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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Readable view of the future - a true irony!,
By
This review is from: When Things Start to Think (Hardcover)
When things start to think is one of the better, if not best, future-of-the-industry books of the past 12 months. First, it lacks the ego-centric writing that is the commonplace of MIT texts, which is refreshing. All too often the books coming out of MIT seem to be a self proclamation of value - "Hey, I'm important and cool, and so is my work". Gersenfeld, on the other hand, let's his work do the talking. He openly questions the appropriateness of some of his projects, and shows areal-world appreciation of what it means to bring product to market with his "1 dollar rule" for additive technology. With the exception of a few chapters at the end of the book, it is highly readable for all people of all professions, and is a refreshing new way of approaching old issues. It also reads at times like a collection of essays, so while you will want to read it in a linear fashion, it is easy to pick up, read, put down, and pick up again. You'll find yourself wanting to do that again and again, allowing your own ideas to digest and grow.
13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
MIT MIT MIT,
By A Customer
This review is from: When Things Start to Think (Paperback)
This book does not fulfill the promise of its title, in a rambling, sometimes interesting, mostly self-serving view of the author's work and that of his colleagues at one of the world's premier labs. Lacking clear structure or drama, the book suffers further from poor writing and editing. If you're from MIT, every sentence probably makes sense -- it often sounds as if it were transcribed from a small group seminar. Instead of focusing on clarity for those outside of the tight jargon, it uses a loose, concept-by-implication presentation style with enough fuzziness to dazzle the innocent. Perhaps that explains the over-glowing reviews.How many things think in Gershenfeld's tapestry? Not many, but I can't find them quickly again, either from memory or index.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Read about Electronic Paper - the "Monitor" of the Future,
By A Customer
This review is from: When Things Start to Think (Hardcover)
A good book for discovering about the future directions of computer science and the things which will be coming our way some day soon from research done at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dr. Gershenfeld writes very good explanations for some very advanced research topics and their future uses. Covers a revolutionary invention known as electrophoretic paper for making an electronic book which looks exactly like a book but whose pages have the properties of a computer monitor.
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