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Latest Read: Thank You for Being Late

Thank You for Being Late: An Optimist’s Guide to Thriving in the Age of Accelerations by Tom Friedman. This is just one of his many books that I have read. And from time to time he reflects upon his best sellers: Lexus and the Olive Tree, The World is Flat and Hot, Flat and Crowded. All focus on the impact of globalization.

thank you for being late

Looking back it can be confusing to see why Tom stopped writing books at exactly the precise moment the world changed. The year was 2007 and some very significant events developed. Call it The World is Flat v4.0, when behavior capitalism began.

Consider the introductions of the iPhone, Hadoop and GitHub. Add the launch of Twitter and Facebook. Then Google’s purchase of YouTube should provide the clearest indication of how rapidly technology changed the internet.

Don’t forget Amazon released the Kindle while Airbnb was launched. IBM also launched Watson and Intel launched new non-silicon microchips.

As Tom suggests in his last example, DNA sequencing may have been the most overlooked. The price dropped from $100 million in 2001 to only $1,000 in that magic year of 2007.

So how is anyone supposed to know what all that meant to them 13 years ago? I think many family and friends would say Hadoop and GitHub are names of their pets.

This book is perfect for many, including my family and friends who do not see technology changes coming so quickly. Nor are they used to the fast pace of change. This is where Tom explains very well, for a wide audience where the world is at today. He gives you in this book the permission to slow down and reflect…

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Education Innovation Reading Technology

Latest Read: When

When: The Scientific Secrets of Perfect Timing by Daniel Pink. This was a very enjoyable read. So enjoyable that I restarted chapter one immediately after finishing the book. And then again, a third read. Maybe this is no surprise. I read in 2007 his book A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future and it was also very enjoyable.

In this book Pink provides a lot of scientific data (big data) that provides insights to our lives. This is so broadly appealing that everyone should read this book. Basically Pink shares that we all have a unique hidden patterns. This really impacts our work performance, studies, exercise and even our mood throughout the day.

Pink breaks our day into three periods: Peak, Trough, and Recovery. A morning Peak is when we apply thinking tasks. A Trough sees a decline in the mid-afternoon. This is best for simple tasks. Finally Recovery reenergizes us in the early evening to be creative.

At the same time Pink acknowledges our personality fits into one of three buckets. These circadian rhythms are Lark (morning person), an Owl (evening person), or a middle Third Bird. These rhythms will change over time. While in college I was definitely an owl, programming into the wee hours of the morning. Owls have their rhythms in reverse: recovery, trough and peak.

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Cyberinfrastructure Education Globalization Google Network Reading Technology

Latest Read: The Age of Surveillance Capitalism

The Age of Surveillance Capitalism by Shoshana Zuboff rocked Silicon Valley and beyond. Shoshana is Professor Emerita at Harvard Business School and a former Faculty Associate at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School.

The Age of Surveillance Capitalism by Shoshana Zuboff

Shoshana has delivered a critically important book not to be missed. This is a “once in a decade book” that digs deep into digital surveillance by Google and Facebook.

So, before you ask about recent US Senate votes to continue warrantless access to your internet search and browser history, Google, Facebook, and Microsoft are harvesting just about all of your personal data.

So, the term ‘surveillance capitalism’ is new for many who only recently see this term added to our societal lexicon. The ability for Google and Facebook to simply take your data, mash it up, and sell it (without your knowledge) may indeed surprise many. But the depth of their reach Shoshana reveals may shock you.

You may not yet realize how Google and Facebook have already tuned their artificial intelligence platforms to data mining you even deeper than you may realize. Actually, think you with nothing to hide? Think again.

Google and Facebook lead in data harvesting

There is a common understanding that ‘free’ is just that. A ‘free’ email account and ‘free’ social media platforms? Nothing short of a lie. And the misdirection that ‘you become the product’ is no longer accurate. Shoshana refocuses this misdirection to convey Google and Facebook have so much of your private data, they now simply harvest your daily input toward their behavioral capitalism.

For Google this data mining includes all products and services including the acquired Nest thermostat. This is not new by the way. The LA Times reported back in May 2008 a plan by Charter to track customer web habits. These messages remind me of 2009’s The Future of the Internet by Jonathan Zittrain.

