Incoming Resources
- Technological slavery, the collected writings of Theodore J. Kaczynski, a.k.a. "The unabomber", introduction by David Skrbina
- Social physics, how good ideas spread--the lessons from a new science, Alex Pentland
- Not so fast, thinking twice about technology, Doug Hill
- Thank you for being late, an optimist's guide to thriving in the age of accelerations, Thomas L. Friedman
- What technology wants, Kevin Kelly
- World without mind, the existential threat of big tech, Franklin Foer
- Not a scientist, how politicians mistake, misrepresent, and utterly mangle science, Dave Levitan
- Whiplash, how to survive our faster future, Joi Ito and Jeff Howe
- BioEvolution, how biotechnology is changing our world, by Michael Fumento
- Emerging technologies, from hindsight to foresight, edited by Edna F. Einsiedel
- i-Minds, how cell phones, computers, gaming, and social media are changing our brains, our behavior, and the evolution of our species, Mari K. Swingle, PhD
- High tech/high touch, technology and our search for meaning, John Naisbitt, with Nana Naisbitt and Douglas Philips
- Re-engineering humanity, Brett Frischmann, Villanova University, Evan Selinger, Rochester Institute of Technology
- Leveling the playing field, the democratization of technology, by Rod Scher
- Rapture, how biotech became the new religion, Brian Alexander
- American technological sublime, David E. Nye
- What's yours is mine, against the sharing economy, Tom Slee
- FutureHype, the myths of technology change, Bob Seidensticker
- The spike, how our lives are being transformed by rapidly advancing technologies, Damien Broderick
- The glass cage, automation and us, Nicholas Carr
- Present shock, when everything happens now, Douglas Rushkoff
- Therefore choose life, the found Massey lectures, George Wald
- The inevitable, understanding the 12 technological forces that will shape our future, Kevin Kelly
- The driver in the driverless car, how our technology choices will create the future, Vivek Wadwha with Alex Salkever
- Objects in motion, globalizing technology, edited by Nina Möllers and Bryan Dewalt ; managing editor, Martin Collins, Smithsonian Institution ; series editors, Robert Bud, Science Museum, London, Bernard Finn, Smithsonian Institution, Helmuth Trischler, Deutsches Museum
- Hello world, being human in the age of algorithms, Hannah Fry
- Inevitable
- Whiplash, how to survive our faster future, Joi Ito, Director, MIT Media Lab, and Jeff Howe
- How renewable energy is changing society, Robert Green
- Abundance, the future is better than you think, Peter H. Diamandis and Steven Kotler
- The great reversal, how we let technology take control of the planet, David Edward Tabachnick ; [foreword by Darin Barney]
- Techno-fix, why technology won't save us or the environment, Michael Huesemann and Joyce Huesemann
- Technocracy, the hard road to world order, by Patrick M. Wood
- Humans 3.0, the upgrading of the species, Peter Nowak
- Hacking h(app)iness, why your personal data counts and how tracking it can change the world, John C. Havens
- What technology wants, Kevin Kelly
- iDisorder, understanding our obession with technology and overcoming its hold on us, Larry D. Rosen, with Nancy A. Cheever, L. Mark Carrier
- New dark age, technology and the end of the future, James Bridle
- World without mind, the existential threat of big tech, Franklin Foer
- Tools and weapons, the promise and the peril of the digital age, Brad Smith and Carol Ann Browne ; foreword by Bill Gates
- How the world really works, the science behind how we got here and where we're going, Vaclav Smil
- Mindless, why smarter machines are making dumber humans, Simon Head
- The big disconnect, the story of technology and loneliness, Giles Slade
- Don't unplug, how technology saved my life and can save yours too, Chris Dancy
- Radical abundance, how a revolution in nanotechnology will change civilization, K. Eric Drexler
- The war on science, who's waging it, why it matters, what we can do about it, Shawn Otto ; foreword by Lawrence M. Krauss
- The science of liberty, democracy, reason and the laws of nature, Timothy Ferris
- Only humans need apply, winners and losers in the age of smart machines, Thomas H. Davenport and Julia Kirby
- Technopoly, the surrender of culture to technology, Neil Postman
- Technology & sustainability, Peter Denton