A bold and vital book that asks and answers the most urgent question of today: What Would Google Do?
In a book that's one part prophecy, one part thought experiment, one part manifesto, and one part survival manual, internet impresario and blogging pioneer Jeff Jarvis reverse-engineers Google — the fastest-growing company in history — to discover forty clear and straightforward rules to manage and live by. At the same time, he illuminates the new worldview of the internet generation: how it challenges and destroys, but also opens up vast new opportunities. His findings are counterintuitive, imaginative, practical, and above all visionary, giving readers a glimpse of how everyone and everything — from corporations to governments, nations to individuals — must evolve in the Google era.
Along the way, he looks under the hood of a car designed by its drivers, ponders a worldwide university where the students design their curriculum, envisions an airline fueled by a social network, imagines the open-source restaurant, and examines a series of industries and institutions that will soon benefit from this book's central question.
The result is an astonishing, mind-opening book that, in the end, is not about Google. It's about you.
Reviews
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Jeff Jarvis writes well enough, and he narrates in a pleasant, businesslike tone. He has the the kind of friendly, authoritative voice popular in podcasting. But this is one audiobook that would benefit from abridgment. So many of the points--for example, that Google listens to its customers--are easily grasped yet overexplained, tempting one to skip over them. Other sections sound self-serving, for example, the discourse on the author's battle with Dell's Customer Service department. In the end, audio listeners are left wondering whether they're hearing a series of entries from Jarvis's popular blog. R.W.S. (c) AudioFile 2009, Portland, Maine
About the Author
Jeff Jarvis is the proprietor of one of the Web's most popular and respected blogs about the internet and media, Buzzmachine.com. He also writes the new media column for the Guardian in London. He was named one of 100 worldwide media leaders by the World Economic Forum at Davos in 2007 and 2008, and he was the creator and founding editor of Entertainment Weekly. He is on the faculty of the City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism in New York City.
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