What do you think?
Rate this book


Het grootse en inspirerende verhaal achter het digitale tijdperk
De computer en het internet zijn de belangrijkste uitvindingen van onze tijd, maar weinig mensen weten wie ze heeft uitgevonden. Dit is het verhaal van alle pioniers, hackers, ondernemers en genieën die verantwoordelijk zijn voor de digitale revolutie. Over hoe hun geest werkte, wat ze zo creatief maakt en waarom hun vermogen om samen te werken zo belangrijk is.
Walter Isaacson is bekend als auteur van talloze biografieën die alom worden geprezen. Hij schreef de biografie van Steve Jobs, Albert Einstein, Benjamin Franklin en Henry Kissinger. Na Steve Jobs, de superster van het digitale tijdperk, komt Isaacson nu met een eerbetoon aan alle pioniers van de computer en het internet. Isaacson is CEO van het Aspen Institute en voorheen chairman van CNN en hoofdredacteur van Time Magazine.
652 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 7, 2011
>
"Most of the successful innovators and entrepreneurs in this book had one thing in common: they were product people. They cared about, and deeply understood, the engineering and design. They were not primarily marketers or salesmen or financial types; when such folks took over companies, it was often to the detriment of sustained innovation. When the sales guys run the company, the product guys don’t matter so much, and a lot of them just turn off, Jobs said. Larry Page felt the same: The best leaders are those with the deepest understanding of the engineering and product design.
Another lesson of the digital age is as old as Aristotle: Man is a social animal. What else could explain CB and ham radios or their successors, such as WhatsApp and Twitter? Almost every digital tool, whether designed for it or not, was commandeered by humans for a social purpose: to create communities, facilitate communication, collaborate on projects, and enable social networking. Even the personal computer, which was originally embraced as a tool for individual creativity, inevitably led to the rise of modems, online services, and eventually Facebook, Flickr, and Foursquare. Machines, by contrast, are not social animals. They don’t join Facebook of their own volition nor seek companionship for its own sake.... Despite all of the proclamations of artificial intelligence engineers and Internet sociologists, digital tools have no personalities, intentions, or desires. They are what we make of them.”