly (The Inevitable: Understanding the 12 Technological Forces That Will Shape Our Future)
The vision may be the destination but the journey began with a past which will stay connected whatever the sages may say against it - there is always a hyperlink.
Amit Abraham
or logical chains of reasoning. Dyslexic brains store information like murals or stained glass, connect ideas like spiderwebs or hyperlinks, and move from one thought to another like ripples spreading over a pond.
Brock L. Eide (The Dyslexic Advantage: Unlocking the Hidden Potential of the Dyslexic Brain)
What should be evident from the studies on the backfire effect is you can never win an argument online. When you start to pull out facts and figures, hyperlinks and quotes, you are actually making the opponent feel even surer of his position than before you started the debate. As he matches your fervor, the same thing happens in your skull. The backfire effect pushes both of you deeper into your original beliefs. Climate scientist John Cook and psychologist Stephan Lewandowsky write in their pamphlet, The Debunking Handbook, “A simple myth is more cognitively attractive than an over-complicated correction.” Multiple lines of research back up this advice.
David McRaney (You Are Now Less Dumb: How to Conquer Mob Mentality, How to Buy Happiness, and All the Other Ways to Outsmart Yourself)
The web is hyperlinked documents; the cloud is hyperlinked data.
Kevin Kelly (The Inevitable: Understanding the 12 Technological Forces That Will Shape Our Future)
He started reading. He jumped from volume to volume, understanding only part of what he was reading, but understanding enough to follow another lead and then another. It was exactly like following hyperlinks, only slower, and with more lifting.
Michael Grant (Gone (Gone, #1))
By 2010 the internet had roughly as many hyperlinks as the brain has synapses, and a significant proportion of the whispering that goes on within the internet originates in devices rather than people. It is already virtually impossible to turn the internet off.
Matt Ridley (The Evolution of Everything: How New Ideas Emerge)
Journalists are taught they are never the story. As it happened, the longer I was a journalist, the better it suited me to disappear behind the professional voice of an omniscient third person, belonging everywhere and nowhere, asking questions and answering none. Every conclusion I published was double-sourced, fact-checked, and hyperlinked. My name might have been below the headlines, but the stories I wrote belonged to other people in other places, families whose grief and pain were so massive that mine was irrelevant.
Patricia Evangelista (Some People Need Killing: A Memoir of Murder in My Country)
When the Net absorbs a medium, it re-creates that medium in its own image. It not only dissolves the medium's physical form; it injects the medium's content with hyperlinks, breaks up the content into searchable chunks, and surrounds the content with the content of all the other media it has absorbed. All these changes in the form of the content also change the way we use, experience, and even understand the content.
Nicholas Carr (The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains)
For new media reactionaries...the problem is technology, the endless distractions of the Internet, the breakdown of authority in an age of blogs and Twitter, the collapse of narrative in a hyper-linked, multi-networked world.
David L. Ulin (The Lost Art of Reading: Why Books Matter in a Distracted Time)
From Bertrand Russell’s “An Outline of Intellectual Rubbish”: “I am sometimes shocked by the blasphemies of those who think themselves pious — for instance, the nuns who never take a bath without wearing a bathrobe all the time. When asked why, since no man can see them, they reply: ‘Oh, but you forget the good God.’ Apparently they conceive of the Deity as a Peeping Tom, whose omniscience enables him to see through bathroom walls, but who is foiled by bathrobes.
Lindy Moone (Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife)
On our way to the back stairs, we passed by the elevator. At one time, its mechanism was faulty, and only Matilda was brave enough to use it. Gramps wanted to have it repaired, but she’d raised holy Hell about it. “It’s too late to die young,” she’d insisted, “but it’s never too late to die quick!
Lindy Moone (Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife)
Instead of storing those countless microfilmed pages alphabetically, or according to subject, or by any of the other indexing methods in common use—all of which he found hopelessly rigid and arbitrary—Bush proposed a system based on the structure of thought itself. "The human mind . . . operates by association," he noted. "With one item in its grasp, it snaps instantly to the next that is suggested by the association of thoughts, in accordance with some intricate web of trails carried by the cells of the brain. . . . The speed of action, the intricacy of trails, the detail of mental pictures [are] awe-inspiring beyond all else in nature." By analogy, he continued, the desk library would allow its user to forge a link between any two items that seemed to have an association (the example he used was an article on the English long bow, which would be linked to a separate article on the Turkish short bow; the actual mechanism of the link would be a symbolic code imprinted on the microfilm next to the two items). "Thereafter," wrote Bush, "when one of these items is in view, the other can be instantly recalled merely by tapping a button. . . . It is exactly as though the physical items had been gathered together from widely separated sources and bound together to form a new book. It is more than this, for any item can be joined into numerous trails." Such a device needed a name, added Bush, and the analogy to human memory suggested one: "Memex." This name also appeared for the first time in the 1939 draft. In any case, Bush continued, once a Memex user had created an associative trail, he or she could copy it and exchange it with others. This meant that the construction of trails would quickly become a community endeavor, which would over time produce a vast, ever-expanding, and ever more richly cross-linked web of all human knowledge. Bush never explained where this notion of associative trails had come from (if he even knew; sometimes things just pop into our heads). But there is no doubt that it ranks as the Yankee Inventor's most profoundly original idea. Today we know it as hypertext. And that vast, hyperlinked web of knowledge is called the World Wide Web.
