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Hardcover Tips for Time Travelers Book

ISBN: 0070120706

ISBN13: 9780070120709

Tips for Time Travelers

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

This text offers commentary on how late-1990s advances in technology may alter the way one lives and thinks. It encourages the reader to embrace new technological advances rather than to fear them. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Tantalizing Tangential Topics

I liked the "Cut to the chase" nature of his writing - engineer speak par excellance. Although sometimes a little rambling, there were more than enough jewels in every topic to make this a must read for anyone considering our current metamorphosis as an e culture. Not just for the technocrats either. Enjoy!

A perfect companion for my Passport and Metrocard.

I loved "Tips For Time Travelers" because it makes perfect sense. Cochrane is pragmatic. Although he sees what we all see, he sees more and is compelled to do something about it. He has unquestionably proved that a desire to do more, to create, to make something better and the willingness to act on the desires can pay off. His vision for the future is based on the logical and practical adoption of technology. The fact that this will mean chips in our head and fiber in our veins, is a good thing. Our body is only a shell and we have been enhancing it externally since the beginning of time. Technology will make it feasable to go under the skin.As Emerson said "All things being taken, it is not instruction but provocation that I would rather take from anothers soul" and Cochrane manages to be both provocative and practical as he leads us into the future.

Cochrane makes getting back to the future an easy ride.

It's hard to disagree with the likes of Nicholas Negroponte, Douglas Adams and Bran Ferren when they rave about Peter Cochrane's book, but what they can't say is what a great book it is for the regular guy on the street. Cochrane writes in such an easy style, his book is more like a conversation with a person you'd sit next to on an airplane, or one of the other dads at daycare picking up their kids -- and he makes the future of technology seem real and lets you see how it will actually change your life. It's a great book and I really like the very short chapters. Does he actually have a camera in his glass-walled office called "Little Brother" so his team can watch what their boss is up to? Does he actually carry only digital pictures of his family on his laptop -- no paper-printed pix in his wallet? Does he really have as much trouble upgrading his software as the rest of us? Read the book to find out.

Inside knowledge on the way things could be

Don't read Tips for Time Travelers expecting techno****, predictions on the demise of Microsoft or complicated scenarios on the application of advanced technology - it's far more fun than that. Here are short stories that should strike fear into the heart of technophobes, technocrats and bureaucrats in equal measure - if they have the imagination to understand them.Cochrane is refreshingly concerned with the human scale of technology and its potential to deliver freedom from mundane, repetitive tasks and create new types of relationships with work, with leisure and with each other. His message seems to be that we can't live without technology because that is "tough life", but its going to fade into the background and make us far more accountable for our ideas.My personal favourite - his comparison on the value of the Ten Commandments at 135 words and the EEC documentation on pricing and defining cabbages at nearly 7000 words - says it all really!If you want to take an active part in the future, read about how it could be here and then make-up your own version.

Even the way the book is layed out is for Time Travellers

The book is layed out in seperate monolgues so its easy to pick when I was caught with 5 minutes free. It looks at modern day life, technology and society asking those obvious questions about it all. Well worth a read.
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