The intersection of language, technology and art is a busy intersection. Some of the questions I ask myself while standing on the street corner waiting for the bus to show up:

Are there infinite languages or are they all variations on a single language?

If there are infinite languages, does every one of them translate into all the others?

Is language genetic and species specific? If so, is knowledge genetic and species specific?

Can language provide a definitive answer to the question of whether or not the universe is random?

Can language provide a definitive answer to the question of whether the universe is a unity or a multiplicity?

How is it that through language new and unique things come into existence that never would have existed were it not for language?
I have tried to answer these questions. The answers have taken many different forms. The questions usually take the forms of words. Some answers ended up as patents and software companies. Some answers were non-verbal. Some answers I forgot to write down and have since forgotten. The following papers are representative of answers I did not forget to write down:

The Class of N-Bits

The Relationship of Entropy to Message Size in Binary Symbol Strings

The Relationship of Sample Space to Sample Size in the Calculation of Entropy

Virtual Computing

A Comparison of Distributed and Peer-to-peer  Computing Architectures

U.S. Patents and Patent Applications