M. Mitchell Waldrop (The Dream Machine: J.C.R. Licklider and the Revolution That Made Computing Personal)
If I can reach further, it is by connecting with influential nodes
Gohar F. Khan (Creating Value With Social Media Analytics: Managing, Aligning, and Mining Social Media Text, Networks, Actions, Location, Apps, Hyperlinks, Multimedia, & Search Engines Data)
With the rise of the knowledge worker, the former monuments to carbon-fuelled manual industries themselves metamorphosed into galleries, restaurants, dwellings and hubs for start-up enterprises. At the same time, digital temples of reason were created, inhabited by people who commune in both virtual and physical spaces. These are communities and movements that have been built through the hyperlink; the connection of people and knowledge facilitated by fluctuating networks.
Kenneth Mikkelsen (The Neo-Generalist: Where You Go is Who You Are)
As the contents on the web become more complex and heterogeneous (images, videos, news, etc.), the traditional hyperlink organization is no longer sufficient.
Simone Puorto
I had a dream in which I clicked on a hyperlink and it led me directly into another brain.
Guillaume Morissette (The Original Face)
That night I dreamt about the roses laid at the wrong feet—the feet of the nurse. Each bit of the dream was like a hyperlink. I pressed on one, wanting answers, and it took me to another. I could never get to the meaning at the bottom of any of the bits. When I reached for the petals of the roses, I was touching a metal seatbelt buckle in a coach, driving by night through a remote place, with a band of mist running parallel to the glass I leant against.
Olivia Sudjic (Sympathy)
Do You Know How Search Engine Optimization Can Help You? In order to market your website and/or business effectively, you need to have the proper information to guide you along the way. Without the right info, you'll be swinging blindly in the most competitive marketplace in the world. Read the article below and find out about some tips you can use for optimizing your website. You will need to make your website pop up in the google search results. Build a really solid website and use search engine optimization to get it found. If other local businesses in your area don't have this, you will stand out like a shining star from the crowd. When it comes to linking your keywords, whether on your own site or on someone else's, quality beats quantity any day of the week. Make sure that your keywords are linked naturally in quality content. One proper, quality link will earn you much higher placement than 10 garbage links. Since web business is a marathon, it is good to plan around quality so that you last the long haul. To know where you stand with your particular niche market, you should check on your page rank at least once a week. By checking your rank, you will find out varying information about how competitors are finding you and you will also realize what you need to do in order to shoot up in the rankings. Your goal should be a page rank of 1. To search engine optimize your website, don't include more than 150 internal linking hyperlinks on your home page. Too many internal links on one page can dilute a web page's search engine rank. Huge numbers of links also make it hard for visitors to find the information that they need quickly. A great way to get more people to your site is to list your site with Google so that when people search through Google your page will come up. Listing your site in this way, will give you a vast venue where thousands of people will be introduced to your site and to your links. The future development strategy for all companies with a web site should include a strategy for search engine optimization, getting more traffic to their site. One key point is to be aware of the use of appropriate key words. Appropriate key words should be placed strategically throughout your site, the title tag and page header are generally the most important spots for keywords, be careful with your choices. Linking to lists is very popular for website owners and bloggers and can help your search engine optimization. You can find a lot of articles on the internet that are written as a top 10 list or top 100 list of tips or small facts. If possible, present well- written articles with relevant content composed as lists with numbers, not bullets, such as "10 ways to buy a new car." It's all about what the websites want in SEO, and that's what you need to realize. It doesn't matter if you're a simple blog or a legitimate business; you still need the proper optimization if you hope to achieve a high ranking. What you've read here will help you achieve that, but you still need to put the information to good use.
