"The Leap" By Janelle Brown
Tom Ashbrook's tale of self-doubt, poverty, marital discord and a $25 million jackpot is just the thing to inspire would-be entrepreneurs to take the start-up plunge. (05/09/00)
Time warp By Brad Wieners
In "Cyberselfish," Paulina Borsook denounces high-tech culture as pitiless, egotistical and libertarian. She was right in 1996. (05/04/00)
It's a bubble, all right! By Thomas Scoville
In "Irrational Exuberance," Robert Shiller credits investors' folly with keeping the bull market on its feet. (05/02/00)
Zen and the art of start-ups By Katharine Mieszkowski
A Silicon Valley rebel gets spiritual about making money in "The Monk and the Riddle." (04/26/00)
"Beyond the Charts" By Janelle Brown
Bruce Haring sets out to tell the amazing story of how the MP3 movement turned the recording industry on its head, but misses the beat. (03/23/00)
Maybe the Net doesn't change everything By Katharine Mieszkowski
In "The Social Life of Information," John Seely Brown and Paul Duguid send technology futurists back to reexamine their crystal ball. (03/09/00)
Should your boss know about those visits to the shrink? By Thomas Scoville
Employers sniffing through medical records, would-be forgers having UPS deliver your signature -- Simson Garfinkel reveals a world rife with privacy violations in "Database Nation." (03/01/00)
The essence of geekdom By Thomas Scoville
Can you create an accurate dissertation on nerd subculture by studying two young Idahoans? Jon Katz gives it a try in "Geeks." (02/23/00)
"Sex and Rockets" By John Geirland
When JPL co-founder and occultist Jack Parsons wasn't busy building rockets, he was chatting up the "whore of Babylon." (02/15/00)
Last train to Cluesville By Thomas Scoville
Corporations who don't want to see
their car unhitched from the New Economy had better give up on "business as
usual," argues "The Cluetrain Manifesto." (02/01/00)
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Technology books archives for:
1999 |
1998 | 1995-97