A revolution is under way.
In recent years, Google’s
autonomous cars have logged thousands of miles on American highways and
IBM’s Watson trounced the best human Jeopardy! players. Digital
technologies—with hardware, software, and networks at their core—will
in the near future diagnose diseases more accurately than doctors can,
apply enormous data sets to transform retailing, and accomplish many
tasks once considered uniquely human.
In The Second Machine Age
MIT’s Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee—two thinkers at the forefront
of their field—reveal the forces driving the reinvention of our lives
and our economy. As the full impact of digital technologies is felt, we
will realize immense bounty in the form of dazzling personal technology,
advanced infrastructure, and near-boundless access to the cultural
items that enrich our lives.
Amid this bounty will also be
wrenching change. Professions of all kinds—from lawyers to truck
drivers—will be forever upended. Companies will be forced to transform
or die. Recent economic indicators reflect this shift: fewer people are
working, and wages are falling even as productivity and profits soar.
Drawing
on years of research and up-to-the-minute trends, Brynjolfsson and
McAfee identify the best strategies for survival and offer a new path to
prosperity. These include revamping education so that it prepares
people for the next economy instead of the last one, designing new
collaborations that pair brute processing power with human ingenuity,
and embracing policies that make sense in a radically transformed
landscape.
A fundamentally optimistic book, The Second Machine Age will alter how we think about issues of technological, societal, and economic progress.
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