Technology + Social aspects
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Technology + Social aspects
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Technology + Social aspects
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Incoming Resources
- Emerging technologies, from hindsight to foresight, edited by Edna F. Einsiedel
- On the future, prospects of humanity, Martin Rees
- Born digital, understanding the first generation of digital natives, John Palfrey and Urs Gasser
- Technological slavery, the collected writings of Theodore J. Kaczynski, a.k.a. "The unabomber", introduction by David Skrbina
- The ingenuity gap, can we solve the problems of the future?, Thomas Homer-Dixon
- A world without work, technology, automation, and how we should respond, Daniel Susskind
- New power, how ideas catch fire and movements build in our hyperconnected world-- and how to make it work for you, Jeremy Heimans and Henry Timms
- Not a scientist, how politicians mistake, misrepresent, and utterly mangle science, Dave Levitan
- The simplicity cycle, a field guide to making things better without making them worse, Dan Ward
- When technocultures collide, innovation from below and the struggle for autonomy, Gary Genosko
- We do things differently, the outsiders rebooting our world, Mark Stevenson
- 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
- Overcomplicated, technology at the limits of comprehension, Samuel Arbesman
- Rise of the machines, a cybernetic history, Thomas Rid
- Re-engineering humanity, Brett Frischmann, Villanova University, Evan Selinger, Rochester Institute of Technology
- A short history of progress, by Ronald Wright
- Leveling the playing field, the democratization of technology, by Rod Scher
- Whose global village?, rethinking how technology shapes our world, Ramesh Srinivasan
- A deadly wandering, [a tale of tragedy and redemption in the age of attention], Matt Richtel
- Conscientious objections, stirring up trouble about language, technology, and education, Neil Postman
- Humans are underrated, what high achievers know that brilliant machines never will, Geoff Colvin
- Human scale revisited, a new look at the classic case for a decentralist future, Kirkpatrick Sale
- The long descent, a user's guide to the end of the industrial age, John Michael Greer
- The spike, how our lives are being transformed by rapidly advancing technologies, Damien Broderick
- Anti-tech revolution, why and how, Theodore John Kaczynski
- The glass cage, automation and us, Nicholas Carr
- Chaos monkeys, obscene fortune and random failure in Silicon Valley, Antonio GarcÃa MartÃnez
- Innovation and its enemies, why people resist new technologies, Calestous Juma
- 24/6, the power of unplugging one day a week, Tiffany Shlain
- The ascent of humanity, civilization and the human sense of self, Charles Eisenstein
- FutureHype, the myths of technology change, Bob Seidensticker
- The driver in the driverless car, how our technology choices will create the future, Vivek Wadwha with Alex Salkever
- The human factor, revolutionizing the way people live with technology, Kim Vicente
- The end of killing, how our newest technologies can solve humanity's oldest problem, Rick Smith
- The digital republic, on freedom and democracy in the 21st century, Jamie Susskind
- Fab, the coming revolution on your desktop--from personal computers to personal fabrication, by Neil Gershenfeld
- The life we're looking for, reclaiming relationship in a technological world, Andy Crouch
- Present shock, when everything happens now, Douglas Rushkoff
- Back to human, how great leaders create connection in the age of isolation, Dan Schawbel
- Digital for good, raising kids to thrive in an online world, Richard Culatta
- 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
- Information doesn't want to be free, laws for the Internet age, Cory Doctorow ; with forewords by Neil Gaiman & Amanda Palmer
- You are not a gadget, a manifesto, Jaron Lanier
- Your digital undertaker, exploring death in the digital age in Canada, Sharon Hartung
- Hello world, being human in the age of algorithms, Hannah Fry
- How we got to now, six innovations that made the modern world, Steven Johnson
- The age of AI and our human future, Henry A. Kissinger, Eric Schmidt, Daniel Huttenlocher with Schuyler Schouten
- The Real World of Technology
- Not so fast, thinking twice about technology, Doug Hill
- New power, how power works in our hyperconnected world-- and how to make it work for you, Jeremy Heimans and Henry Timms
Outgoing Resources
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