"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
"This book punctures old information revolution myths and breaks important new ground. It will transform the way you think about information and its role in shaping both business and society at large."
-Paul Saffo, Director, Institute for the Future
"The Social Life of Information will help technologists keep an eye on the bigger picture and avoid the tunnel vision that can lead promising companies down blind alleys."
-Dr. Eric Schmidt, Chairman and CEO, Novell, Inc.
"The Social Life of Information provides a wonderfully refreshing counterpoint to the legion of information revolution gurus with their boundless confidence that the 'Net will remake the world. From management to research to universities, Brown and Duguid show how information is embedded in social relationships and institutions, and how knowledge management must therefore focus on the social dimension every bit as much as on technology."
-Francis Fukuyama, Hirst Professor of Public Policy at George Mason University, and Author of Trust and The Great Disruption
"Despite all predictions that the information revolution will bring us a bloodless workplace of machines and Dilberts, Brown and Duguid show us that human interactions, human conversations, and human meaning will still form the beating heart of business. Wonderful! A necessary read for everyone interested in the new economy."
-W. Brian Arthur, Citibank Professor, Santa Fe Institute
"The Social Life of Information makes a clear and compelling case that the social context of information will determine which tools will work and which will bite back, often in unanticipated ways. Anyone seeking to shape our new world by harnessing the power of information technology should read this book."
-John Hagel, Partner, McKinsey & Company, and Author of Net Worth
"In The Social Life of Information, Brown and Duguid help people throughout business, academia, government, and society at large to better understand that information technology can have an appropriate and positive impact only if we design technology and social systems holistically. This is a book that I have long awaited, and that should be required reading for the information technology system researchers and designers, managers, policy makers, and executives in every information-intensive organization."
-Daniel E. Atkins, Professor, University of Michigan, School of Information and Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
"The Social Life of Information is timely and important. Brown and Duguid eloquently present a dynamic and multilayered view of the nature of learning and work and, indeed, learning in work. They show convincingly how critical issues of knowledge management and innovation rely on an intricate web of relationships between process and practice, structure and spontaneity, technological reach and personal reciprocity."
-Gary Hamel, Founder and Chairman, Strategos, and Author of Competing for the Future
"In this age of the euphoric pursuit of information for its own sake, we often forget that information is only a means to an end, not an end in itself. This extremely readable and informative book reminds us to consider the social context into which knowledge and information must be placed. We ignore its message at our peril."
-James R. Houghton, Chairman of the Board, Emeritus, Corning Incorporated
"In this important and finely argued volume, Brown and Duguid point out that technology occurs in a social context that is often overlooked: that things like habit, work environments, and human judgment play a major role in how, when, and even whether technology gets adopted. A refreshing and timely counter to the infoenthusiasts who think Moore's Law solves every problem, The Social Life of Information is a must read for the digitally endowed."-Jack Smith, Correspondent, ABC News
"The Social Life of Information starts a thoughtful conversation about the impact of information technology on our lives and our institutions. It is a richly humanistic search for context, concerned with issues of meaning, purpose, and judgment. In graceful and accessible prose, Brown and Duguid provoke sensitive and deep questions as they seek a balanced perspective about new and old, tradition and innovation, and institutions and individuals."
-Jonathan Fanton, President, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
"An intellectually honest and immensely enjoyable antidote to the scores of overly simplistic projections of the impact of information technology. While there is no doubt this impact will be immense, its precise form is yet unknowable. By raising questions about what that form might be Brown and Duguid expose the pundits' unstated assumptions and treat the reader to a wide-ranging analysis of our society."
-William Wulf, President, National Academy of Engineering
"After the endless, breathless hype about the information superhighway and how it will revolutionize society as we know it come two of America's leading technological thinkers who, in this calm and witty volume, point out that information is inevitably embedded in social relations. If you-like all of us-are living through the internet revolution, read this book"
-Robert D. Putnam, Stanfield Professor of International Peace, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
"Neither cheerleaders nor debunkers, these knowledgeable and reflective Silicon Valley insiders provide a much-needed critical perspective on the buzzwords, myths, and conventional wisdom of the digital revolution. Brown and Duguid convincingly argue that our future world is evolving from the complex interaction of powerful new technology with resistant existing structures and practices."
-William J. Mitchell, Dean, School of Architecture and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Author of City of Bits
"The Social Life of Information counters conventional wisdom by reminding us that information technology does not work unless supported by viable communities and institutions. Brown and Duguid argue that communication across distances increases the importance of place, and that the preservation of social knowledge and the art of practice are key to unleashing the economic promise of the new technologies. An artfully crafted and fascinating book that invites the reader to a conversation."
-Bruce Kogut, Felix Zandman Professor of International Management, The Wharton School of Business
"This important book provides both the layperson and the technologically adroit with a pragmatic yet visionary perspective on the profound role that information technology will play in reshaping our society and its institutions. By combining their extensive experience in computers and communications technology with an unusually broad understanding of how technology is developed and adopted by contemporary society, the authors provide a realistic yet provocative view of the future."
-James Duderstadt, President, Emeritus, and University Professor of Science and Engineering, The University of Michigan
"Fascinating and insightful. Experts Brown and Duguid argue convincingly that the context in which information is embedded is as important as the information itself. If information technology is to realize its promise, technologists must learn to take context into account."
-William H. Davidow, General Partner, Mohr, Davidow Ventures
From the chief scientist of Xerox Corporation and a research specialist in cultural studies at UC-Berkeley comes a treatise that casts a critical eye at all the hype surrounding the boom of the information age. The authors' central complaint is that narrowly focusing on new ways to provide information will not create the cyber-revolution so many technology designers have visualized. The problem (or joy) is that information acquires meaning only through social context. Brown and Duguid add a humanist spin to this idea by arguing, for example, that "trust" is a deep social relation among people and cannot be reduced to logic, and that a satisfying "conversation" cannot be held in an Internet chat room because too much social context is stripped away and cannot be replaced by just adding more information, such as pictures and biographies of the participants. From this standpoint, Brown and Duguid contemplate the future of digital agents, the home office, the paperless society, the virtual firm and the online university. Though they offer many insightful opinions, they have not produced an easy read. As they point out, theirs is "more a book of questions than answers" and they often reject "linear thinking." Like most futurists, they are fond of long neologisms, but they are given to particularly unpronounceable ones like "infoprefixification" (the tendency to put "info" in front of words). The result is an intellectual gem in which the authors have polished some facets and, annoyingly, left others uncut. (Mar.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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