Geek Heresy, Kentaro Toyama
Geek Heresy, Kentaro Toyama
1 Rating(s)
List: $17.99 | Sale: $12.59
Club: $8.99

Geek Heresy
Rescuing Social Change from the Cult of Technology

Author: Kentaro Toyama

Narrator: Sean Pratt

Unabridged: 9 hr 7 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 06/23/2015


Synopsis

In 2004, Kentaro Toyama, an award-winning computer scientist, moved to India to start a new research group for Microsoft. Its mission: to explore novel technological solutions to the world's persistent social problems. But after a decade of designing technologies for humanitarian causes, Toyama concluded that no technology, however dazzling, could cause social change on its own.

Technologists and policy-makers love to boast about modern innovation, and in their excitement, they exuberantly tout technology's boon to society. But what have our gadgets actually accomplished? Over the last four decades, America saw an explosion of new technologies, but in that same period, the rate of poverty stagnated at a stubborn 13 percent, only to rise in the recent recession. So, a golden age of innovation in the world's most advanced country did nothing for our most prominent social ill.

Toyama's warning resounds: Don't believe the hype! Technology is never the main driver of social progress. Geek Heresy inoculates us against the glib rhetoric of tech utopians by revealing that technology is only an amplifier of human conditions. By telling the moving stories of extraordinary people, Toyama shows that even in a world steeped in technology, social challenges are best met with deeply social solutions.

About Kentaro Toyama

Kentaro Toyama is the W. K. Kellogg Associate Professor of Community Information at the University of Michigan's School of Information. He is also coeditor in chief of the journal Information Technologies and International Development and cofounder of Microsoft Research India. Kentaro lives in Michigan.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Athan

Much as Kentaro’s amazing book is a “bait and switch,” it was well worth the read. The promise, as perceived by me at any rate, was that one of the smartest people I know would walk me through his Damascene conversion from leading computer scientist and engineer to doubter. The first half of the book......more

I know that the use of stories in non-fiction is encouraged by editors these days, but I thought this book relied too much on narratives of individuals. All the examples of individual experiences got in the way of the bigger picture, rather than making it clear. The concept of technology as an ampli......more

Goodreads review by Larry

This is a book filled with information. And the last 40% of the book in the Kindle edition is notes that are of course not read in the audible version. The one sentence summary of the book is that to effectively create social change we need to work on making better people. Technology alone will not......more