search rankings
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Makealive Studio (Hyperlinked Daily Planner (Kindle Scribe Only))
849738 605653 136415 632387 841540 335470 NUMBER SEARCH Puzzle List Solution Puzzle #1 Puzzle #2
Shambhavi Shuban (Mixed Puzzles Activity Book: Hyperlinked 5-in-1 Variety Puzzle Ebook Including Word Search, Fill-Ins, Sudoku, Mazes and Number Find (Kindle Scribe Only))
Bible book and chapter hyperlink returns or goes back to the Table of Contents. • Every entry is hyperlinked directly to the contents-specific location in the main text. • Use the device’s “back
John F. MacArthur Jr. (NASB, The MacArthur Study Bible)
When you think about it, the hyperlink is the ultimate act of generosity online. When somebody links to another site, what they’re doing is telling their readers to go elsewhere.
Chris Anderson (The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business Is Selling Less of More)
The idea is to have a wonderfully responsive list of people who opted in to your list, and then to send them a brief e-mail with a hyperlink to your Web site. That e-mail must be readable on one screen with no scrolling.
Jay Conrad Levinson (Guerrilla Marketing: Easy and Inexpensive Strategies for Making Big Profits from Your SmallBusiness)
That’s a sweet little ass you got, Sugar.” I’d been sitting on my ass for hours; how did she know it was sweet?
Lindy Moone (Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife)
Pedro lit a cigar with my lighter, the one engraved, “Smoking will kill you someday, love, Jen.
Lindy Moone (Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife)
Guns? What do we need guns for?” Not that I didn’t like guns, but... Jenny managed a half-smile. “It’s isolated here. You never know what’s lurking. You might need to scare off a bear. But don’t kill anything, not even paparazzi.
Lindy Moone (Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife)
He some kinda terrorist. Jack Russell and toy poodle, all stirred up.
Lindy Moone (Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife)
People! What’s wrong with ‘The Smurfs’?” The boy looked up at her with the wide, innocent eyes of a “Precious Moments” figurine. “The Smurfs are dead, Mom. That’s why they’re blue.
Lindy Moone (Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife)
fault lies not with our movie stars, but with ourselves. All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to sit back and enjoy the show.
Lindy Moone (Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife)
Monique’s voice droned on and on, with the hypnotic quality of a medieval chant, reminding me of what a friend of my mom’s, an ex-priest, used to say about religion: “The music’s great, but the lyrics stink.
Lindy Moone (Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife)
According to geneticist and evolutionary biologist, J.B.S. Haldane, theories have four stages of acceptance: 1. This is worthless nonsense; 2. This is an interesting, but perverse, point of view; 3. This is true, but quite unimportant; 4. I always said so. I can’t help thinking that Jimmie would have added: 5. It was my idea to begin with.
Lindy Moone (Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife)
When in doubt, do the math: The Wizard of Oz = Al Lundy = God. Why not? Everything makes sense to a dead guy in a lion suit.
Lindy Moone (Hyperlink from Hell: A Couch Potato's Guide to the Afterlife)
A word to the wise: one, possibly two hashtags is usually plenty. Don’t give in to the temptation to pack your Tweets full of hashtags, because all the hyperlinks and # signs get messy in bulk.
Laura Fitton (Twitter For Dummies)
The point is this: In today’s hyperlinked world, solving problems anywhere, solves problems everywhere.
Peter H. Diamandis (Abundance: The Future is Better Than You Think)
avoid underlining text, except in the case of hyperlinks.
Graphic Design Artists United (Typography Essentials)
subject lines shorter than 50 characters in length, as well as an increased number of hyperlinks, led to increased open- and click-through rates.
Jay Conrad Levinson (Guerrilla Marketing: Easy and Inexpensive Strategies for Making Big Profits from Your SmallBusiness)
Another recent study, this one on academic research, provides real-world evidence of the way the tools we use to sift information online influence our mental habits and frame our thinking. James Evans, a sociologist at the University of Chicago, assembled an enormous database on 34 million scholarly articles published in academic journals from 1945 through 2005. He analyzed the citations included in the articles to see if patterns of citation, and hence of research, have changed as journals have shifted from being printed on paper to being published online. Considering how much easier it is to search digital text than printed text, the common assumption has been that making journals available on the Net would significantly broaden the scope of scholarly research, leading to a much more diverse set of citations. But that’s not at all what Evans discovered. As more journals moved online, scholars actually cited fewer articles than they had before. And as old issues of printed journals were digitized and uploaded to the Web, scholars cited more recent articles with increasing frequency. A broadening of available information led, as Evans described it, to a “narrowing of science and scholarship.”31 In explaining the counterintuitive findings in a 2008 Science article, Evans noted that automated information-filtering tools, such as search engines, tend to serve as amplifiers of popularity, quickly establishing and then continually reinforcing a consensus about what information is important and what isn’t. The ease of following hyperlinks, moreover, leads online researchers to “bypass many of the marginally related articles that print researchers” would routinely skim as they flipped through the pages of a journal or a book. The quicker that scholars are able to “find prevailing opinion,” wrote Evans, the more likely they are “to follow it, leading to more citations referencing fewer articles.” Though much less efficient than searching the Web, old-fashioned library research probably served to widen scholars’ horizons: “By drawing researchers through unrelated articles, print browsing and perusal may have facilitated broader comparisons and led researchers into the past.”32 The easy way may not always be the best way, but the easy way is the way our computers and search engines encourage us to take.