How Google Maps harvested your personal data

Today the question is not how, but rather how much you use and rely upon Google Maps. When Google’s StreetView cars drove past your house (and mine) taking photographs — their cars had surveillance tools that downloaded your home’s WiFi payload data.

Wait, what? Oh yes, they did.
As a result, Attorneys General from 38 states sued Google. 12 other countries, mainly from Europe also sued.

So, just how sensitive was the data collected by Maps? Technical experts in Canada, France, and the Netherlands discovered that StreetView’s data harvesting included:

names
telephone numbers
credit card information
passwords (Yes Google harvested your passwords)
e-mails (full text)
chat transcripts
dating site data
pornography site data
browsing behavior
medical data
location data

In addition, Shoshana reveals how Google, forced to concede that it had intercepted and stored “payload data” the personal information grabbed from unencrypted Wi-Fi transmissions. In some instances your entire email message, URLs and passwords were harvested.

John Hanke, Vice President for Google Maps previously directed Keyhole, a CIA-satellite mapping company. After Google purchased Keyhole, Hanke directed the upgrade of Google Earth. The full 25 page legal filing for your reading pleasure: In the Matter of Google, Inc.: Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture, File No.: EB-10-IH-4055, NAL/Acct. No.: 201232080020, FRNs: 0010119691, 0014720239, Federal Communications Commission, April 13, 2012, 12–13.

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Education Innovation Reading

Latest Read: Wait

Wait: The Art and Science of Delay by Frank Partnoy has been a wonderful read. With American culture based on “immediate everything” is there any reason to pause? Yes in fact Frank illustrates why delay means a lot to us. Are we as aware of the decision making errors we make in rapid response?

Wait: The Art and Science of Delay by Frank Partnoy

A return of serve in professional tennis is all about rapid response. With end-lines 78 feet apart a tennis player has almost 500 milliseconds to respond. Has this rapid response been ingrained into our culture? Probably, and we need to change this.

The opening two chapters of Wait address how we regard making decisions on rapid response. Frank provides valuable insights that rapid response actually robs us of wise decision making. There is a lot we can learn from the opportunity of delay. Wait refers at many points the impact of Daniel Kahneman’s book Thinking Fast and Slow, the ground breaking research with Amos Tversky.

Kahneman won the noble prize in economics for having integrated insights from psychological research into economic science, especially concerning human judgment and decision-making under uncertainty. Wait builds upon the impact of delays in decision-making.

Chapter three: “High-Frequency Trading, Fast and Slow” is the story of UNX Inc, a trading firm in California. The ability of Wall Street to trade stocks between 8 to 14 milliseconds is fascinating. Yet Frank reveals the opportunity by UNX to save a lot of money by actually slowing down their trading. Sounds odd but proves to be true. Again the insights to Thinking Fast and Slow are remarkable. High frequency trading was the subject of Michael Lewis’ amazing book Flash Boys.

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Education Innovation Reading

Latest Read: Grit

Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance by Angela Duckworth. I have been looking forward to reading this book. Angela’s story on researching Grit begins by studying West Point’s Beast Barracks. That would be the best location to convey grit for all of us.

Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance by Angela Duckworth

Her research of the national spelling bee does, in fact hold similarities to Beast. The lesson of learning your passion is indeed the key defining how you persevere over time. Swimming is a topic addressed throughout the book.

Angela’s story of Rowdy Gaines‘ love of athletics helped drive his skill in the pool. Examples of Grit lessons from swim coaches to Mark Spitz continue to inspire swimmers. When your teammates arrive by 4:00am every morning — you understand perseverance.

The idea of describing Grit versus Flow hit me (for some reason) as two approaches to playing a golf course. More than a few years ago I repeatedly played a course that hosted an annual PGA tournament.

Many weekday evenings spent at the range prepared me for a weekly test. Playing from the championship tees simulated the tournament yardage. The ‘grit’ was time at the range during the week. More often this was Monday, Wednesday and Friday while looking forward to teeing off that same Sunday.

However one Sunday I found myself changing my approach to ‘just play’ the course. Foregoing all the details approaching each shot, and moving to ‘just playing’ by feel. Angela describes this change as Flow. Many wasted efforts to perfect my swing for each shot was eliminated by simply ‘feeling’ the iron shot to be played. This turned out to be a much more relaxing round of golf. There are moments in the book that Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000 hour rules applies to flow and the amount of time to enhance your passion.