From: David Gelernter < To: jeffrey epstein Subject: (working on gmail) Date: Tue, 17 May 2011 11:19:21 +0000 Not ignoring the issue; all 3 of us are in on this act. Puzzling, b/c we can't see how to turn the feature on -- or off But we'll find it. On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 10:53 AM, David Gelemter > wrote: Attached tight bullets (3 pages) are highly distilled. love to discuss, any time you're available. --David On Fri, May 13, 2011 at 12:52 PM, jeffrey epstein < > wrote: On the right track Sony for all the typos .Sent from my iPhone On May 13, 2011, at 6:14 PM, David Gelemter < > wrote: I hope. Just a start; done Monday. --David 1. Every day you read and create digital documents: email, photos, web pages, blog entries, videos, calendar entries, text. If you string those documents chronologically like beads on a necklace, you get a documentary history of (the digital aspect of) your life. 2. Our Streambuilder makes it easy for you to knock any digital document you choose into the Streambuilder's hopper (as flick Japanese beetles off your rose bushes into a funnel); those documents move out of the hopper into your lifestream. 3. If you're looking at an email and you want to put it in your lifestream, just click an onscreen button. Likewise for photos, videos, web pages. Our goal is perfect simplicity in adding-to and viewing your Stream: learn it in 30 seconds. 4. Sometimes you want to type or dictate a comment just for the stream ("those photos came from Schwartz"; "Just met Piffel & he seems like a moron, but he mentioned that he knew Max & that's worth remembering—ask Eva"). To do that, click or touch an onscreen button; you get a window for text (or a microphone set to record); type or speak your comment; click "done," and the comment goes into your stream. 5. Why have a lifestream? Because your computer-based information and communication is scattered over lots of devices (phones, pods, pads, laptops) and applications (mail, video v