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Paperback How We Got Here PB Book

ISBN: 0060840978

ISBN13: 9780060840976

How We Got Here PB

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good*

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Book Overview

Best-selling author Andy Kessler ties up the loose ends from his provocative book, Running Money, with this history of breakthrough technology and the markets that funded them.

Expanding on themes first raised in his tour de force, Running Money, Andy Kessler unpacks the entire history of Silicon Valley and Wall Street, from the Industrial Revolution to computers, communications, money, gold and stock markets. These stories cut (by an unscrupulous...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Fun and Important Book

Fascinating story about the history of technology and capital markets. More fun than most books I've read, it's like riding a roller-coaster through history. By giving us a detailed account of how these areas are interwoven, Kessler also looks to the future - showing how important it is for America (and the world) to make smart decisions that will lead to further advances. Chris "SparkGuy" Downie SparkPeople Founder & CEO

Great story telling about history.

Kessler has the unique ability to tie the history of finance, technology, and Wall Street shenanigans into a great tale. This book would make a great introductory textbook for highschool and college students about "How We Got There". The book is a fun read, and I learned a great deal about history. The underlying cautionary tale is to remember nothing is new, history just repeats itself; the same mistakes about "this time it is different" occur every time a new technology emerges.

Entertaining stories that teach principles of economic growth

In his last book, "Running Money" Andy Kessler underscored his arguments with breezy historical accounts that demonstrated the quirks of history and what made the industrial revolution go. "How We Got Here" is a book length version of that history and pulls it more fully what has been happening to intellectual property and capital markets during the past decade. Kessler tells these stories because he wants his readers to understand the importance of intellectual property, of scaling those ideas to serve the needs of large populations, and of free flowing capital markets to find and support the best ideas. A by-product of these is lower prices for everyone, which leads to an increased standard of living. The author notes that he wishes he had been taught these things as a young man, and I agree that every young person (and everyone else, for that matter) will be better off taking these ideas into their bones. Why? Because we human beings don't always understand specific events all that well. We need broader principles to see our local life as part of a larger whole and the principles that are governing what is happening. Our untrained instincts are quite bad in assessing statistical outcomes (hence the thriving business of casinos). This is a very entertaining read. It is similar to James Burke's famous "Connections", but this actually has a more focused purpose that Mr. Burke's wonderful vignettes. Kessler is strongest at the end when he is telling about the development of our computer based world because he is talking from his personal experience. Not only does he bring the world of Wall Street into sharp focus, he demonstrates the role of the military in funding the development the networks we use everyday. For me, the thing I would hope readers would take away from this book is how unpredictable the future is and how things come along that confound all experts, bureaucrats (whether private or public), and projections. Industries are born, they grow, and then they are killed off. Just as there are no old animal homes in the wild (despite what "Bambi" has been telling folks for decades), it is the natural order for people to find work doing new things and people to be put out of work that should no longer be done. These dislocations are hard and painful, but these changes are vital in the improvement of the standard of living for everyone. One of Kessler's complaints about our current economy is its risk averse allocation of capital into less efficient and less productive portions of the economy. It baffles him and he thinks it has more to do with out of date accounting practices than reality. For example, we don't give a fig about the trade deficit between North Dakota and California, but are losing our minds over our trade numbers with China. Yet, we don't properly account for the value of the intellectual capital we send to China that gets put into the products they ship back here. In fact, the value of that intellectua

Everyone should read this

I had a hard time putting this book down after I started reading it. There was one fact after another concerning major technological leaps, how they were manipulated by influential people of their day. and how they subsequently affected the lives of everyone. The book is very easy to read, which is amazing considering the vast subject coverage. The author has a great sense of humor and a great grasp of history. This is a must-read for anyone who wants to peer into the future by examining the past.

Crucial narrative on how the world worked

Andy Kessler tells it like it is and was. This book is one of the most enlightening and entertaining books on the history of technology. But more importantly he combines technology and finance - you get a much more clear understanding of why and how things evolved. It is a must read for anybody interested in how the world works, and how it might evolve in the future. I was pleasantly surprised that I learned some things I didn't know about the history of the industrial revolution and the computer revolution. That is saying something, since I have read a great deal of history about the industrial revolution and I participated in the computer revolution besides reading a lot about it. Andy Kessler makes all these details interesting and relevant, including not well known facts and connections. Kessler has a unique and insightful perspective on finance which he includes as a crucial part of the story. I have seen interesting technology stories or interesting financial stories, but to put them together gives us a unique and valuable non-PC narrative.
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