Incoming Resources
- TECHLASH, who makes the rules in the digital gilded age?, Tom Wheeler
- Speed limits, where time went and why we have so little left, Mark C. Taylor
- Hello world, being human in the age of algorithms, Hannah Fry
- Life at the speed of light, from the double helix to the dawn of digital life, J. Craig Venter
- American technological sublime, David E. Nye
- iDisorder, understanding our obsession with technology and overcoming its hold on us, Larry D. Rosen with Nancy A. Cheever, L. Mark Carrier
- The big disconnect, the story of technology and loneliness, Giles Slade
- The evolution of everything, how new ideas emerge, Matt Ridley
- Future hype, the myths of technology change, Bob Seidensticker
- Welcome to the future, written by Kathryn Hulick ; illustrated by Marcin Wolski
- Whiplash, how to survive our faster future, Joi Ito and Jeff Howe
- I, human, AI, automation, and the quest to reclaim what makes us unique, Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic
- How the world really works, the science behind how we got here and where we're going, Vaclav Smil
- What technology wants, Kevin Kelly
- World without mind, the existential threat of big tech, Franklin Foer
- High tech/high touch, technology and our search for meaning, John Naisbitt, with Nana Naisbitt and Douglas Philips
- The ascent of science, Brian L. Silver
- Thank you for being late, an optimist's guide to thriving in the age of accelerations, Thomas L. Friedman
- Our own devices, the past and future of body technology, Edward Tenner
- System error, where big tech went wrong and how we can reboot, Rob Reich, Mehran Sahami, and Jeremy M. Weinstein
- Rhythm science, Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky That Subliminal Kid ; editorial director, Peter Lunenfeld
- The future is analog, how to create a more human world, David Sax
- Technology matters, questions to live with, David E. Nye
- Technopoly, the surrender of culture to technology, Neil Postman
- The meaning of the 21st century, a vital blueprint for ensuring our future, James Martin
- Fabrication, essays on making things and making meaning, by Susan Neville
- How robotics is changing the world, by Kathryn Hulick
- The Frankenfood myth, how protest and politics threaten the biotech revolution, by Henry I. Miller and Gregory Conko ; foreword by Norman E. Borlaug ; prologue by John H. Moore
- The spike, how our lives are being transformed by rapidly advancing technologies, Damien Broderick
- How we got to now, six innovations that made the modern world, adapted by Sheila Keenan ; Steven Johnson
- American plastic, a cultural history, Jeffrey L. Meikle
- Better off, flipping the switch on technology, Eric Brende
- How innovation works, and why it flourishes in freedom, Matt Ridley
- The science of liberty, democracy, reason, and the laws of nature, Timothy Ferris
- Radical evolution, the promise and peril of enhancing our minds, our bodies--and what it means to be human, Joel Garreau
- TECHNOFEUDALISM, what killed capitalism, Yanis Varoufakis
- Dark light, electricity and anxiety from the telegraph to the X-ray, Linda Simon
- Controversies in science and technology, from maize to menopause, edited by Daniel Lee Kleinman, Abby J. Kinchy, and Jo Handelsman
- Power and progress, our thousand-year struggle over technology and prosperity, Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson
- Nuts & bolts, seven small inventions that changed the world (in a big way), Roma Agrawal
- Present shock, when everything happens now, Douglas Rushkoff
- How we got to now, six innovations that made the modern world, Steven Johnson
- Our molecular future, how nanotechnology, robotics, genetics, and artificial intelligence will transform our world, Douglas Mulhall
- Liberation biology, the scientific and moral case for the biotech revolution, Ronald Bailey
- As the future catches you, how genomics & other forces are changing your work, health & wealth, Juan Enriquez
- Armageddon science, the science of mass destruction, Brian Clegg
- Rocket dreams, how the space age shaped our vision of a world beyond, Marina Benjamin
- The second machine age, work, progress, and prosperity in a time of brilliant technologies, Erik Brynjolfsson, Andrew McAfee
- The hedgehog, the fox, and the magister's pox, mending the gap between science and the humanities, Stephen Jay Gould