Nicholas Carr (The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains)
Mike hung up. He hopped online and pulled up the Web address for his cell carrier. He put in the phone number, provided a password. He found the GPS program, clicked the hyperlink and a bunch of options popped up. You could get a month of GPS service for $49.99, six months for $129.99, or a full year for $199.99. Mike was actually dumb enough to start considering the alternatives, automatically calculating what would be the best deal, and then he shook his head and clicked monthly. He didn’t want to think about still doing this a year from now, even if it was a much better value. It
Harlan Coben (Hold Tight)
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Makealive Studio (Hyperlinked Daily Planner (Kindle Scribe Only))
Let’s all do a little experiment. I ask adult readers of this book to watch the most high-speed and intense two-hour action film they can think of—something that really gets the old adrenaline going, maybe one of Liam Neeson’s Taken movies, let’s say. Or to simply take about two hours to surf the Net—rapidly skimming along as many hyperlinks as they can. At the end of those two hours, pick up any one of your favorite books and start reading. Now notice how far you get before your attention begins to wander.
Nicholas Kardaras (Glow Kids: How Screen Addiction Is Hijacking Our Kids - and How to Break the Trance)
Let’s all do a little experiment. I ask adult readers of this book to watch the most high-speed and intense two-hour action film they can think of—something that really gets the old adrenaline going, maybe one of Liam Neeson’s Taken movies, let’s say. Or to simply take about two hours to surf the Net—rapidly skimming along as many hyperlinks as they can. At the end of those two hours, pick up any one of your favorite books and start reading. Now notice how far you get before your attention begins to wander. If you’re like most of us, you won’t get too far. It takes time to calm down a hyperaroused nervous system; you can’t just downshift from fifth to first gear. Now keep in mind that, as an adult, you have a fully developed brain and nervous system; your frontal cortex—which controls your executive functioning, including impulsivity—is fully formed. Your adrenal and nervous systems—fully developed. And your attentional abilities have been hardwired since your childhood. Yet you still have a hard time staying focused after just a couple of hours of intense, rapid scene changes in the movie or the rapid content shifting that occurs while you are surfing. Now imagine if hyperarousing screen stimulation was a condition under which you spent the bulk of your time—like the seven-plus hours a day that kids do.
Nicholas Kardaras (Glow Kids: How Screen Addiction Is Hijacking Our Kids - and How to Break the Trance)
…चलिए ये भी ठीके है, भेज दीजिये लिंक। लिंके अब कलजुग का बरह्मा-बिसनु-महेस आ सरसती है। सबे समस्या आ काम के लिए, जिससे भी पूछिए - एक ठो लिंक दे देता है। महाभारत के टाइम में ऐसा होता त यक्ष के सब प्रश्न के जवाब में जुद्दिष्ठिर भी दू चार ठो लिंके दे दिए होते।
Abhishek Ojha (लेबंटी चाह | Lebanti Chah)
The Divine Human from eternity was the Divine truth in heaven, and the Divine passing through heaven, thus the Divine Existere which afterward in the Lord became the Divine Esse by Itself [per se], from which is the Divine Existere in heaven,
Emanuel Swedenborg (Heaven and Hell (Hyperlinked Works of Emanuel Swedenborg Book 21))
HTML stands for Hyper Text Markup Language. Hyper Text is a method used to move across the Internet. You can click on hyperlinks, which are special texts that move you towards the next page. It is called hyper because it is not linear. In other words, you can move towards any location on the Internet at any time you desire simply by clicking on links.
Micheal Knapp (HTML & CSS: Learn The Fundamentals In 7 days)
If other technology has made life easier, and provided options hitherto unknown, it has simultaneously infiltrated the human spirit in corrosive ways—impinging on our inner life with one cyber temptation after another. The explosion of information leaves us senseless and robotically at their mercy, as we “waste our powers” in trivial pursuits and newer hyperlinks.
