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The bleeding edge : why technology turns toxic in an unequal world / Bob Hughes.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Hughes, Bob, 1947- author.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Information society.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (272 pages)
- Edition:
- 1st ed.
- Place of Publication:
- Oxford, England : New Internationalist, 2016.
- Summary:
- A big-hitting historical analysis of technology which uses the computer as a can-opener to expose the inequality innate in capitalism.
- Contents:
- Intro
- About the Author
- Acknowledgements
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1. Technofatalism and the future - is a world without Foxconn even possible?
- Two paradoxes about new technology
- Humanity began with technology
- Technology emerges from egalitarian knowledge economies
- The myth of creative competition
- Why capitalism inhibits innovation
- Capitalism didn't make computers… but took computing down the wrong path
- 2. From water mills to iPhones: why technology and inequality do not mix
- Egalitarian hopes for computing
- The return of medieval economics
- The first modern environmental crisis
- An unequal society is a dangerous place for powerful ideas
- Water mills, and how new technology can be a curse
- Firearms take a European turn
- 3. What inequality does to people
- Inequality reduces life expectancy
- Equality and the Soviet Union
- Autonomy and solidarity: the essential nutrients
- Inequality makes people shorter
- Today's inequality will damage future generations
- 4. The environmental cost of human inequality
- Are the rich destroying the earth?
- Inequality turns humans into a geological force
- Malthus's mistake: not too many babies, but too much debt
- Ehrlich's last gasp: technology and 'eye-pat'
- The power to choose a low-impact life
- 5. Ever greater impact, ever less benefit: high-tech capital's mysterious lack of growth
- 'Keep your nerve' or 'tough it out'
- Why computers have grown nothing but themselves
- Inequality: the elephant in the room
- 6. The invisible foot: why inequality increases impact
- Technology plus inequality equals meltdown
- 'Positionality' and 'human nature'
- Traffic waves and why faster is slower
- Computers and the positional economy: obsolescence gone mad.
- The rise of financial services, trailed by women in old cars
- Putting a girl on the moon: the cost of education
- How 'e-learning' rebounded on the poor
- 7. Enclosure in the computer age: the magic of control
- The supernatural enters everyday life: the magic of commodities
- Power over the future: the magic of intellectual property
- Computers and the making of money
- The world gets smaller and hotter
- Closing the technological frontier (or trying to)
- Other routines are possible!
- 8. Sales effort: from the automobile to the microchip
- The all-steel automobile as an energy sump
- How the sales effort shaped the chip
- Moore's self-fulfilling prophecy: chips with everything
- Dictating the future
- The visionary turn
- Embracing carnage: faith in disruption
- 9. Technoptimism hits the buffers
- The toxic deWmands of purity
- Obsolescence and e-waste: a total system
- Displacing the problem to Africa
- Entropy: measuring what's possible
- Maxwell's demon: the spoiler in the green growth dream
- Puncturing the weightless economists
- 10. The data explosion: how the cloud became a juggernaut
- Forced migration: corporate flight into the cloud
- How the web became an entropy pump
- The cost of the dotcom bubble and Web 2.0
- 11. 'The least efficient machine humans have ever built': how capitalism drove the computer down a dead end
- The buried world of analog computing
- Clocks: why today's computers mostly do nothing, but very quickly
- Soviet computing: diversity under scarcity and bureaucracy
- Time-sharing: another abandoned road
- Competitive pressure narrows all options
- 12. Planning by whom and for what? The battle for control from the Soviet Union to Walmart
- The benefits and dangers of centralized planning
- Electrification of the Soviet Union: heteronomous planning becomes the global norm.
- Linear programming, with and without computers
- The curious incident of the capitalist calculation debate
- Connection-making and the ecology movement
- Operational Research and cybernetics
- Variety engineering: the difference between amplification and shouting
- 13. A socialist computer: Chile, 1970-1973
- A global crisis of inequality
- The Unidad Popular: a moderately egalitarian program
- Stafford Beer and 'cybernetic socialism'
- How much computer hardware does a viable society need?
- Cheap, radical technology
- 'War' is declared
- 14. Utopia or bust
- Envisioning Utopia: the world turned right way up
- Utopian practicalities: food and work
- Beauty and lower impact, from the bottom up
- Shrinking roads, expanding diversity
- Putting babies and children at the heart of the economy
- Shared work: Utopia's powerhouses
- Community is stronger than we think: 'Disaster Utopias'
- The Right knows the power of solidarity, even if the Left doesn't
- Equality, truth and the experience of being believed
- The 'apparatus of justification'
- Index.
- Notes:
- Includes index.
- Description based on print version record.
- ISBN:
- 1-78026-339-2
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