Plus d’un million de livres à portée de main !
Bookbot

Clay Shirky

    Shirky concentre ses écrits sur les effets sociaux et économiques des technologies Internet, explorant comment les technologies décentralisées et les topologies réseau façonnent notre culture et vice-versa. Il analyse la dynamique de groupe dans les environnements en ligne, examinant les indices que nous utilisons pour comprendre les propriétés émergentes des groupes. Son travail apparaît fréquemment dans des publications de premier plan, abordant les technologies émergentes et leur impact sociétal. Auparavant, il s'est également consacré au théâtre, expérimentant des formes non conventionnelles de 'théâtre non fictionnel'.

    Cognitive Surplus
    Here Comes Everybody
    • Here Comes Everybody

      • 352pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      3,8(6158)Évaluer

      Welcome to the new future of involvement. Forming groups is easier than it�s ever been: unpaid volunteers can build an encyclopaedia together in their spare time, mistreated customers can join forces to get their revenge on airlines and high street banks, and one man with a laptop can raise an army to help recover a stolen phone. The results of this new world of easy collaboration can be both good (young people defying an oppressive government with a guerrilla ice-cream eating protest) and bad (girls sharing advice for staying dangerously skinny) but it�s here and, as Clay Shirky shows, it�s affecting � well, everybody. For the first time, we have the tools to make group action truly a reality. And they�re going to change our whole world.

      Here Comes Everybody
    • Cognitive Surplus

      • 242pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,7(134)Évaluer

      For decades, technology encouraged us to squander our time and as passive consumers. Today, tech has finally caught up with human potential. In Cognitive Surplus, Clay Shirky examines the changes we will all enjoy as our untapped resources of talent and good will are put to use at last. Since the postwar boom, we've had a surfeit of intellect, energy, and time - a "cognitive surplus." Shirky argues persuasively that this cognitive surplus - rather than being some strange new departure from normal behavior - actually returns our society to forms of collaboration that were natural to us up to and through the early 20th Century. He also charts the vast effects that our cognitive surplus - aided by new technologies - will have on 21st Century society, and how we can best exploit those effects, and how the choices we make are not only economically motivated but driven by the desire for autonomy, competence, and community.

      Cognitive Surplus