Michael Fishbane (Fragile Finitude: A Jewish Hermeneutical Theology)
KNIGHTS, KNAVES, POPES, AND PENTACLES: THE HISTORY OF THE HOLY GRAIL THROUGH TAROT “Not surprising,” Langdon said to Sophie. “Some of our keywords have the same names as individual cards.” He reached for the mouse to click on a hyperlink. “I’m not sure if your grandfather ever mentioned it when you played Tarot with him, Sophie, but this game is a ‘flash-card catechism’ into the story of the Lost Bride and her subjugation by the evil Church.” Sophie eyed him, looking incredulous. “I had no idea.” “That’s the point. By teaching through a metaphorical game, the followers of the Grail disguised their message from the watchful eye of the Church.” Langdon often wondered how many modern card players had any clue that their four suits—spades, hearts, clubs, diamonds—were Grail-related symbols that came directly from Tarot’s four suits of swords, cups, scepters, and pentacles. Spades were Swords—The blade. Male. Hearts were Cups—The chalice. Feminine. Clubs were Scepters—The Royal Line. The flowering staff. Diamonds were Pentacles—The goddess. The sacred feminine.
Dan Brown (The da Vinci Code (Robert Langdon, #2))
the influence in the right-wing media ecosystem, whether judged by hyperlinks, Twitter sharing, or Facebook sharing, is both highly skewed to the far right and highly insulated from other segments of the network, from center-right (which is nearly nonexistent) through the far
Yochai Benkler (Network Propaganda: Manipulation, Disinformation, and Radicalization in American Politics)
Isabella di Fabio What is CSS and HTML? Isabella Secret Story About The html language (hypertext markup language) is used for the development and creation of web pages. ... Among the tags included within the HTML language are: hyperlinks, image tags, page breaks, among others.
Isabella Di Fabio
Search engines are gateways to people’s minds
Gohar F. Khan (Creating Value With Social Media Analytics: Managing, Aligning, and Mining Social Media Text, Networks, Actions, Location, Apps, Hyperlinks, Multimedia, & Search Engines Data)
consider what’s happening in this book when I describe sandbox play as the beginning of the age of the individual, dinner as the ritualized celebration of industrialization, television as a new hearth, clockwork mechanics as the foundation of twentieth-century developmental health, penmanship as up-skilling for a burgeoning capitalist economy, and card catalogs as a representation of an obsolete epistemological attitude. I’m situating the familiar technologies of the past in a hopeful story about a digital future—a future that requires folks to understand information in a drastically new way. If the old education cultivated habits of mind for a card-catalog world, then the new education needs to build habits of mind for a world of nonlinear hyperlinks. Luckily, situation theory can help.
Jordan Shapiro (The New Childhood: Raising Kids to Thrive in a Connected World)
Your main keywords can be included in the title of your pages or blog posts. H1, h2, h3 tags. These tags might be placed in the subtitles or headers on your pages. The first paragraph of content. This is extremely important since having the target keywords in the first paragraph ensures that the topic is made clear instantly. Anchor text. This type of text has a clickable hyperlink that will bring readers to another page. Meta description and tags. These
Phillip Rusell (SEO SECRETS 2019: The Ultimate Guide on how to Mastering Search Engine Optimization FAST!)
Our most powerful prayers are hyperlinked to the promises of God. When we know we are praying the promises of God, we can pray with holy confidence. We don't have to second-guess ourselves, because we know that God's word does not return to Him empty. This doesn't mean we can claim the promises of God out of context. But our problem typically isn't overclaiming the promises of God; it's underclaiming them. Every spiritual blessing is ours in Christ. No matter how many promises God has made, they are 'Yes' in Christ. No good thing will God withhold from those whose walk is blameless. If we stand on God's word, God will stand by His word.
Mark Batterson (Draw the Circle: The 40 Day Prayer Challenge)
When we stop to weigh the meaning of these words, then note the connection in which they are found, the intelligent child of God is driven to say, "I must pray, pray, pray. I must put all my energy and all my heart into prayer. Whatever else I do, I must pray.
Reuben A. Torrey (How to Pray: Optimized with Hyper-Linked Chapters)
The Virtual Reality Modeling Language (VRML) is a language for describing multiparticipant interactive simulations -- virtual worlds networked via the global Internet and hyperlinked with the World Wide Web. All aspects of virtual world display, interaction and internetworking
Anonymous