From David P. Reed's, "The Law of the Pack" (Harvard Business Review, February 2001, pp 23–4):
"Even Metcalfe's law understates the amount created by a group-forming arrangement GFN as it grows. Let's say you accept a GFN with n members. If you add up all the abeyant two-person groups, three-person groups, and so on that those associates could form, the cardinal of accessible groups equals 2n. So the amount of a GFN increases exponentially, in admeasurement to 2n. I alarm that Reed's Law. And its implications are profound."
"Even Metcalfe's law understates the amount created by a group-forming arrangement GFN as it grows. Let's say you accept a GFN with n members. If you add up all the abeyant two-person groups, three-person groups, and so on that those associates could form, the cardinal of accessible groups equals 2n. So the amount of a GFN increases exponentially, in admeasurement to 2n. I alarm that Reed's Law. And its implications are profound."
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